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Land Covenants

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Title: Land Covenants


1
Land Covenants
2
Covenants an introduction
  • As with most agreements concerning property, a
    covenant is an agreement or an undertaking under
    seal
  • That is, the obligation is set out in a clause of
    a deed which is signed in the presence of a third
    party
  • Two types of covenant
  • A positive covenant requires a person to do some
    action specified in the covenant
  • A negative or restrictive covenant requires a
    person not to do some action specified in the
    covenant. A land covenant is a restrictive
    covenant the subject of which touches and
    concerns land

3
Transfer of Land Act
  • Section 88(1) of the Transfer of Land Act
    provides that the burden of a restrictive
    covenant may be recorded on the Certificate of
    Title which is subject to the restriction
  • The Registrar shall have power and shall be
    deemed always to have had power to on the folio
    of the Register for land subject to the burden of
    a restrictive covenant make a recording of such
    covenant and of any instrument purporting to
    create or affect the operation of such covenant,
    and when such covenant is released varied or
    modified by agreement of all interested parties
    or by order of a competent court to delete or
    amend that recording.
  • Note that recording an interest is not the same
    as registering it, and this seems to be confirmed
    by s 88(3), which provides
  • Apart from the operation of Part III a recording
    in the Register of any such restrictive covenant
    charge easement or right shall not give it any
    greater operation than it has under the
    instrument or Act creating it.

4
What is the difference?
  • If a covenant is not recorded on the certificate
    of title then a person acquiring the land,
    certainly if they have no other notice of the
    covenant, takes free of it
  • But it is not as simple as the legislation
    provides
  • Even if a covenant is registered, it is necessary
    to evaluate the validity of a covenant according
    to the complicated rules of common law and equity

5
To illustrate by example
  • Andrew owns land on which a gigantic tree
    stands. One day he is about to chop it down.
    His neighbour, Bianca, runs into his yard
    imploring him to stop. Andrew explains that he
    loves the tree but needs firewood. So Bianca
    pays Andrew half the value of the firewood in the
    tree and they enter a land covenant which
    purports to bind anyone who acquires Andrews
    land to preserve the tree for the benefit of
    Biancas land. The covenant is recorded on the
    certificate of title. Beatrice sells her land to
    Christopher and Andrew sells his land to Dolores.

6
Questions raised in this example
  • At common law it is clear that the original
    agreement and the covenants are legally
    enforceable between the original parties to a
    deed (here Bianca and Andrew)
  • However, when the subject of the covenant
    (preservation of the tree) concerns land, is the
    covenant also enforceable against a person who
    acquires the land from the person who entered the
    original covenant (Dolores)?
  • The further question arises of whether a person
    acquiring the benefited land (Christopher) also
    acquires the benefit of covenants
  • Put simply, does the covenant run with the land?

7
Making the Burden Run with the Land
  • At common law, the burden of a covenant does not
    run with the land
  • There are conveyancing devices to overcome this,
    such as requiring the parties to the covenant to
    make fresh covenants every time the land is
    transferred

8
Making the Burden Run with the Land
  • In Equity, the burden of the covenant can run
    with the land if the following conditions are
    met
  • the covenant must be for the benefit of the
    dominant land
  • it must be a restrictive that is, a negative
    covenant
  • the covenantee must hold the benefited land at
    the time the covenant is created
  • there must have been intention to bind successors
    in title
  • a purchaser of the land must have notice of the
    burden of the covenant when acquiring the land -
    with respect to registered title, that means
    recording the burden on the certificate of title,
    and
  • the covenant must touch and concern the land by
    directly affecting the enjoyment, quality or
    nature of the land

9
Making the Benefit Run with the Land
  • There are three arguments for the benefit of a
    covenant to run with the land.
  • Statutory Annexation Section 78 of the Property
    Law Act provides that the benefit of a covenant
    is deemed to have passed with conveyance of the
    dominant land to the successor in title (there is
    some dispute about the meaning of this section)

10
Making the Benefit Run with the Land
  • Note the benefit of a covenant can be expressly
    assigned to a purchaser of the land
  • It can be argued that the benefit of the covenant
    runs with the land at common law. You can argue
    that the benefit has become annexed to the
    dominant tenement at common law. The following
    must be met
  • the benefit must have been annexed in the sense
    of becoming a feature of the land, perhaps by
    enhancing its value - it must "touch and concern"
    the land
  • it must have been intended that the benefit would
    run with the land
  • the dominant land must be identified in the
    document creating the covenant, and
  • the covenantee must have a legal estate in the
    dominant land and the successor in title must
    obtain the same interest. An equitable interest
    in the land is not sufficient

11
Making the Benefit Run with the Land
  • It can be argued that the benefit runs with the
    land at Equity Equity permits annexation of the
    benefit of the covenant to the dominant land so
    that express assignment is not necessary, when
  • the covenant must "touch and concern" the land,
    perhaps by preserving its character or amenity,
  • there must have been intention to annex the
    benefit of the covenant to the land, and
  • it must be possible to identify the dominant land
  • In Equity it is also possible to make an express
    assignment of the benefit of a covenant at the
    same time as one transfers the land itself to a
    purchaser

12
Doctrine of Building Schemes
  • When subdivision of land became popular the
    Courts of Equity also adopted a doctrine called
    the Doctrine of Building Schemes to deal with
    this
  • Under this doctrine any land owner within a
    subdivision could enforce the subdivision's
    covenants concerning land use against any other
    land owner in the subdivision
  • Five elements are referred to for guidance
  • the land owners had to be able to trace their
    titles back to a common vendor
  • a common plan of development must have been laid
    out for the subdivision
  • the plan must have been intended to benefit all
    subdivided lots
  • purchasers must have bought their lots on the
    basis that the development plan was for their
    benefit
  • it must be possible to identify the land

13
Subdivision Act
  • A far simpler method of creating a land covenant
    is provided by the Subdivision Act 1988
  • Under this method a planning scheme featuring the
    land covenant is submitted for approval by the
    local council
  • When approved it becomes part of the local
    planning scheme and binds successors in title
  • While this simplification seems very desirable,
    there have been criticisms of it from the view of
    land owners, as opposed to public administrators
    (lack of flexibility in individual circumstances)

14
Discharging a Covenant
  • A land covenant can be discharged by agreement of
    the parties to it
  • Also, the benefit of the land covenant might
    lapse through acquiescence to activities in
    breach of it
  • The covenant might also discharge if title to the
    dominant land and the servient land is ever
    acquired by the same person (like easements)
  • Section 84 of the Property Law Act empowers the
    Supreme Court to discharge or modify a
    restriction if has become obsolete through change
    in the character of the properties or the
    neighbourhood

15
Discharge Planning Schemes
  • The planning system also provides for the
    discharge of private land covenants You can
  • seek amendment of the Planning Scheme affecting
    the land, or
  • apply for a planning permit
  • Generally this will involve the Planning
    Department of the local municipal council
  • Of course, one would have to support these
    initiatives with material showing why the
    covenant should be discharged
  • The statutory scheme establishing these
    procedures is complicated, relying partly on the
    Planning and Environment Act 1987 and partly on
    the Subdivision Act 1988 (provisions are set out
    in your notes)

16
Profit à Prendre
17
What is a profit à prendre?
  • A profit à prendre is a property interest known
    as a usufruct
  • A profit à prendre is a right to take part of the
    soil or part of the produce of the soil from the
    land of another
  • examples of profits à prendre
  • a right to take gravel from a gravel pit
  • a right to depasture cattle on the servient land
  • a right to harvest fruit from an orchard

18
Rules governing profits à prendre
  • The rules governing profits are basically the
    same as those governing easements except in two
    important respects
  • although a profit is often appurtenant to
    dominant land this is not essential. The law
    recognises profits in gross as valid property
    rights
  • as property rights, the benefits and burdens of
    easements and profits would usually pass to the
    successors in title. Profits need to be
    registered a purchaser who becomes registered
    as proprietor will not be subject to an
    unregistered profit that existed prior to
    obtaining registration of the transfer of the fee
    simple estate
  • In contrast, section 42(2)(d) preserves an
    easement as a paramount interest, but there is no
    equivalent provision in relation to profits.

19
Profit à Prendre vs licence
  • A profit is likely to resemble a mere contractual
    licence (see discussion on licences in previous
    lectures)
  • Eg, a grazing licence confers no proprietary
    interest in the land
  • This resembles an informal profit
  • But it is a mere contractual licence (difficult
    to distinguish)
  • Important distinguishing factor between profit
    and licence A profit is a full legal proprietary
    interest in land a profit à prendre can be
    mortgaged
  • A profit à prendre can be dealt with
    independently of the fee simple estate

20
Mortgages
21
Two types of Mortgage in Vic
  • Generally, a mortgage is an arrangement designed
    to give a lender the highest degree of certainty
    of being repaid money due on the debt by
    providing security over land owned by the
    borrower
  • In the Victorian legal system there are two legal
    conceptions of a mortgage
  • General Law Mortgage
  • Mortgage over General Law land
  • It remains the model common law conception of a
    mortgage
  • Most legal principles concerning mortgages have
    been developed from it
  • As always, these principles often fit uneasily
    with the structure of the Torrens mortgage over
    land
  • Torrens mortgage
  • Considerably simpler than the general law
    mortgage
  • This is the most common mortgage of land in
    Victoria

22
The General Law Mortgage
  • A general law mortgage takes is a legal
    conveyance by the land owner/borrower to the
    mortgagee/lender
  • Importantly, the borrower is then no longer the
    owner of the fee simple estate
  • Rather, the borrower is a mortgagor who is
    entitled to have the fee simple reconveyed when
    all money has been repaid
  • The mortgagor retains an interest in the land
    (known as an equity to redeem the legal estate)
    until the date on which payment is due
  • After that date, if repayment has not been made,
    the mortgagor's interest is known as an equity of
    redemption
  • Although the due date has passed the mortgagor
    can still pay what is due and require a
    reconveyance, until the mortgagee has validly
    obtained possession and exercised its power of
    sale
  • It should be noted that it is possible to make a
    general law mortgage of any estate or interest in
    land

23
The General Law Mortgage
  • The general law deed of conveyance usually
    includes the following
  • a covenant by the mortgagor to pay the principal
    sum lent and interest on a fixed date, usually
    six months after the date of the mortgage
  • a proviso under which the mortgagee covenants to
    reconvey the fee simple estate to the mortgagor
    if the mortgagor pays the money due under the
    terms of the mortgagor's covenants, and
  • a clause under which the mortgagee, as legal
    proprietor of the fee simple estate, permits the
    mortgagor to retain possession of the land in a
    relationship of landlord and tenant (an
    "attornment clause")

24
Equitable Protection for the Mortgagor
  • So, the mortgagor under this system requires some
    protection in equity
  • Under the general law mortgage, mortgagor only
    has a right to a reconveyance if repayment is
    made by the due date (the Common Law position)
  • Courts of Equity however recognised that the
    mortgage was intended to operate as security for
    the repayment and for this reason the mortgagor
    has an equity of redemption enforceable in
    equity after the due date
  • The following rules in Equity have been
    developed
  • A provision increasing the rate of interest in
    the event of late payment was void
  • There must be a genuine right to redeem the land

25
Mortgages under the Transfer of Land Act
  • A mortgage under the Transfer of Land Act is
    created by registration of an instrument (in a
    prescribed form) by the Act
  • It operates as a security (not transfer of fee
    simple estate) s 74(2)
  • So, the mortgagor remains the legal owner of the
    land
  • But the mortgagee has certain powers, such as
  • the power to enter and inspect s 75(c)
  • a power of sale upon default s 77
  • Much simpler your notes will reveal how complex
    the general law system is, but we are not going
    to get into it today

26
Remedies Available to the Mortgagee
  • If the lender does not have the same extent of
    ownership of a property, what remedies are
    available under a Torrens mortgage?
  • A mortgagee under a Torrens mortgage has the
    following powers in relation to a mortgagor in
    default
  • The mortgagor must pay principal and interest,
    keep the premises in repair, keep them insured
    and permit the mortgagee to inspect
  • to sell and transfer a good title to the
    purchaser once certain conditions are satisfied
    ss 76 and 77.
  • to be able to enter into possession upon default
    in payment of principal or interest s 78.
  • to foreclose s 79
  • The power to appoint a receiver s 101(c) and s109
    (Property Law Act)
  • The express powers of leasing conferred on a
    mortgagor or a mortgagee in possession of general
    law land under a general law mortgage by s 99 of
    the Property Law Act are not conferred in
    relation to land under the Transfer of Land Act

27
Popularity of Mortgages
  • Popular with lenders The law provides so many
    mechanisms to ensure that a lender's interests in
    recovering interest and capital are protected the
    arrangement is popular with lenders.
  • Popular with borrowers A mortgagor under a
    Torrens mortgage who honours mortgage obligations
    enjoys continued occupation of the property and
    remains registered proprietor of the legal estate
  • Popular with both lenders and borrowers The law
    permits the arrangement to be fine-tuned to suit
    the precise interests of the parties, and in
    unique or extraordinary transactions this is done

28
Adverse Possession
29
Introduction
  • Adverse possession is the idea that if one
    obtains possession of land and holds it for long
    enough one might eventually become the owner of
    it
  • It is less well known that even before the time
    arrives to obtain full title, or tolls, the
    adverse possessor enjoys a strong position in
    relation to all other people, apart from the true
    owner of the land entitled to it by paper title
  • The mere act of possession gives this strong
    position to exclude all others
  • An interesting concept

30
How adverse possession begins
  • With respect to general law land, except against
    the true owner by virtue of paper title, the
    general law simply regarded a person in
    possession of land as the owner of the fee simple
    estate
  • A person in adverse possession therefore starts
    to acquire the title against even the true owner
    from the time when their possession
  • Until the time arrives when a right equivalent to
    full ownership is obtained (15y) the adverse
    possessor has an inchoate title - that is, one
    which is growing
  • When adverse possessors themselves suffer adverse
    possession by a newcomer, this inchoate title is
    generally strong enough to obtain a court order
    to recover the land from the newcomer.

31
Surprising set of Rules
  • Surprisingly, the law also regards a person in
    possession as holding very strong status
  • Section 42(2)(b) makes the rights of an adverse
    possessor a paramount interest (like easements
    etc)
  • Further, a person acquiring a new registered
    estate or interest in the land acquires it
    subject to the adverse possessor's rights,
    whether the acquirer knew about them or not.
  • If the period has not already expired the new
    acquirer can expel the adverse possessor
  • If the adverse possessor is not expelled, s
    42(2)(b) has the effect that periods of time
    accumulated against an earlier owner of the land
    are still good, and can be added to new periods,
    against the acquirer.
  • If the period had already expired when the new
    acquirer came along, s 42(2)(b) has the effect
    that the new acquirer has bought only a faint
    hope that the adverse possessor will move off of
    his or her own accord, without selling the title
    obtained by possession.

32
An Example
  • Most people think adverse possession happens out
    in the bush where the true owner would not often
    go
  • In fact, most adverse possession occurs on
    boundaries when fences or building walls and
    foundations encroach on to the neighbour's land
  • This is why it is of particular relevance to
    surveyors

33
S272 Property Law Act
  • A limitation in the circumstances of boundary
    encroachment is section 272 of the Property Law
    Act
  • From and after the first day of August One
    thousand eight hundred and ninety the dimensions
    of the boundaries of any parcel of land as stated
    in any document of title now made or hereafter to
    be made relating to such land, or as represented
    on any plan drawn on or referred to in any such
    document of title shall unless such construction
    is expressly negatived or modified by such
    document of title or contract be construed as
    though the phrase "a little more or less"
    immediately followed and referred to the
    dimensions so stated or represented and such
    phrase shall in all cases whether so implied or
    expressed be deemed to cover any difference
    between the actual dimensions of such boundaries
    as found by admeasurement on the ground, when
    such difference does not exceed the following
    limits, that is to say, a limit of 50 millimetres
    for any one boundary line irrespective of its
    length where the length does not exceed 40.30
    metres, but where it exceeds 40.30 metres a limit
    equivalent to one in five hundred computed upon
    the total length of such boundary line. No action
    shall be brought by reason or in respect of such
    difference (whether of excess or deficit) where
    it does not exceed the aforesaid limits and in
    any case where such difference does exceed such
    limits an action for damages or compensation in
    respect thereof shall lie in respect of such
    excess only.

34
Basis of Adverse Possession
  • Limitation of Actions Act 1958
  • The basis of the law of adverse possession is
    trespass
  • Section 8 of the Limitation of Actions Act 1958
    provides that -
  • No action shall be brought by any person to
    recover any land after the expiration of 15 years
    from the date on which the right of action
    accrued to him or, if it first accrued to some
    person through whom he claims, to that person
  • Provided that if the right of action first
    accrued to the Crown the action may be brought at
    any time before the expiration of fifteen years
    from the date on which the right of action
    accrued to some person other than the Crown.

35
Adverse Possession - Trespass
  • A title acquired by adverse possession is
    essentially a title acquired by trespass
  • When even the true owner can no longer take legal
    action to recover the land the trespasser's title
    is good against all the world
  • At general law the trespasser has obtained legal
    title and the former owner's title has been
    extinguished
  • An act of trespass cannot occur by someone simply
    wandering onto land by mistake and wandering off
    again. Rather than being a mere physical
    penetration of the boundaries
  • At law trespass is a deliberate act by which the
    trespasser assumes rights in relation to the land
    generally incident to ownership.
  • The positive intention to do this is called
    animus possidendi

36
Exceptions etc
  • If the act is done with the permission of the
    owner it is not trespass
  • Some interesting cases have arisen where the
    owner has been content to leave the land waste
    and totally unproductive in anticipation of some
    development (eg a highway being built, or the
    outskirts of the city expanding)
  • It has been argued in these cases that the
    trespass against the owner does not commence
    until the owner would wish to use the land
  • This argument has been contemplated seriously in
    English cases but not in Victoria.

37
When does time start to run?
  • Time does not start until someone takes
    possession adversely, and time will cease to run
    if the land ceases to be held in adverse
    possession before the owner's right to commence
    court action is barred
  • Section 14(3) and (4) provide two instances where
    adverse possession is deemed to exist
  • wrongful receipt of rent under a lease, and
  • possession or receipt of more than the due share
    of land, or receipts from the land, by a coowner.

38
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.

39
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

40
Extension of the Limitation Period
  • Disability
  • Acknowledgement
  • Concealed Fraud

41
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

42
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

43
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

44
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

45
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

46
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

47
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
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