Land law l4 MCQ Flashcards
In the official copies of a registered title, in which register would you find the details of any burdens on the land?
Absolute title
Overriding interest
Charges register
Proprietorship register
Property register
Correct
This is correct. The charges register contains the details of any burdens on the land, for example mortgages or covenants that burden the land.
The charges register
Correct
This is correct. The charges register contains the details of any burdens on the land, for example mortgages or covenants that burden the land.
A buyer and seller enter into a contract to buy/sell a freehold estate. They enter into a document which is described as a contract for the sale of land. The document contains all the agreed terms and is signed by the seller in the presence of a witness who attests their signature. Which of the following options correctly describes the validity of this document?
The contract is invalid because it does not comply with LP(MP)A 1989, s 2.
Correct
This is correct. The contract must comply with LP(MP)A 1989, s 2; it must be in writing, contain all the agreed terms and be signed by both parties. The document is not a valid contract as it has not been signed by both the buyer and the seller.
Which of the following options correctly describes the nature of proprietary rights in land?
The right is enforceable in rem and is capable of being enforced against third parties
Correct
This is correct. A proprietary right is enforceable in rem, which means use or possession of the right can be recovered by the right holder, they do not have to settle for damages. A proprietary right is also capable of being enforced against a third party, not just the original grantor of the right. Registration systems are in place, which new land owners can check, enabling a right holder to protect their right so that it will be enforceable.
Which of the following principles of land registration is arguably defeated by overriding interests?
The Mirror Principle
Correct
This is correct. Put simply the register should reflect all matters that the property has the benefit of and all the matters that the property is subject to, it should be a clear and comprehensive account of the ownership and rights that benefit and burden a piece of land. Overriding interests are interests that are binding even though they do not appear on the registered title. They are therefore criticised as defeating the mirror principle of land registration.
Which of the following options correctly describes the nature of proprietary rights in land?
The right is enforceable in rem and is capable of being enforced against third parties
Correct
This is correct.
A proprietary right is enforceable in rem, which means use or possession of the right can be recovered by the right holder, they do not have to settle for damages.
A proprietary right is also capable of being enforced against a third party, not just the original grantor of the right.
Registration systems are in place, which new land owners can check, enabling a right holder to protect their right so that it will be enforceable
On what basis might a clause in a mortgage deed, which imposes an interest rate of 25% per annum, be challenged?
This is correct. An interest rate may be amended or struck out by the court if it is imposed in a morally reprehensible way: CItyland Properties v Dabrah and Multiservice Bookbinding v Marden
The case of Kreglinger v New Patagonia Meat Storage Co looked at the circumstances in which a collateral advantage may be upheld. What is the principle from that case?
A collateral advantage will be upheld if it is genuinely part of a separate transaction, irrespective of when it comes to an end
Correct
This is correct. If an advantage for the lender is genuinely separate from the mortgage then the question of whether it comes to an end within or beyond the mortgage term is irrelevant. Indeed, all mortgage law is irrelevant to a genuinely separate transaction.
Last year A and B bought a registered freehold property with the assistance of a loan secured by a 25 year capital and interest repayment mortgage. The mortgage deed contains a term which states that the legal date for redemption is the final day of the mortgage term. Last week, A inherited a large sum of money. Which of the following is the correct statement on whether A and B can redeem the mortgage now, using the inherited money?
The mortgage can be redeemed because a clause which prevents redemption will be void
Correct
This is correct. A and B in this scenario do not have a right to redeem until the legal date for redemption has arisen. The clause which states that the legal date for redemption is the final day of the term will effectively prevent A and B from redeeming the mortgage for 25 years. Courts will declare void clauses which aim to prevent borrowers from redeeming mortgages, as here (Toomes v Conset).
When does the borrower’s equitable right to redeem arise?
On the day after the legal date for redemption
Correct
This is correct. Generally speaking, the legal date for redemption arises between three and six months after the mortgage is created. The equitable right to redeem arises the next day. This means that the mortgage cannot be redeemed under any circumstances for the first few months.
C and D recently bought a holiday home in the Alps. In order to fund the purchase, they borrowed money from the bank and secured the loan by granting to the bank a legal mortgage over the family home in England. Which one of the following correctly explains the position regarding possible undue influence?
The lender would not be put on enquiry of undue influence because there is no relationship of trust and confidence between C and D
The lender would be put on enquiry of undue influence because C and D are buying a property in a different country
The lender would be put on enquiry of undue influence because there is more than one borrower
The lender would not be put on enquiry of undue influence because the loan is for the joint benefit of C and D
The lender would not be put on enquiry of undue influence because the lender has taken the necessary steps to bring home the risk of the mortgage
The lender would not be put on enquiry of undue influence because the loan is for the joint benefit of C and D
Correct
This is correct. The lender would not be put on enquiry of undue influence because the loan is for the joint benefit of C and D. In CIBC Mortgages plc v Pitt the House of Lords confirmed that a lender would not be put on notice that there is a risk of undue influence where a transaction is ostensibly for a couple’s joint benefit, as it is on the facts here.
What formalities must be met in order to create an express legal easement for five years?
The easement must be created by deed plus substantive registration
Correct
This is correct. All expressly created legal interests in land must be created by deed (LPA 1925, s 52) which complies with LP(MP)A 1989 s 1.
In addition the easement must be substantively registered LRA 2002 s 27(2)(d).
A grants a two-year lease of a flat in A’s house to B. The lease includes an express right for B to store bikes in A’s garden shed. B stores several bikes and takes up all of the available space in the shed. To ensure the bikes are not stolen, B padlocks the shed and keeps the key.
Which statement correctly explains why the right is not capable of being an easement?
The right does not benefit B’s flat but simply benefits B personally
The right gives B exclusive possession of the shed
The right granted to B means that A will need to obtain permission to use the shed
The right granted to B means that A will incur expenditure paying for storage elsewhere
The right is not of a type which has been judicially recognised
The right gives B exclusive possession of the shed
Correct
This is correct. If the use granted to the grantee amounts to exclusive possession then the right is too extensive to be an easement. Here, the right leaves A with no reasonable use of the shed (the ouster principle form Batchelor v Marlow) and deprives A of possession and control of the shed (Moncreiff v Jamieson)
A sold part of his field to B. In the transfer deed, B covenanted to build and maintain a fence along the boundary with A’s land. B built the fence. B sold his land to C last year. In the transfer deed, C entered into an indemnity covenant with B. The fence was damaged in a storm six months ago and C has not replaced it.
Which of the following statements correctly describes C’s position in relation to the covenant?
The burden of the covenant has not passed to C although C could be liable in damages to B
The burden of the covenant has not passed to C as the covenant is purely personal to B
The burden of the covenant has passed to C under the rule in Halsall v Brizell and C can be sued for breach
The burden of the covenant has passed to C under Tulk v Moxhay and C can be sued for breach
The burden of the covenant has passed to C as it has been expressly annexed to the servient land, and C can be sued for breach
The burden of the covenant has not passed to C although C could be liable in damages to B
Correct
This is correct. This is a positive covenant, so generally the burden does not pass to successors: Austerberry v Oldham Corporation. The exception in Halsall v Brizell does not apply here as there is no mutual benefit and burden in relation to this covenant. Therefore B remains liable in damages and can recover them from C as C entered into an indemnity covenant in this respect.
A owned two adjoining freehold offices, Unit X and Unit Y, from which he ran his business. Needing less room, he sold Unit Y to B. In the transfer deed, B covenanted ‘for himself and his successors in title to Unit Y not to use Unit Y for retail purposes’.
A sold Unit X to C last week but the transfer did not mention the covenants. B is now using Unit Y as a car parts sales centre.
Which of the following statements correctly describes C’s position in relation to the benefit of the covenant?
C has the benefit of the covenant by express assignment
C has the benefit of the covenant by statutory annexation
C has the benefit of the covenant by express annexation
C does not have the benefit of the covenant as there is no annexation
C does not have the benefit of the covenant as there is no assignment
C has the benefit of the covenant by statutory annexation
Correct
This is correct. The wording of the covenant does not annex the benefit expressly; nor is there any evidence that the covenant has been expressly assigned when Unit X was transferred. In the absence of express annexation, Law of Property Act 1925, s 78 operates to annex the benefit of the covenant to the dominant land at the time the covenant was created. So when the Unit X was transferred to C, C gained the benefit of the covenant and can enforce it.
What does Administration of Justice Act 1970, s 36 enable a court to do?Postpone an order for possession of commercial property for a reasonable period
Postpone an order for possession of residential or commercial property for 28 days
Postpone an order for possession of residential property for a reasonable period
Prevent a lender from repossessing mortgaged property altogether
Postpone possession by a lender even if the lender has not applied for an order for possession
Postpone an order for possession of residential property for a reasonable period
Correct
This is correct. As long as the lender has applied for an order for possession, the court may postpone possession of residential properties only on such terms and for such a period as it considers reasonable to give the borrower the chance to repay the arrears.