eSwatini
Land Survey Act, 1961
Act 46 of 1961
- Commenced on 16 June 1961
- [This is the version of this document at 1 December 1998.]
Part I – Preliminary
1. Short title
This Act shall be cited as the Land Survey Act, 1961.2. Interpretation
In this Act unless the context otherwise requires—“approve” in relation to the Surveyor-General and to any general plan or diagram means the signing of such general plan or diagram in order to signify that the requirements of this Act have been complied with in regard to such general plan or diagram;“Court” means the High Court;“diagram” means a document, containing geometrical, numerical and verbal representations of a piece of land which has been signed by a person recognised, under any law then in force, as a land surveyor, or which has been approved or certified by the Surveyor-General, or other officer empowered under any law so to approve or certify a diagram and includes a diagram or copy thereof prepared in the Surveyor-General's office and approved or certified as aforesaid or a document which has at any time, prior to the commencement of this Act, been accepted as a diagram in the Deeds Office or Surveyor-General's office;“general plan” means a plan which, representing the relative positions and dimensions of two or more pieces of land, has been signed by a person recognised, under any law then in force, as a land surveyor, or which has been approved or certified as a general plan by the Surveyor-General or other officer empowered under any law so to approve or certify a general plan and includes a general plan or a copy thereof prepared in the Surveyor-General's office and approved or certified as aforesaid or a general plan which has at any time, prior to the commencement of this Act, been accepted for registration in the Deeds Office or Surveyor-General's office;“land surveyor” means a person recognised as such for the purposes of this Act;“lot” means every piece of land registered as an erf, lot, plot or stand in the Deeds Office, and includes a stand or lot forming a portion of a piece of land laid out as, but not proclaimed, a township or village; or a portion of such erf, stand or lot;“Minister” means the Minister for Works, Power and Communications;“owner” in relation to immovable property, means the person registered in the Deeds Office as the owner of such immovable property, and includes the liquidator of a company or the representative recognised by law, of any owner who has died, become insolvent, assigned his estate, is a minor or of unsound mind, or is otherwise under disability and includes the person in whom the ownership of land is vested by statute:Provided that such liquidator or representative shall act within the powers conferred on him by law;“public place” includes any street, road, thoroughfare, sanitary passage, square, park or open space shown on a general plan of a township, filed in the Deeds Office or Surveyor-General's office, and all land (other than lots shown on the general plan) the control whereof is vested, to the entire exclusion of the owner, in a local authority or to which the owners of lots in the township have a common right;“reference mark” means a survey mark of permanent construction placed in a township, village or settlement to form one of a system of such marks for the purpose of basing the survey of the pieces of land in such township, village or settlement thereon or connecting such survey thereto;“registrar” means the officer in charge of the Deeds Office;“registration” in relation to any land, means registration of any real right in or to such land in accordance with the provisions of the law relating to the registration of deeds; and “registered” shall have a corresponding meaning;“trigonometrical station” means a station of the primary, secondary, or tertiary triangulation, according to the classification generally recognised in surveying in the Republic of South Africa;“township, village or settlement” means a group of pieces of land which are used for residential, industrial or similar purposes or are intended or destined or likely to be used for any such purpose.Part II – Surveyor-General and surveyors
3. Surveyor-General
4. Recognition as land surveyor
5. Duties of surveyor and non-liability of Government
6. Suspension or cancellation of right to practise as surveyor
If a land surveyor—7. Unauthorised practice as surveyor
Part III – Surveys and resurveys
8. Replacing incorrect diagram by new diagram after resurvey (Schedule)
9. Rectification of title deeds after determination of boundary dispute
10. Endorsement of diagrams when correct position of beacon or boundary has been determined and agreed upon
11. Rules for arbitrators
In deciding what are the true and correct beacons or boundaries common to contiguous pieces of land an arbitrator appointed under this Act shall take into consideration the particular circumstances of each case but shall generally be guided by the following principles—12. Division diagrams
13. Rectification of errors ascertained by resurvey or division survey
If on the resurvey of any land or the survey of land for the purpose of division (in this section also referred to as the resurvey), the numerical data derived from the resurvey are found to differ from those numerical data on the diagram of the land upon which any registration has been based, the Surveyor-General shall if—14. Diagram of exact share of land
If a surveyed piece of land which is held in undivided shares is divided for the purpose of partition, the Surveyor-General may withhold his approval of a diagram purporting to represent an exact share of the total area of such surveyed piece of land until he is satisfied that such total area has been ascertained by a resurvey of the whole of such piece of land.15. Alteration of general plans
Part IV – Beacons
16. Beacons and boundaries lawfully established
17. Manner and cost of erecting beacons for survey purposes
18. No posts to be erected or excavations made near beacons
Except with the consent of the Surveyor-General, it shall not be lawful for any person to place any fence post or fence anchor or any other erection or to make any excavation within four feet of any beacon or trigonometrical station, except in the case of lots in a township, village or settlement; or plots of an area not exceeding five morgen.19. Repair or re-erection of beacons
20. Offences and compensation in respect thereof
21. Authority to remove beacons
Any person who, for the purpose of carrying out any work which he may lawfully perform, desires to remove or disturb any beacon or mark erected in connection with the survey of land, shall apply to the Surveyor-General for authority to effect such removal or disturbance and the Surveyor-General may thereupon, at the expense of such applicant, employ any land surveyor personally to effect or supervise the removal or disturbance and subsequent replacement, in accordance with such requirements as may be prescribed, of such beacon or mark or the erection or placing of any other mark to indicate the position of such removed or disturbed beacon or mark, in such manner as the Surveyor-General may direct.Part V – General plans and diagrams
22. Manner of preparing diagram
Every general plan or diagram submitted for the approval of a Surveyor-General shall be prepared in accordance with such requirements as may be prescribed and the numerical and other data recorded thereon shall be within the prescribed limits of consistency:Provided that the Surveyor-General may approve a diagram prepared before the commencement of this Act in accordance with any law or usage in force at the time of such preparation.23. No registration of land without approved diagram
No general plan or diagram of any piece of land shall be accepted in the Deeds Office in connection with any registration therein of such land unless such general plan or diagram has been approved by the Surveyor-General:Provided that, in the event of such approval being contingent upon any act being subsequently performed in the Deeds Office, the Surveyor-General may approve such general plan or diagram provisionally and, upon the performance of that act in the Deeds Office, the Surveyor-General shall finally approve such general plan or diagram when submitted to him.24. Diagram must be signed by surveyor
No general plan or diagram shall be approved by the Surveyor-General unless it be prepared under the direction of and signed by a land surveyor:Provided that the Surveyor-General may sign and approve a diagram framed by his direction from a general plan or from a diagram filed in his office or registered in the Deeds Office, without the signature thereon of the land surveyor or land surveyors who signed the original general plan or diagram if he is or they are not available or unreasonably refuse to sign the diagram so framed.25. Diagram for consolidated title
26. Registrar and owner to be informed of incorrect diagram
If the Surveyor-General is satisfied that the diagram of any piece of land entirely fails to represent such land or misrepresents it to such an extent that damage or loss might result to any person who is or may become interested therein, he may give notice of such fact to the registrar and to the owner of such piece of land and thereafter no further registration of such piece or land or of any portion thereof or undivided share therein shall be effected in the Deeds Office until a new diagram thereof has been approved and a certificate of amended title thereto has been issued or the title deed thereof has been endorsed, in accordance with such new diagram, under the law relating to the registration of deeds:Provided that if the Surveyor-General is unaware of the address of the owner of such piece of land, a publication of such notice in three consecutive issues of the Gazette and once every week during three consecutive weeks in a newspaper circulating in the district within which such piece of land is situate, shall be deemed to be sufficient notice to such owner for the purpose of this section.27. Correction of registered diagram
The Surveyor-General may correct any error in the numerical data, figure or wording of a diagram registered in the Deeds Office:Provided that, if such correction affects the extent or designation of the land represented by such diagram, the Surveyor-General shall notify the registrar of such correction, and the registrar shall thereupon amend the relative title deed and register in the Deeds Office in accordance with such corrected diagram and before effecting any further registration of such land or any portion thereof or undivided share therein shall likewise amend the relative duplicate title deed belonging to the owner of such land.Part VI – Miscellaneous
28. Power of entry, etc. upon land
29. Act binding on Government
This Act shall be binding on the Government in so far as any land surveyed or resurveyed or dealt with thereunder is unalienated Government land or land which has been alienated and subsequently re-acquired by the Government, and the Government shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to be the owner of any such land.30. Savings as to railway or irrigation surveys and plans relating to mining titles
31. Notice to Surveyor-General of application to Court
Before any application is made to the Court for an order affecting the performance of any act in the Surveyor-General’s office, the applicant shall give notice in writing to the Surveyor-General at least seven days before the hearing of such application and the Surveyor-General may submit to the Court such report thereon as he may deem desirable.32. Regulations
History of this document
01 December 1998 this version
Consolidation
16 June 1961
Commenced
Documents citing this one 6
Act 4
1. | Deeds Registry Act, 1968 | 137 citations |
2. | Human Settlements Authority Act, 1988 | 41 citations |
3. | Change of Place Names Act, No. 23 of 1970 | |
4. | Crown Lands (Temporary Occupation) Act, 1964 |
Gazette 2
1. | Swaziland Government Gazette dated 1992-07-09 number 880 | |
2. | Swaziland Government Gazette supplement dated 1999-04-30 number 468 |