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Adverse Possession

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Eg, an interest taking effect after a life estate, time starts to run when ... to a different disability, such as unsoundness of mind, before reaching full age ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adverse Possession


1
Adverse Possession
  • Continued

2
Special Circumstances
  • Crown Land The Crown is never barred, and time
    only starts to run in favour of the adverse
    possessor when the land is included in a Crown
    Grant
  • Future interests time starts to run when the
    future interest becomes an interest in
    possession. Eg, an interest taking effect after
    a life estate, time starts to run when the life
    tenant dies. This provision has no effect if the
    land is already in adverse possession when the
    future interest is created
  • Forfeiture and breach of condition Time runs
    from the time of the forfeiture or breach. But
    the right to recover for forfeiture or breach by
    virtue of the future interest will not be
    affected.

3
Tenancies
  • Tenancies Tenancy at will Time will start to run
    when the tenancy is determined, and it will be
    deemed to be determined one year after its
    creation if it is not determined earlier
  • Periodic tenancies Time runs from the end of the
    first period of the tenancy, but if rent is
    subsequently received it will run from the date
    of the last receipt
  • Leases in writing at a rent above 2 per year
    Possession by a tenant under a lease for a term
    absolute is never adverse to the landlord. But
    time will run against the landlord and in favour
    of another person who claims to be entitled to
    the land subject to the lease if rent is paid to
    that person and not to the landlord

4
Extension of the Limitation Period
  • Disability
  • Acknowledgement
  • Concealed Fraud

5
Disability
  • The definition of disability is in s 3(2) and (3)
    of the Limitation of Actions act and includes a
    person
  • who is under age, or
  • who is subject to a guardianship arrangement for
    intellectual disability
  • s 23(1) provides for the case where the owner was
    under a disability when the right of action first
    accrued
  • The period may be extended for 6 years from the
    date when the owner ceases to be under a
    disability
  • If the owner was a minor when the right to
    commence legal action to recover the land
    accrued, he or she will not cease to be under a
    disability if he or she becomes subject to a
    different disability, such as unsoundness of
    mind, before reaching full age
  • In these cases, the 6 years will only begin to
    run from the date when the true owner recovers
    from the disability or dies

6
Disability
  • But there is an overall limit of thirty years on
    the period
  • So, for example, if the relevant disabilities
    extend for 28 years from the date of first
    adverse possession the section operates to extend
    the right for only 2 years, not for 6 years
  • It was Land Titles Office practice for many years
    not to accept an application for registration
    based on adverse possession until 30 years had
    elapsed unless it could be proved positively that
    the true owner had not suffered a disability

7
Acknowledgement
  • What if the adverse possessor acknowledges (in
    writing and signed by the adverse possessor or an
    agent) the title of the true owner?
  • A new period of limitation commences
  • Such an acknowledgment binds everyone in
    possession during the ensuing period

8
Concealed Fraud
  • Where a right of action is concealed by the fraud
    of the defendant or an agent, or some person
    through whom the claim is made, time begins to
    run when the plaintiff discovers the fraud or
    when the plaintiff could with reasonable
    diligence have discovered it
  • The legislation also protects an honest purchaser
    against fraudulent concealment

9
Stopping Time Running
  • Time will cease to run if the owner succeeds in
    ejecting the adverse possessor
  • A new period of limitation will start to run from
    the time when the adverse possessor resumes
    possession
  • Note that time does not cease to run when the
    owner merely makes a formal entry on the land or
    when he or she merely makes a verbal or written
    claim to ownership
  • When a writ to recover the land is issued time
    has ceased to run as at the date of issue of the
    writ

10
Equitable Estates
  • No period of limitation applies to an action by a
    beneficiary under a trust to recover from the
    trustee trust property, or the proceeds of trust
    property
  • In general, the owner of an equitable estate is
    subject to the same rules as if his or her estate
    were a legal estate

11
Effect of Adverse Possession on Title
  • With some exceptions, the rule is that when any
    person's right of action is barred then his or
    her title to the land is extinguished
  • When the maximum period applicable has expired
    the Land Titles Office will register the adverse
    possessor as the proprietor of the estate
    acquired
  • The important exceptions are
  • the estate of a tenant for life, or of statutory
    owner under the Settled Land Act, is preserved so
    long as any person entitled to a beneficial
    interest in the land is not barred
  • the estate held by a trustee is preserved until
    every person entitled to a beneficial interest is
    barred

12
Title to Land And Priority Between Conflicting
Interests in Land
  • and an argument for law reform in Victoria

13
Recap on General Law Land
  • General law land ownership was established by
    production of a chain of documents
  • If valid, these established that the person
    claiming ownership had obtained the same right to
    the land as someone in the past
  • Assumed to have confirmed the earlier title
    documents back to a good root of title.
  • Cumbersome and expensive
  • Risk of a defect was placed on the purchaser
  • In Victoria, it is necessary to search back
    through the chain of title for only 30 years to
    establish a good root of title s 44 of the
    Property Law Act 1958

14
Recap on General Law Land
  • Risk of a defect was placed on the purchaser
  • In Victoria, it is necessary to search back
    through the chain of title for only 30 years to
    establish a good root of title s 44 of the
    Property Law Act 1958
  • Reforms made in 1998 now require the conversion
    of general law (old law) land to Torrens land
    whenever there is a transaction with the title

15
Land Under the Transfer of Land Act
  • The Transfer of Land Act provides a simpler,
    cheaper and more secure system to establish and
    confer ownership
  • The Act sets up a system of land title and
    transfer administered by the Land Titles Office.
    The present registration of an estate or interest
    in land is guaranteed by the State in two
    respects
  • what is stated on the Certificate of Title is
    upheld as conclusive evidence of the state of the
    legal title (indefeasibility of title)
  • loss of a registered estate or interest through
    operation of the indefeasibility doctrine can be
    compensated through Torrens compensation scheme

16
Land Under the Transfer of Land Act
  • These structural factors in Transfer of Land Act
    avoid the necessity for searching of a chain of
    title
  • There is a consumer protection element what is
    stated on the Certificate of Title is taken to be
    definitive
  • This reduces the risk to the purchaser
  • We look a little more in detail at registration
    of title

17
Effect of Registration
  • Section 40 An instrument takes effect on
    registration (equivalent to under seal) Note
    Courts have maintained the possibility of
    interests being recognised and assigned in Equity
  • Section 41 A certificate of title is conclusive
    evidence of the estates and interests in land
    registered on it (typical Torrens)
  • Section 42 reinforces the conclusiveness of the
    Certificate of Title, providing that interests
    registered on the certificate of title take
    priority according to the order of their
    registration except in the case of fraud

18
Effect of Registration
  • Section 43 modifies the English general law
    Doctrine of Notice by providing that a person not
    involved in a fraud who deals with the registered
    proprietor is not to be concerned to investigate
    the circumstances under which the registered
    proprietor became registered. BUT, if you have
    notice of a fraud when you acquire title,
    registration will not protect you even if you are
    innocent.
  • Section 44 This section is subject conflicting
    cases. Until this disagreement is resolved it is
    difficult to explain an undisputed reading of the
    section. Look at the cases in your notes for
    conflicting interpretation
  • S44(1) Any folio of the Register or amendment to
    the Register procured or made by fraud shall be
    void as against any person defrauded or sought to
    be defrauded thereby and no party or privy to the
    fraud shall take any benefit therefrom
  • S44(2) But nothing in this Act shall be so
    interpreted as to leave subject to an action of
    ejectment or for recovery of damages or for
    deprivation of the estate or interest in respect
    of which he is registered as proprietor any bona
    fide purchaser for valuable consideration of land
    on the ground that the proprietor through or
    under whom he claims was registered as proprietor
    through fraud or error or has derived from or
    through a person registered as proprietor through
    fraud or error and this whether such fraud or
    error consists in wrong description of the
    boundaries or of the parcels of any land or
    otherwise howsoever

19
Deferred Indefeasibility and Immediate
Indefeasibility
  • The dispute about the meaning of s44 of the
    Transfer of Land Act concerns whether
    registration of an estate or interest in land,
    innocently obtained, makes that interest
  • indefeasible immediately (immediate
    indefeasibility), or whether
  • indefeasibility is to be deferred until the time
    when the person who innocently obtains
    registration transfers the title on to another
    innocent party (deferred indefeasibility)
  • Consider the example on the next slide

20
Indefeasibility Example
  • Evans title is transferred to Felicity through a
    forgery of Evans signature made by George, who
    disappears with the proceeds of sale.
  • Under immediate indefeasibility, Felicity obtains
    an indefeasible title as soon as the transfer is
    registered
  • Under deferred indefeasibility, the transfer is
    void for forgery (a species of fraud) and Evan
    can bring an action of ejectment against Felicity
    and have the Certificate of Title restored to his
    name

21
Indefeasibility Example
  • Now suppose that before the forgery is
    discovered, Felicity sells the land to Harry and
    the transfer to her is registered
  • Under immediate indefeasibility, Harry obtains an
    indefeasible title in her own right through
    registration
  • Under deferred indefeasibility, Felicitys title
    obtained indefeasibility when she transferred it
    to Harry. So Harry's title cannot be challenged
    by Evan, but it would remain open to challenge by
    Felicity if there had been some fraud in the
    second transaction, regardless of Harry's
    innocence

22
Deferred Indefeasibility - Discussion
  • The doctrine of deferred indefeasibility is
    complicated and illogical because title becomes
    indefeasible the moment it is assigned away
  • The advantage is that the doctrine appears to get
    just results, especially when the second innocent
    interest (Felicity in our example) is a mortgage,
    the loss of which would be compensated from the
    Torrens compensations scheme, and the defrauded
    party (Evan in this example) has an emotional
    attachment to the land they have lost
  • This doctrine prevailed in common law countries
    for some decades

23
Immediate Indefeasibility - Discussion
  • The doctrine of immediate indefeasibility is
    simpler and logical
  • The problem is that between two innocent parties
    the newcomer prevails and the person likely to
    have the deepest attachment to the land loses
  • As far as Victoria is concerned, we seem to
    favour the doctrine of immediate indefeasibility
    (although not settled completely)
  • It seems unfair that an innocent purchaser who
    makes all the usual searches should lose because
    of a transaction which it is impossible to
    discover, and which has probably been facilitated
    to some extent by the registered proprietor's own
    carelessness

24
Frazer v Walker
  • Immediate indefeasibility
  • Mr and Mrs Frazer were joint owners of a farm in
    New Zealand
  • Mrs Frazer forged her husband's name on a
    mortgage of the farm to Mr and Mrs Radomski as
    security for a loan of 3000
  • No principal or interest was repaid under the
    loan
  • Mr and Mrs Radomski exercised their power of sale
    as mortgagees
  • Mr Walker bought the property
  • Mr Fraser took legal action to recover the land
  • The Privy Council decided that Mr and Mrs
    Radomski acquired an indefeasible title to their
    mortgage as soon as it was registere
  • Mr Walker also acquired indefeasible title to the
    fee simple estate he purchased from the
    Radomskis when they exercised their mortgagees
    power sale, and the transfer was registered

25
Breskvar v Wall
  • Immediate indefeasibility was adopted by the High
    Court of Australia in Breskvar v Wall in 1971
  • Mr and Mrs Breskvar left a signed blank transfer
    of land with their solicitor as security for a
    loan
  • He inserted the name of his grandson, Wall, and
    had it registered
  • Wall then sold the land to Alban Pty Ltd
  • After Alban Pty Ltd had paid the purchase price,
    but before it lodged the transaction for
    registration, the Breskvars lodged a Caveat
  • The High Court adopted the doctrine of immediate
    indefeasibility, so the solicitors grandson Wall
    could create a valid transaction with Alban Pty
    Ltd
  • Between the unregistered interest of the
    Breskvars and the unregistered interest of Alban
    Pty Ltd it decided in favour of Alban
  • Although the Breskvars were first in time, they
    had been less than prudent in their transaction
    with their solicitor

26
Deferred Indefeasibility more just?
  • The doctrine of deferred indefeasibility seems to
    deliver just results, especially when the
    newcomer is a mortgagee
  • Chasfild Pty Ltd v Taranto
  • Mr and Mrs Taranto wished to borrow 10,000 at
    low interest from a reliable and conventional
    bank with a view to investing it elsewhere at
    higher rates
  • They offered their home as security, but through
    a string of frauds and forgeries by a finance
    broker and a solicitor, and apparently their son,
    it was mortgaged for 100,000 - far more than
    they had approved
  • The transaction collapsed and the mortgagee sued
    for possession of the land in order to sell it
    under the mortgagee's power of sale
  • Under the doctrine of immediate indefeasibility,
    the bank would clearly prevail
  • But under the doctrine of deferred
    indefeasibility the Tarantos were able to keep
    their home and the mortgagee had to apply for
    compensation
  • This makes sense because a mortgagee is really
    only interested in the money

27
The Compensation Provisions
  • The Transfer of land Act assiste parties who
    suffer loss through amendment of the register
  • A person aggrieved may apply to the Registrar of
    Titles to be compensated for a loss
  • If compensation is refused, the applicant may
    commence legal action against the Registrar
  • Indemnity is not payable where the claimant or an
    agent has substantially contributed to the loss,
    or where valuable consideration was not paid
  • Note particularly that claimant/agent are not
    liable for losses occasioned by a breach of trust
  • A surveyor would usually be classified as an agent

28
Indefeasibility could be avoided if
  • The conflicts at the heart of most
    indefeasibility cases would not have arisen if
    the following were followed (an argument for
    reform)
  • caveats should be lodged as a matter of course to
    protect unregistered transactions
  • the parties to a transaction should attend in
    person before a solicitor to settle the
    transaction the parties should have to identify
    themselves and show that they understand the
    nature of their transaction in the process
  • a doctrine of unjust enrichment should be
    available to obtain compensation for a party
    deprived of an unregistered interest from the
    party who obtained the benefit of it without a
    legal reason
  • an efficient cadastre of non-title information
    about land, linked to accurate title plans which
    actually fit with neighbouring parcels,
    providing sound information about different
    interests in land, and where possible the
    paramount interests

29
Question
  • Norma worked hard and saved for many years to
    buy a ten pin bowling alley business, in which
    sport she was a well known champion. Norma
    noticed one being sold by Fair Play Bank at a
    mortgagee's sale.
  • Norma's solicitor searched the title, planning
    schemes and certificates, rates, land tax and so
    on. Everything pointed to what the Certificate
    of Title stated -the land on which the Bowling
    Alley stood was owned in legal fee simple by
    Pauls Ten Pins Pty Ltd, subject to a registered
    legal mortgage in favour of Fair Play Bank.
    Normas solicitor again checked everything and
    decided to complete the transaction. Norma paid
    over all of her money and the Transfer of Land
    was registered in her name.
  • One day a man walked into the Bowling Alley,
    introduced himself as Paul Pins and started
    explaining in a very loud voice how successful
    his world bowling tour had been. It appeared
    that Paul left the Bowling Alley (then not
    subject to a mortgage) in the care of a man who
    happened to be bowling the day when Paul left on
    his tour a year beforehand. For good measure
    Paul left the duplicate Certificate of Title, a
    signed blank mortgage, and other documents with
    the bowler in case he had to raise some money in
    an emergency, and to operate the bank accounts.
    The bowler mortgaged the land to Fair Play Bank
    and disappeared with the money thus raised. Not
    a cent was ever repaid to the Bank.
  • Is Normas title secure? What was the position
    of the mortgage in favor of Fair Play Bank? Is
    there somewhere that Paul Pins could at least
    seek compensation?
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