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THE CONSOLIDATED RIGHTS OF THE OWNERS OF EXISTING BUILDINGS
By Juan Bertomeu Vallés Lawyer
Interestingly enough, it has never been explained to the owners of existing buildings that the Basic Law of the Spanish State on the subject of Right of Property protects absolutely the acquired rights that correspond to them. And this is what we are going to try with the present article. Considering the complexity of the matter, at the end of the text we incorporate a series of town-planning basic concepts. The general rule is that the building rights are integrated into the assets of the homeholder only by the fulfillment of the duties of cession of land for public equipments, betterment and charges sharing·out and, finally, execution of the urban development. This general rule has only one basic exception: the existing or positively prescribed buildings; in these cases, the consummate building rights are presumed by law – and therefore protected- integrated into the assets of the homeowner. The legal basis of this exception is regulated in THE FIFTH TRANSITORY DISPOSITION, first paragraph, contained in the Land Law Consolidation Act of 1992 (TRLS), that, in turn, is a literal transcription of the 6th Transitory Disposition of the Law 8/90, for the Reform of the Planning System Regime and Assestment of the Land. This Law 8/90 established the gradual process of consolidation of rights; and to the object of this article, the principle that the application of the Average Use to the plots with existing buildings only can take place when the building is replaced. That is to say, meanwhile the existing building is not destroyed, it is not applicable the Average Use or the Equidistribution of betterments and charges. The Judgment of the Constitutional Court 61/97 declared unconstitutional almost all the articles of the TRLS 1/92, because the Spanish Central Parliament had no jurisdiction on the Planning System, as this exclusive jurisdiction correspond to the Autonomous Regions; The sentence of the Constitutional Court manteined those articles that were affecting only to the basic content of the right of urban property, that for being a matter of Civil Law, his regulation corresponds, under exclusive jurisdiction, to the Central State. So that, inter alia, maintained the constitutionality of the the article 41 and the Fifth Transitory Disposition, first paragraph, both contained in the Land Law Consolidation Act of 1992 (TRLS) In accordance with the principle of the gradual acquisition of rights, the article 41 had a very precise regulation on the existing buildings. The article 41 was part of the basic content of the right of urban property, up to its repeal throught the Law 6/98. This Law 6/98, nevertheless, upheld the The Fifth Transitory Disposition, first paragraph, of the Land Law Consolidation Act of 1992 (TRLS). And today it continues in force, as basic content of the right of property. The literal text of the Fifth Transitory Disposition is as follows: “EXISTING BUILDINGS. - THE EXISTING BUILDINGS at the coming into effect of the Law 8/1990, of July 25, PLACED IN URBAN LAND OR DEVELOPMENT LAND, executed in conformity with the applicable town-planning, or regard from wich does not proceed anymore to dictate measures to restore the town-planning legality that imply its demolition, WILL BE UNDERSTOOD INCORPORATED INTO THE PATRIMONY OF HIS HOLDER ”. “incorporated to the patrimony –understood as assets- of his holder” means to have fulfilled all the town-planning duties, because it supposes having come at the end of town-planning process, or the legal presumption of having fulfilled them. This legal rule neither distinguish if the consolidated buildings are included or excluded in sectors or units of execution, nor distinguishes if they have been constructed under town·planning license (planning permit) or without it, nor distinguishes if the built·up surface is more than allowed by the planning or not. And it does not distinguish, so, in any case, the course of four years, on having determined the prescription, if existed, of the town-planning infraction, it is a definitive limit against any administrative action againts the consolidated buildings. Therefore, the Fifth Transitory Disposition presumes that the above mentioned buildings had fulfilled all the phases (cession, equi·distribution and urban development execution), remaining, therefore, directly protected by the Law; consequently, the Local Planning Authority is not empowered to affect the consolidated rights of the homeowners. In other words, the Fifth Transitory Disposition granted a sort of amnesty to the existing buildings constructed before July 25, 1990. The owner who has consolidated the right of urban property, concretising the development rights in the existing building, CAN NOT BE FORCED TO SUPPORT TOWN-PLANNING CHARGES (except those later indicated), NEITHER TO DO PROPORTIONAL CESSIONS FOR EQUIPMENT LAND, NEITHER TO CEDE TO THE TOWN HALL 10 % OF HIS DEVELOPMENT/BUILDING RIGHTS, NEITHER TO BE FORCED TO A SHARE-OUT OF BETTERMENTS AND CHARGES. And this is so, because the opposite would be so much as expropriate without compensation an already consolidated right, to apply retroactively the law and, finally, to create a situation of permanent juridical insecurity. Therefore, the owner of an existing building can only be forced TO COMPLETE THE URBAN DEVELOPMENT with regard to those minimal elements of urbanisation which his property lacks. We hope that this basic principle will be incorporated into the new Valencian Planning Law, determining that the existing buildings in development land will be delimited as Units of Independent Execution, determining that their only obligations will be to complete the works of urban development which they are missing.
Fundamental concepts of the Valencian Planning Systema) Objective Use (Aprovechamiento Objetivo): it is the quantity of square meters of construction of private destination allowed (or required) by the planning in a given plot. b) Subjective Use (Aprovechamiento Subjetivo): it is the quantity of square meters that can be builded, wich constitute the development or building rights that correspond to the owner of a plot, to which will have right supporting the cost of the works of urban development that, proportionally, correspond to such a plot. The subjective use is what remains once discounted of the Average Use the percentage of use of obligatory cession.
c) Average Use (Aprovechamiento Tipo): it is the unitary edificability(builded square meters divided by the plot square meters) that the planning establishes for all the plots included in the same Area of Betterment and Charges Sharing·out, in order that to all the owners corresponds, in a fair distribution, an identical or similar subjective use, with independence of the different objectives uses that the Plan allows to construct in their individual plot.
d) Excess of Use (Excedente de Aprovechamiento): it is the remaining positive difference once deducted of the objective use of a plot the subjective use that corresponds to the owner of the same one.
e) Compensation of the excess of use: It is the juridical·economic operation, of town-planning management, by which the right to construct the excess of use in a certain plot is compensated onerously. The excess of use is compensated transferring to the Administration equivalent plots, free of charges, or compensating in cash its value (The individuals cannot construct a surplus of use without having compensated it previously; The public income for this concept will remain fond of the municipal patrimony of soil).
f) Area of Share-out (Área de Reparto): set of plots regard of wich the Plan determines the same average use. The area of share-out is the basic objetive principle to apply the just distribution of benefits and charges.
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