Not collectively speaking
IN HIS Monday Blues column, Today Editor-At-Large Conrad Raj opined
that it is “Time to revamp the Strata Titles (ST) Boards” (June 22) .
In fact, it is not merely the composition of the ST Boards, but the
present ST rules as well that need to be looked into, and a thorough
“revamp” made in the larger interests of subsidiary proprietors (SP), as
unit owners in private estates are described.
A report in The Business Times in March 2008 reported that “The Ministry
of Law is understood to be planning a review soon (sic) of the revised en
bloc legislation, which took effect on Oct 4 (2007)”, with a Ministry of
Law spokeswoman on record as saying: “Since the amended Land Titles
(Strata) Act came into effect, we have received feedback mainly from
affected owners to make the collective sale process even more rigorous by
introducing more safeguards”.
That was well over a year ago. All that has happened since is that there
have been several legal suits involving collective sales, with some
startling decisions. There is no escaping the stark reality that the
threat of an en bloc sale will always exist whether the property market is
robust or moribund as long as a collective sale will fetch more than
scattered sales of individual units.
It is only fair to all who own and live in private estates that the
Government makes known speedily whether the changes, once proposed, are
likely to be reviewed.
For the huge majority, the purchase of a property is without question the
biggest capital investment they make in their lifetime, and typically they
spend most of their working lives to pay off for their homes. Seen in this
light, and against the Government’s once-avowed objective of promoting
self-houseownership, and its natural extension to sinking roots in
Singapore, it bucks logic or even a sense of justice that many or even
just some of them should be compelled to move out of such homes against
their will because of an en bloc sale, even if some capital profit is
realised in the process.
There are plenty of areas where the present rules can, and in fact,
urgently need to, be changed.
The rate of success of collective sales varies depending on the age of the
estate. In public-listed companies, where the individual stakes can be
quite minimal and the emotional impact much less in comparison, the rule
is that as long as 10 per cent of the capital still remains in the hands
of minority shareholders, they cannot be compulsorily bought out.
Legislation should also be introduced that SPs who have an alternative
property to which they can move in the event of a successful en bloc sale
should be automatically disbarred from voting in favour of such sale, as
they are in the privileged position vis-a-vis SPs who own just the
property they stay in.
I have heard of some who buy a property with the intention of starting an
en bloc sale, in the hope of benefiting from the resultant increased price
at which it would most probably be sold.
SPs themselves and/or those who have close relatives in the property
business should also similarly be disbarred from participating, as there
is bound to be the suspicion of a conflict of interest, or even collusion.
One thing is certain when en bloc sales come into the picture: The harmony
of neighbourly living is disrupted, and probably lost for ever, sometimes
leading to acrimony and unsocial, even criminal, acts of vandalism as was
widely reported in the media. If the changes in rules made in October 2007
have according to the Ministry of Law led to complaints by affected
owners, it is probably time to scrap those rules altogether, and leave the
purchase and sale process to individuals, and a collective sale to proceed
only where there is total unanimity among owners, as is the case in landed
property.
A Singaporean’s home should remain his castle, in which he can lock
himself securely against en bloc raiders bent on ejecting families for
their own purely selfish ends. It is imperative that Govenment moves
swiftly towards the changes they intended to make early last year.
Narayana Narayana
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