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Probe into forced house sales needed

If you owe a bank R50 000 and cannot repay on time, you have a problem. But if you owe a bank R1 billion and cannot pay, the bank has a problem.

This point has been made both by billionaire J Paul Getty and economist John Maynard Keynes.

It highlights the fact that the wealthy are always privileged, especially when it comes to money.

This certainly applies to debt, where those with considerable assets and perhaps a well-paying job can access cheaper credit than the poorly paid. In many ways, and for most workers, it’s a case of the less you earn, the more you pay. This applies particularly to access to credit and the rate of interest on borrowings.

Poorly paid workers cannot get loans from banks and have to pay higher rates at microlenders or be forced into the clutches of the mashonisas.

Wealthy individuals can negotiate preferential interest rates on loans in a system where, even if you have no assets and no job, you still pay taxes through the now-increased value-added tax.

Should a working person fall on hard times and be unable to pay the bond on a house, they should expect no mercy from the lender, in most cases, a bank. This fact was underscored in March by a decision of the Pretoria High Court, which ruled that banks could sell indebted homes at auction without a minimum (reserve) price.

This gives legal confirmation to the existing practice that anyone who defaults on bond payments can have ownership of their house taken over by the bank. The bank can then put it up for sale on auction and, without a reserve price, it may be sold for whatever is the final bid.

The case in March upheld the right of banks to behave in this way. It involved a house valued at R470 000 and on which the defaulting owner still owed R370 000 in capital and interest. It was sold for just R40 000. This does not seem to make sense, even for the bank.

The reality is that a buyer bought a R470 000 house for R40 000, while the seller, the bank, was still owed R370 000 by the defaulting former homeowner. The former homeowner now has a bad credit record, is therefore no longer “creditworthy”, is still liable and will be pursued for the money owed.

On a personal level, such cases – and there are many every year around the country – are often very sad. But they also open the way for corruption, something highlighted in this column some time ago.

Then it was a case of houses in a Western Cape township, where the owners of dwellings valued at R30 000 and who fell behind with their bond repayments had these sold on auction for as little as R200. There was invariably only one bidder, a local lawyer who, also invariably, went on to sell the same houses for R20 000 or more.

There was clearly collusion in this case and there may be collusion in others, only because such forced sales without reserve can be an easy way for unscrupulous individuals to make money.

Not that the banks are involved in such unethical and possibly illegal activity; they take a “hands-off” approach. It is the sheriffs (or others) who execute the order to sell and who work together with the buyers.

Here is an area that needs the attention of unions and government. Much more so than the debate about land expropriation, an issue fully covered by section 25 of the Bill of Rights.

What should be done to stop alleged collusion in the sale of the homes of bond defaulters?

SMS us on 35697 using the keyword AUCTION and tell us what you think. Please include your name and province. SMSes cost R1.50

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