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  2. South Africa hastens title deed handover to poor homes - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/south-africa-hastens-title-deed...

    By Wendell Roelf CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - South Africa's Treasury plans to speed up the transfer of ownership of homes worth 180 billion rand ($15 billion) to about one million poor people from April ...

  3. Boschendal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boschendal

    The farm's title deeds are dated 1685. The estate's first owner, Jean le Long, was one of the party of 200 French Huguenot refugees who were fleeing religious persecution in Europe. He was granted land in the Cape of Good Hope by the Dutch East India Company in 1688 and the title deed was written in 1713. In 1715 the farm was acquired by ...

  4. Greyton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greyton

    This was the only town in the Cape in which such land with full title deeds, water rights and grazing rights was for sale to anyone. In the 1860s, Herbert married a young girl of British stock named Elizabeth Belshaw – 27 years his junior.

  5. Law of conveyancing in South Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_conveyancing_in...

    The law of conveyancing in South Africa refers the legal process whereby a person, company, close corporation or trust becomes the registered and legal owner of immovable property, including improved and unimproved land, houses, farms, flats and sectional titles, as well as the registration of bonds and other rights to fixed properties, including servitudes, usufructs and the like.

  6. South African property law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_African_property_law

    The Principles of The Law of Property in South Africa. Cape Town: Oxford University Press Southern Africa, 2010. A.J. van der Walt & Gerrit J. Pienaar. Introduction to the Law of Property / Inleiding tot die sakereg, 7th edn. Claremont: Juta, 2016. Cases. ABSA Bank Ltd t/a Bankfin v Jordashe Auto CC 2003 (1) SA 401 (SCA).

  7. Cape foot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_foot

    A Cape foot is a unit of length defined as 1.0330 English feet (and equal to 12.396 English inches, or 0.31485557516 meters) found in documents of belts and diagrams relating to landed property. [1] It was identically equal to the Rijnland voet and was introduced into South Africa by the Dutch settlers in the seventeenth and eighteenth century ...

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