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Land Law Materials

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Materials to help with second year land law

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  • March 21, 2021
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  • 2019/2020
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Land Law

Lecture Notes

,Week 1 – Topics and Themes



What is Land Law?

 Its not simply a subject matter at Peter Birks says as its not just all law that relates to land as
so much law relates to land
 Nor is it a legal category like ‘property rights’ because you can have PR in loads of things like
ideas etc
 The 3 key features were interested in are: nature, creation and protection of interest in land

Key Questions for this module:

 We focus on land law doctrine relating to specific:

- Questions,
- Situations, and
- Kinds of “interests in land”
 As you approach each topic/sub-topic, you should ask yourself the following things:
- What proprietary interest(s) does each party have?
- How do we know they have such interests?
- What might that interest enable them to do/stop other people from doing?


The textbook uses the same three questions
but in different terms.

- Content is how we classify the right
eg a lease has to have exclusive
possession (Q1)
- Acquisition is the special rules to
follow to gain that right (Q2)
- Priority and Defences competing
rights for the same piece of land(Q3)




Concepts of Property

 We’re starting to move away from the term ‘’ownership’’ to thinking about who has the
right to do what in respect of a thing ‘’bundles’’ of rights and ‘’strands of economic
potential’’
 We don’t just want to know what rights someone has but rather where they come from?

Property is fundamentally Social

‘According to a deeply pragmatic approach which characterises much of the English law of realty, the
phenomenon of “property” in land is simply a product of behavioural reality or socially constituted
fact’ – Gray & Gray

,But what do we mean by “social”?

 Land law is a/the private law subject but it inevitably interfaces with other branches of law
(planning, environmental etc.) and public (housing) resolving conflicts
 Relations with other people (Rose).
 Within doctrine we have formal/informal interests.
 Social power relations? Encodes these? Impacts power dynamics which has an influence
when it comes to developing policy and new laws

Market Logics in Land Law

19th Century and before

 Land held by (even) fewer people
 Landowning entitled you to vote, tightly held by relatively few aristocratic families as the
basis of wealth, land law prioritised keeping land in the family (links to equity).

But Now

 Industrialisation, urbanisation

 Land no longer the most important form of wealth (rise of company form and managed fund
with diverse portfolio).

 Land freed up for involvement in profit-generation.

 Utilitarian thinking (Rose, page 3) encourages wealth maximisation.

Law and property Act 1925

 Law of Property Act 1925
 Transfer of land easier and more certain, simpler, set up the architecture of modern land
law.
 Reduced the number of estates in land to two.
 Protected other types of interests (i.e. family wealth relations) using equitable interests (not
registrable).
 Registration conceptualised as “mirror of title”, as reflecting “real world rights and
“protecting them by registration” (s43 LPA 1925).
 All above made it more attractive to get land and trustworthy

But is land just another tradeable asset?

 Not really because if we put a lot of focus into it being fundamentally social and if it is then
it’s not just an asset

Margaret Radin

 Margaret Radin: The conditions of human freedom may not be preserved only through a
freedom to alienate.

- Some realms of social life should be off-limits to commodification
- Such realms are ‘delineated in a way that is evolutionary and provisional… [and/
partially structured by the law’
- She is critical of the idea of reducing land to a tradeable asset as it has a lot of social
significance

, Market logics directly shape doctrine via…

 Commercial practice,
 Reform,
 Judges reasoning etc.

Registration and its Politics/Morality

 Land Registration Act 2002

 Move towards “title by registration”, producing ownership not just reflecting it (think about
s27 LRA 2002).= certain types of interest will not take affect in law until they have been
registered

 Paved the way for e-conveyancing.

Sounds great?

 Clear title facilitates trade and reduces resource wasting conflict (Rose, page 16).
 More clarity for you to see what you would be bound by
 Mirror principle, register reflects all rights affecting a transaction (i.e. those that will bind 3 rd
party purchasers). 3rd party know they are getting rights from a pre-existing freehold
 Curtain principle, purchaser shouldn’t have to go behind the register.
 Insurance principle, state-backed guarantee of your title. Boosting the system and giving
people the confidence to buy land

But, subject to overriding interest! A practical objection…

 Some things are impossible to register. E.g all one year student leases would be a nightmare
to register
 What should be able to override and when? Something of a vexed and politically charged
question.

But, subject to overriding interest! A conceptual objection…

‘the development of land registration… closes out the idea of property as a way of “being in the
world”, of land as the physical, organic basis for human activity, a favour of a vision of property
as a commodity asset to be traded as efficiently as possible in pursuit of capital gain’ – Great
Debates in Land Law, 109

 Squatting and “land law morality”, does the “registration fetish” get in the way of
perfectly good land law doctrines that might better serve social, legal and economic
aims?
 Squatting is when someone deliberately enters property without permission and lives
there, or intends to live there

Points of interaction?

 Ask yourself
- How does registration shape our concepts of property?
- Does seeing land as a market asset have to change our concepts of property?
- Is registration simply the next step to an increasingly marketized and commercial view of
land law, impacting on the foundations of our communities and societies?

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