Land Registration Act 2002
The Land Registration Act 2002 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which repealed and replaced previous legislation governing land registration, in particular the Land Registration Act 1925, which governed an earlier, though similar, system. The Act, together with the Land Registration Rules, regulates the role and practice of HM Land Registry.
Background
The Land Registration Act 2002 was introduced in response to the Law Commission and HM Land Registry report, Land Registration for the Twenty-first Century. The Act:- Simplified and modernised the law of land registration;
- Made the register reflect a more accurate picture of a title to land, showing more fully the rights and subsidiary interests that affect it; and
- Was intended to facilitate the introduction of e-conveyancing.
- Enabled shorter leases to be registered;
- Further encouraged voluntary land registration;
- Changed the system of protection of third party rights; and
- Reformed and modernised the law of adverse possession.
- Repealed the Land Transfer Act 1875
- Repealed the Land Registration Act 1925
Land registration
- Freehold estate is transferred, whether under a sale, gift or other circumstances;
- Legal lease for more than seven years is granted;
- Legal lease with more than seven years to run is transferred; or
- Grant of a first legal charge.
Grades of title
On first registration, the registrar awards a grade of title to each registered estate.In the case of freehold estates, one of the following grades of title may be awarded according to of the Act:
- Absolute title – This shows there is nothing dubious about the title. The estate is vested in the proprietor and is subject only to entries on the register and unregistered interests which override. Title does not have to be perfect – if the registrar believes that any defect will "not cause the holding under the title to be disturbed", absolute title will be given – s.9 LRA.
- Possessory freehold title – there is no documentary evidence of title. Title depends on adverse possession. It conveys no guarantee of title at the time of registration, but subsequent problems will be covered by the guarantee. It can be upgraded into absolute title after being in possession as proprietor for 12 years, ).
- Qualified freehold title – the title is subject to a fundamental defect. There is no guarantee in respect of the specified defect. It may be upgraded to absolute title if registrar is satisfied as to the title – s.62 LRA.
- Absolute leasehold title – same as absolute freehold except the proprietor is also subject to covenants in the lease
- Good leasehold title – same as absolute leasehold except the right of the landlord to grant the lease is not guaranteed
- Possessory leasehold title – same as possessory freehold
- Qualified leasehold title – same as qualified freehold
Registerable dispositions
- any transfer of a freehold, whether for value or by way of gift or on death
- the grant of a legal lease for more than seven years
- the grant of a legal lease taking effect in possession in three or more months from grant
- the grant of a legal charge
- the express grant of legal easement
Priority
According to of the Act, a person acquiring an interest under a registrable disposition for valuable consideration and having been registered successfully as owner of the interest, takes it subject to only:- an entry on the register, mainly a Notice in the charges register
- unregistered interests which override
- interests excepted from the effects of registration
- and if the estate is a lease, to burdens incidental to the lease
Note: if the transferee is not a purchaser, he or she takes the title subject to all pre-existing proprietary interests affecting the land – see s.28 LRA 2002
Restrictions
A restriction on the proprietorship register prevents the registration of a disposition unless complied with.This is the appropriate way of alerting a purchaser of the existence of an equitable family interest which arises under a trust of land. A restriction does not protect the priority of that interest, nor any right of occupation – it notifies the purchaser of the interest. In any event, in the normal case, the purchaser will overreach and in such cases it is immaterial whether the purchaser knows of the equitable family interest or not.
Restrictions are also useful to control dealings with the land as a secondary means of protection. For example, a person with an option to purchase land should protect that interest by means of a Notice. However, they may also enter a restriction to prevent, or to be alerted to, any attempt to transfer the land in breach of the option.
Notices
According to of the Act: "A notice is an entry on the register in respect of a burden of an interest affecting a registered estate or charge."According to , the following interests cannot be protected by a notice:
- the interest of a beneficiary under a trust of land
- a lease granted for less than three years
- restrictive covenants in a lease
- and certain other minor property rights.
According to , all other interests may be protected by a notice. Examples include:
- equitable easements
- freehold restrictive covenants
- equitable leases
- estate contracts, including options to purchase and rights of pre-emption.
Adverse possession
The Act provides that anyone who occupies registered land without permission from the owner and treats it as his own for 10 years is entitled to apply to be registered as owner, although the system introduced by the Act means that few claims will succeed. Specifically, according to paragraph 1 of Schedule 6 to the Act:
The Land Registry is obliged to notify the registered proprietor of the land that an application for possessory title has been made. The registered proprietor then has 65 business days to object to the registration. The objection may dispute the applicant's right to be registered as owner or, more usually, the registered proprietor will claim the benefit of the process found in paragraph 5 of Schedule 6. This provides that a registered proprietor who objects has a further two years to evict the adverse possessor. It will be enough to secure eviction within these two years that the registered proprietor relies on their registered title. No other reason need be given. Failure to secure the eviction of the adverse possessor within these two years gives the adverse possessor the right to re-apply to be registered and such a second application will be successful.
In three special cases, the adverse possessor may be registered as proprietor without having to wait for two further years and even if the proprietor objects. These special cases usually arise because the adverse possessor has some other reason for claiming ownership in addition to their possession for 10 years.
The new rules regulating adverse possession can be found in of the Act, and the rules regulating the procedures for registration of an adverse possessor can be found at to the Act.
These rules are much more difficult to satisfy than the common law with regard to adverse possession, although it is now clear that all rules of adverse possession are human rights compliant, see generally the judgment of the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights in J.A. Pye Land Ltd v United Kingdom
A registered proprietor need simply object and then proceed to evict within two years. The adverse possessor's claim is therefore vulnerable under the 2002 Act and the registered proprietor is protected in all but the most unusual circumstances.
After the passage of the Act, local councils and other organisations with large land holdings began the systematic registration of their land in order to prevent title being lost to squatters.
Objection and adjudication
Anybody may make an objection to the Registrar about an application. The Registrar must advise the applicant and, so long as the objection is not groundless, must dispose of the objection by agreement between the parties. If agreement cannot be reached, the matter must be referred to the Land Registration Division, Property Chamber, First Tier Tribunal who is appointed by the Lord Chancellor. The Tribunal also hears appeals from aggrieved persons on decisions of the Registrar as to access to the Land Registry Network.The Tribunal can make any order which the High Court could make for the rectification or setting aside of certain dispositions, contracts and other documents affecting interests in land. Appeals from the decision of the Regulator can be made to the High Court.