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Legal

PP 2011/127

The Land Registration Act 2002 protects the interests of parties in actual occupation of registered land. This often causes problems for buyers or lenders because the rights of parties in actual occupation are not recorded on the registers of title kept by the Land Registry. In addition, the capacity in which a party occupies land – for example, as a tenant – need not be indicative of the rights claimed.


However, so long as appropriate enquiries are made of occupiers, and their rights are not disclosed, disponees can proceed, safe in the knowledge that their interest will have priority.  By contrast, disponees that fail to make appropriate enquiries run the risk than an occupier may subsequently claim the benefit of an option to purchase the freehold reversion, or an unpaid vendor’s lien, an estoppel or some other equity in the property that affects them.

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