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On Demand Module l Electronic booklet l PowerPoint Presentation
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The Land Transfer Act 2017 (LTA) received Royal Assent on 10 July 2017 and is expected to come into force by November 2018. The new LTA will replace the outdated 1952 Act.
Virtually all private land transactions rest on the framework of the LTA, and the new legislation modernises and updates this framework.This module is an introductory guide, picking up on the key implications for property lawyers, conveyancers, and legal executives arising from the Land Transfer Act 2017. It will help you understand the practical issues, and provide guidance on how to effectively advise clients in this new environment.
Covered in this module will be:
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After completing this module you will:
Author: Thomas Gibbons, Robert Metcalf
Published: 22 March 2018
Pages: 32
The 1952 Act was drafted to support the operation of a paper-based land transfer system. It repeated many of the provisions from earlier land transfer acts dating back to 1870, and its language reflected this. The 1952 Act operated alongside two amendment acts – the Land Transfer Amendment Act 1963 (LTAA) and the Land Transfer (Computer Registration and Electronic Lodgement) Amendment Act 2002 (CRELA). The LTAA dealt with applications for title based on adverse possession, while CRELA created a statutory framework for electronic registration. The Act consolidates these three Acts into one and modernises the language to reflect the operation of an electronic register.
In addition to bringing together the provisions of the 1952 Act, the LTAA and CRELA, the Act will repeal the Statutory Land Charges Registration Act 1928 (SLCRA) and incorporate its provisions into the Act to give the Registrar-General of Land (Registrar) greater control over the registration of statutory land charges.While the Act does not fundamentally change New Zealand’s Torrens system of land registration, it introduces new terminology and instruments, and brings about changes in certain key areas. For example, the Act introduces a limited judicial discretion allowing alteration of the register in certain circumstances where immediate indefeasibility would result in manifest injustice. It also makes some changes to the State compensation system, by amending the time periods relating to guaranteed searches and altering the method of calculation of land value for compensation claims.
This webinar is focused on key highlights and practical tips to prepare you for the forthcoming changes.2 A full-length seminar will be offered by NZLS CLE on this topic in October 2018. This paper will briefly review the structure of the Act and then examine the main changes. that are likely to be of interest to conveyancing practitioners.1 New Zealand Law Commission in conjunction with Land Information New Zealand A New Land Transfer Act (NZLC R116, Wellington, 2010) [R116]. See also New Zealand Law Commission, Review of the Land Transfer Act 1952 (NZLC IP 10, Wellington, 2008 [IP10].
2 See also Thomas Gibbons, A Practical Guide to the Land Transfer Act (LexisNexis, Wellington, 2017) for further discussion on the new Act.
These are the slides included in the presentation.
Thomas Gibbons McCaw Lewis Hamilton |
Robert Metcalf Land Information New Zealand Wellington |