Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Land Law Cases Analysis
kill Law Cases AnalysisKingsnorth Finance v Tizard 1986 1 WLR 783Mr and Mrs Tizard owned a matrimonial home on unregistered land. Mrs Tizard had contributed to it although it was in Mr Tizards name. Due to the breakdown of the matrimony Mrs Tizard spent time away from the home but returning daily to c ar for their children and to prepare herself for give way and so often spending nights at that place to care for the children and leaving clothes at the plaza. Mr Tizard obtained a loan to which it was ruling that the attribute was solely occupied by him and his children. Mr Tizard informing the surveyor that he and his married woman were separated and that she was donjon outside of the property with someone else. The loan was consequently granted and Mr Tiazrd defaulted. The lenders sought to enforce the charge and the apparent motion was whether his married womans just absorb was defeated. This depended on whether the lender had actual or constructive handbill of her rights . It was held that the plaintiff lender did have constructive nonice of the married womans rights. Their agent, the surveyor had been aware that a wife existed even through having been told the applicant was single and should have informed the lender of these contradictory facts. Given the wifes confirmed existence further investigations should have been carried out by the plaintiffs. The personal credit line of the children in the house should have further alerted the surveyor as to practical occupation by their mother Mr Tizards wife. Since the plaintiffs should have carried out further investigations as to the matters, they had constructive nonice of the wifes rights. Further, the fact that the inspection had been prearranged did not, in these circumstances, inwardness to a reasonable inspection.Caunce v Caunce 19691 WLR 286A and B, intended to buy a property as a matrimonial home. It was agreed that a mortgage would be acquired in Bs name and that the property would be conve yed into their joint names. B contributed 479.00 towards the cost of the property. But in breach of the agreement A obtained a conveyance of the property into his sole name. Without Bs knowledge A effect legal charges in favour of the bank to secure the amount add to him. A became bankrupt and B commenced proceedings claiming that she had an sincere interest in the property and so that she was entitled to such interest free from the claims both of As trustee in bankruptcy and of the bank. The bank as mortgagee issued a summons seeking possession of the property. B claimed that A had held the house on trust for herself and the banks, alike that the banks mortgages were charged only against the husbands beneficial interest and that her interest had prior over that of the banks. She further claimed that the bankers had had constructive notice of her equitable interest in her property as she had held an count with them.It was held that the bank took free charge of her interest unles s they had constructive notice of it. An enquiry into the wifes account was not an enquiry the bank ought reasonably to have made and so there were no spare facts which should have brought her interest to their attention. Mortgages were not affected with equitable interest of people residing in their property where that residence was not inconsistent with the title offered as security. They were not fixed with contrastive notice by nonstarter to enquire. The mere fact of it being a matrimonial home did not raise a need to enquire therefore, Bs interest was not free from the legal charge.In older cases the problem had mainly been that that the occupier, usually a wife with a beneficial interest in the family home, had been living with the registered owner in circumstances which are not indicative of any hostile claim. But in cases of unregistered land hurl J in Caunce held that there would not be constructive notice of such a wifes interests. In Williams Glyn Bank v Boland1, the House of Lords faced similar facts in registered land. Lord Wilberforce was explicit in rejecting the relevance of the doctrine of notice. He was derisive as to the suggestion that a spouse whitethorn be subject to special rules and rejected the suggestions that actual occupation excludes occupation that is consistent with the mortgagors title. This test would be difficult to apply in modern circumstances as wives and other occupiers are likely to have proprietary interests.But twain things must be distinguished the first is in regards to a person who is living on land in circumstances illustrated in Caunce and Boland. That person cannot be denied to be in actual occupation in accordance with the interpretation of Stamp J If there is actual occupation, and the occupier had rights, the purchaser takes subject to them..no further element is material. Stamp J holding favour of the bank, also based his finality on the fact that it was quite unreasonable to expect a bank to make enqui ries beyond the legal owner of the property, taking the view that2 it is not in the public interest that the bank mortgages should be snoopers and busybodies in wholly normal transactions of mortgage.3The courts have already concluded that where there is doubt as to whether there was actual occupation then it is looked to the question of whether the occupation would have been obvious to a purchaser.4 Turning to Tizard, Judge Finaly QC was clear that there was actual occupation as the Boland test was applied even though the fats concerned unregistered land. Although the Mrs Tizard was no longer living there, her daily activities must be regarded sufficient to justify the result. last(a)The case law involving both unregistered and registered land before the 2002 Act suggests that proper enquiries were considered necessary. The leading authority in respect of unregistered land was Caunce where it was thought that notice of the presence of the wife did not of itself give the bank notice of her interest in the property. But in Tizard it was decided that the mortgagee may be fixed with notice of the co-owners interest by her actual occupation. In Tizard it was held that the bank did have constructive knowledge because the inspection took place on a sunshine in dubious circumstances.So far as registered land is concerned it will be a rare case where the beneficiary will both be in actual occupation and unaware of the banks charge. However, there may still be cases where the lender is ignorant of the beneficiarys interest. The Law Commission recommended5 that occupation of the beneficiary claiming a beneficial interest should have been apparent on reasonably careful inspection and this recommendation has now been incorporated in Schedule 3 of the drop Registration Act 2002 in respect of registered dispositions. As emphasised by the Law Commission it was knowledge of the occupation that was important not knowledge of the interest claimed.In conclusion, the law as enac ted in the 2002 Act combined with the cases since Boland6 gives the lender a high degree of protection. Banks are likely to make standard enquiries and any loser to disclose will enable them to take free of the beneficiarys interest where, for example, a wife knows that her husband is charging the property. at that place may still be exceptional cases where the wife neither knew nor ought to have known of the husbands charge over the property or where the wife is in occupation through an agent7 whose relationship to her is not obvious to an outsider. However, those cases are likely to remain rare.Considering the facts of these cases from a modern perspective the problem here is the matter of presumption as well as occupation. The operation of presumptions in position law is problematic. There are situations established by case law in which is it presumed that the transfer of property manifests an intention to create a gift of that property. The two most usually cases are the tran sfer of property from father to child and from husband to wife. So the use of presumption in society today is questionable. There is no logic behind the reasoning that a presumption may exist behind the transfer between father and child if the transfer may not necessarily exist between mother and child. In the times when presumptions were created it would thought natural for the court to assume that a man would be cause to provide for his wife and children. So it was presumed that a transfer of property to a wife or child was thought to be part of his obligation to remark them. Yet this presumption did not exist between a wife and her husband as it was thought that women did not usually have a property of their own. At this time husbands and wives were thought to be one person8as the wife was merely the shadow of her husband.9Caunce very much reflects an era where women were considered to rarely own property of their own and were not often thought of as earning incomes and so were reliant on either their husbands or fathers. The presumption of advancement between husband and wife belonged to era were men were expected to look after women for the above reasons. It was only with Caunce, in 1969, that wives were finally reliable by English law as not being solely shadows of their husbands. This meant that for the first time women were entitled to have separate rights to property outside of the rights of their husbands. In 1970 with the influence of Lord Reid in his enlightened onrush to rights of spouses in the matrimonial home, Pettitt v Pettitt10 considered for the first time all the circumstances in recognising the existence of rights in the home, even at a time when women were not considered to have rights independent of their husbands.The matter of the juxtaposition of a womens role in society and so her influence upon mortgage transactions due to her possible proprietary rights in property is not the sole principle to be considered in the light of these two cases. Due to the bench mark decision of Boland it was accepted that the restrictive approach taken in Caunce was no longer applicable and the ambit of reasonable enquiries extended to making enquiries of all occupiers of the property, despite the vendor also being in occupation.11 The full extent of the purchasers task, considered in Tizard meant that the idea of investigations into all occupants of the household was now embraced. This meant that recognition was given to those living within a household living with the legal owner of the house may have rights deserving of protection when the property is mortgaged without their consent.Reference listJournalsHanbury, W., rife Interests under the Land Registration Act, 2002 the Lenders Perspective, 2005. 3 EMIS Property Service.Shea, T., Overriding Interests in Unregistered Land. Journal of International Banking Law. 1 (2), 125 127Thompson, M.P., The vendee as Private Detective, 1986. Conveyancer and Property Lawyer, July Aug ust 283 28BibliographyHudson, A., beauteousness and Trusts, 2004. Third Edition. Cavendish Publishing, London.Pearce, R Stevens, J., The Law of Trusts and Equitable Obligations, 2002, Third Edition. Butterworths, London.Smith, R. J., Property Law, 2003, Fourth Edition. Longman, London.Thompson, M. p., Modern Land Law, 2003. Second Edition. Oxford University PressFootnotes1 (1981) AC 487 (1979) Ch 3122 Thompson, M. p., Modern Land Law at page 533 Caunce v Caunce 19691 WLR 286 at 2944 Analysis of Mustill LJ in Lloyds Bank v Rosset (1989) Ch 3505 In Land Registration for the 21st Century (Law Com 254).6 Ibid 17 Per Lord Oliver in Abbey National BS v Cann (1991) 1 AC 568 Hudson, A., Equity and Trusts at page 3189 Ibid 310 (1970) AC 77711 Midland Bank Ltd v Farmpride Hatcheries Ltd (1981) 2 EGLR 147
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