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Home > Law > Law glossary > Law glossary
Defective title
Last modified: Thu Feb 23 16:37:37 2006
An owner's title to land or goods can be `defective' (that is, less than perfect)
in at least four ways.
He may not be the owner at all. Of course, the reason why a person seeks to
sell something he does not own might be because he is a villain. However,
a person may be dispossessed of his title by the action of law, and then
find that he cannot pass title in a sale. For example, the owner of
UnregisteredLand may be dispossessed by a squatter if he loses his
right to remove the squatter after 12 years (see AdversePossession). Although
the dispossessed owner holds the title deeds, if the squatter has subsequently been
registered as the proprietor, the former owner no title to pass.
The owner may have limited powers of disposition. This situation often arises
where the owner is a company; its powers to buy and sell property may be
limited by statute or by its own articles. As far as land is concerned, the
LRA2002 now makes it clear that a person (legal or natural) who sells
property outside it's powers is not prevented from giving good title simply
by the fact that the sale was UltraVires; however, both the seller and the
buyer may still be acting unlawfully.
The property is subject to incumbrances (that is, third-party rights are
against it).
The title may have become determinable. That is, someone else may have a power
to bring the title to an end. This situation usually occurs in the context of
leasehold land, where the tenant has done something that gives the landlord
a RightToReenter, but that right has not yet been exercised.
LandAndPropertyLaw
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