Unregistered Title - title investigation Flashcards
Compulsory First Registration: what are the relevant dates and how must it be done if the land being purchased now is unregistered?
- triggered on a dealing with the property (sale/ gift / mortgage / easement / covenant) = you must register unregistered land at the Land Registry
- started in 1926
- final date: 1 December 1990 (sales) and 1 April 1998 (gifts)
For this transaction - unregistered land must be registered:
- by buyer solicitor = if root of title dated before 1 December 1990 (b/c this means the land was not sold or mortgaged after then so nothing triggered CFR)
- by seller solicitor (on request of buyer) = if root of title dated after 1 December 1990 (this indicates a transaction happened after the required date of first registration so seller should have registered themselves)
how does the seller’s solicitor deduce unregistered title? (4 steps)
1) EXAMINE BUNDLE OF DEEDS AND DOCUMENTS
2) IDENTIFY ROOT OF TITLE
3) IDENTIFY CHAIN OF OWNERSHIP
4) PREPARE EPITOME OF TITLE
What is a root of title? what is a good root of title? (4)
a deed that can be relied on as providing title - the most recent deed that meets the following requirements:
- dated more than 15 years ago
- CFR date is more than this so this is likely = buyer has to register under first registration
- if dated after 1 December 1990 = ask seller to register at their expense
- deals with both legal and beneficial title (not ‘bare legal title’)
- adequately describes extent of land being conveyed = e.g., postal address, or referring to document of scale plan
- does not cast doubt on seller’s title =
- if doc executed under POA, provide the POA document to ensure it is valid
- if owner’s name changed due to marriage, provide marriage certificate
Good roots of title are:
- sale or legal mortgage (not gift/trust/will)
- dated before 1 December 1990
- silent on legal/beneficial title because presumption is that it deals with both
what is the chain of ownership and what does the seller’s solicitor do?
- seller solicitor must provide a chain of documents from root of title to the seller’s title
- docs dated before root of title may be needed if they are referred to in root of title or contain relevant covenants/easements
Epitome of title: what is it? what is included? what is excluded?
list of documents and copies of documents provided by seller solicitor
documents to include:
- root of title and chain of title documents
- power of attorney which any deed in the chain of title has been executed under (incl. root of title)
- if property passed by survivorship = death certificate
- if property passed under will/intestacy = grant of representation and assent
- leases which are still running
- any mortgages created after root of title (even if discharged)
documents to exclude:
- expired leases
- land charges searches
- deeds containing planning permission, searches, correspondence, architect plans
- docs that only affect beneficial ownership e.g., trust deeds
what documents does the seller’s solicitor send to the buyer’s solicitor pre-exchange vs on completion?
- to deduce title, seller’s solicitor sends buyer’s solicitor COPIES of documents listed on the epitome of title (as some original docs may be held by lender)
- seller solicitor undertakes to send buyer solicitor the ORIGINAL. copies on completion and does so
how does the buyer solicitor investigate unregistered land? (6)
- epitome of title is sufficient to register with title absolute
- land is actually unregistered via index map search
- the chain of ownership is complete and each deed in the chain of title is validly executed and stamped
- check that root of title is valid and satisfies 4 requirements –> if dated after 1 December 1990 ask seller solicitor to register before proceeding
- there are no title defects which affect the value of the land or its marketability
- conduct Land Charges search for any benefits / burdens
what does an index map (SIM) search reveal? why is this important to the buyer?
- if land in a boundary is registered (buyer must check the land is actually unregistered)
- pending applications for first registration
- cautions against first registration (could be by someone with a right agains the property like a covenant or easement)
validity requirements of deeds pre 31 July 1990 (common law) (4)
- clear on its face that it is intended to be a deed
- signed by grantor (individual + witness / company 2 directors or 1 director+secretary)
- delivered (dated)
- SEALED = RED WAX/PAPER DISC + company stamps its seal
–> buyer solicitor must check all deeds in chain of title comply
what are the stamping requirements of pre-1990 deeds? (2 stamps needed)
2 requirements:
- conveyance has a Certificate of Value (if gifted) OR is properly stamped with the ad valorem stamp duty (showing stamp duty tax was paid - pre-SDLT)
AND
- conveyance has a Particulars Delivered stamp
if any are missing = buyer solicitor insists that seller pay outstanding stamp duty and provides proof
checking how beneficial ownership is held in unregistered land - what should buyer solicitor do?
- assume seller is surviving joint tenant if =
- the conveyance states that the seller is beneficially entitled to the whole of the property
- there is no memorandum of severance
- there is no bankruptcy order/petition registered against the seller
–> buyer solicitor should ask for certified copies of deceased JT death certificate
- seller is surviving tenant in common if = above requirements are not met
–> buyer solicitor must ask for second trustee to overreach the beneficial interest of the deceased tenant in common + death certificate certified copy
what does the buyer’s solicitor search at the land charges register when investigating title to unregistered land?
- carry out the searches against each owner of the charge in the chain of title dating back to 1926 (including owners in the chain of ownership given by seller’s solicitor)
- search is against names of owners for the period of ownership they had
- take care that names are spelt differently
charges in the Land Charges Register (5 types)
1) puisne mortgage = C(i)
2) estate contract = C (iv)
3) restrictive covenant = D(ii)
4) Equitable easement = D(iii)
5) home right = F
how does the buyer’s solicitor find out what rights and burdens the unregistered land is subject to? (4)
- mortgages = provided in the epitome of title even if discharged; puisne mortgages are registrable in Land Charges Register
- easements = provided in the epitome of title + equitable easements are are registrable in Land Charges Register
- covenants = provided in the epitome of title + restrictive covenants are are registrable in Land Charges Register
- leases = currently running leases are provided in the epitome of title (not registrable or protected in Land Charges Register)
mortgages in unregistered land
- mortgage deed should be listed on the epitome of title with a vacating receipt if it was discharged
- first legal mortgage is not registrable as lender has deeds until mortgage is paid - BUT mortgage deed must have been in the epitome of title
- puisne mortgages are subsequent and can be protected by a C(i) land charge in the land charges register
- ensure seller solicitor undertakes to redeem the mortgage on completion