Part VII - The Torrens System
Part VII - The Torrens System
Part VII - The Torrens System
I Land Management
A Introduction
Approximately 26 countries have systems of land administration. Some, like the African system
of community titles, embody non-tenure based principles of land management. By contrast,
common law countries reflect principles of private land ownership. In Australia, the Torrens
system is the dominant land management structure. In addition to administering private land
tenures, it is also a legal product exported to other legal environments around the world.
Land administration may be thought of in several contexts. Broadly, these are conceptual,
administrative, and geographical:
Land administration is a product of both environmental and political factors. It formalises values
about land occupation, use and development, and interacts with the legal system to create a
framework for recognising and enforcing recognised interests.
Proper land administration accelerates wealth: it enables land to be used to develop markets,
investment, private holdings and sustainable development:
What creates capital in the West is an implicit process buried in the intricacies of its
formal property systems. … Legal property thus gave the West the tools to produce
surplus value over and above its physical assets.2
One example of land administration is the cadastre, a type of map which identifies logical parcels
of land rather than physical land holdings. It has its origins in Napoleonic France, where it was
used to record land boundaries and tax land owners. It is now used throughout the world, even in
poorer countries (though not England or the United States). As concepts of land ownership
changed, and formal methods of administration developed, the cadastre has become a primarily
technical instrument. It is now mostly used by surveyors. This development highlights the
relationship between mechanisms of land administration and technological and political factors.
Most countries lack even basic land administration systems. From the perspective of the
international agencies, there exist four major land administration and land policy issues:
1
United Nations, European Commission for Europe (1996).
2
Hernando de Soto, The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails
Everywhere Else (2000) 39-43.
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Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
The Torrens System offers one — particularly efficient — way of resolving these issues.
The phrase ‘Torrens system’ describes the registration component of Australia’s land
administration system. It may be contrasted with general law land, which is subject only to deeds
registration.
The basic principle of Torrens land registration is that an interest must be registered to be
cognisable in law. For a registration-based system of land management, Torrens has one of the
strongest registration requirements: most land holdings, with several notable exceptions, will be
of no legal effect until formally registered.
1 Certificates of title (describing the interests of owner and any other restrictions)
2 Maps and surveyors’ plans (noting boundaries and allotments)
3 Electronic land title systems (cataloguing titles and plans)
Any Torrens system will visibly interact with three different types of titles:
In any given property, there may be both registered, equitable and possessory claims on foot
simultaneously. For example, a property, owned by a registered proprietor X, who is trustee for a
beneficiary Y, may subsequently lease to Z, who occupies as tenant. Such interaction may be
further contrasted with civil code systems of land management. These systems envisage only
one absolute owner, rather than many contemporaneous ones.
C Torrens Worldwide
Australia has contributed two internationally acknowledged innovations to global property law:
Strata titles are now almost universally used to vertically divide urban land holdings. They were
first introduced in New South Wales around 1962.
The Torrens system was first introduced to the Colony of South Australia in 1858, followed shortly
after by Victoria (1862). Its adoption was catalysed by widespread dissatisfaction with lawyers
and informal conveyancing practices. The response of lawyers was predictable: in 1893, one
lawyer had the following comments to make about the notion of land registration:
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Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
Barely plausible and utterly impractical idea, the outcome of a bureaucratic and free
hunting administration working on the fanciful enthusiasm of well-meaning but mistaken
3
and visionary faddists.
Most probably, lawyers were just reacting to the prospect of reduced fees as conveyancing
became more efficient.
Today, the Torrens system has been adopted by the following countries:
• Australia;
• New Zealand;
• Canada (only certain provinces);
• Africa (in certain regions); and
• United States (only certain states)
• England;
• Israel;
• Philippines;
• Malaysia; and
• Thailand.
• Europe; and
• Japan.
Two competing views about land management are at work in present formulations and
interpretations of Torrens legislation: practical objectives (simplicity, efficiency and certainty), and
established traditions (English property law and conveyancing practices).
This tension is exhibited by early case law, which largely reflects the traditional view that deeds of
title are more important than acts of registration. Even today, many courts introduce equitable
and personal notions into their construction of Torrens legislation, often to combat its occasionally
harsh operation.
Practitioners, too, exhibit bias towards traditional deeds conveyancing systems. Conveyancing
practices continue to be influenced by old ways: search of title, exchange of contract, requisitions
on title, and the like. At various times, one or other of these views has been dominant. The
present trend is towards registration, as reflected by recent English legislation.
3
R T J Stein and M A Stone, Torrens Title (1991) 15.
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Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
Most systems of land registration may be classified into one of four different theories of land
tenure:
• Private ownership
o Commonly justified on economic grounds: prevention of a ‘tragedy of the
commons’ (Hardin) by making individuals economically responsible for
sustainable land use
o Land rights typically entail
Freehold
Leasehold
Sharecrop
Mortgage
• Public ownership
o Eg, communist societies
• Common ownership
o Eg, indigenous or agrarian societies
• Open access
o Eg, medieval (pre-enclosure) England
F Land in Australia
There exist approximately 10.2m parcels of land. Most are private (alienated) holdings, though
there are also unalienated Crown reserves, and various tracts subject to native title. However,
the vast majority of alienable land is privately owned freehold and leasehold from the Crown.
Crown leases and licences are mostly administered outside Torrens system in Victoria. The
Victorian Land Registry records about 3.2m titles (though this figure somewhat exceeds the
number of saleable properties).
It is important to understand the distinction between parcels of land and properties. The term
‘properties’, colloquially, describes the visible object of proprietary rights: a building or area in
which people operate in relation to land. However, in law, a given physical structure may be
classified as any number of individual parcels of land, each the subject of proprietary rights. In
other words, land management thinks in terms of cadastres (parcels), not addresses.
Consequently, there are roughly 20 per cent more parcels than there are properties.
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Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
II History
A Pre-Registration
Prior to the introduction of Torrens legislation in Australia, title to land was ‘very insecure’. Early
attempts by colonial Governors to regulate the sale of land proved unsuccessful. Transactions
involving land were performed with ‘casualness and informality’.
By the time the ill effects of informal conveyancing practices began to be felt, the custom ‘was
already entrenched and could not [easily] be overturned.’ And so it continued: New South
Welshman dealt with land orally and on scraps off paper, and courts continued to accept their
claims. ‘In this way, popular views of legitimacy were imposed on the civil court.’
Principally responsible for the informal approach to land dealings was the culture of the yeoman,
an independent owner/occupier class of farmers:
‘Yeoman’ is an antiquated British term for a farmer of middling social status who owned his
own land, and often farmed it himself. The yeomanry shared attributes with both the upper
and working classes, though had little in common with the urban middle class. A yeoman
could be equally comfortable shovelling manure on his farm, educating himself from books, or
enjoying country sports such as shooting and hunting. By contrast, members of the landed
gentry and the aristocracy did not farm their land themselves, but let it to tenant farmers.
Yeomen and tenant farmers were the two main divisions of the rural middle class in
traditional British society. Isaac Newton was a famous member of the yeoman class,
inheriting a small farm which paid the bills for his academic work. (Wikipedia)
The strength of such views about law and land was enhanced by various historical factors:
Land was seen initially as having only a use value: cultivation, grazing and, occasionally,
occupation. However, ‘as the value of land increased so did the number of notices in the Sydney
Gazette telling prospective buyers of a prior interest in it and warning off trespassers. Land
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gradually became an integrated part of capital and not merely a place on which to build a house
or grow crops.’ Additionally, South Australia was a colony of free settlers (as compared with New
South Wales, which was comprised by penal colonists), and the emerging Australian middle class
of free settlers developed estates and other interests in land.
The situation in the colonies was still radically different to that in England. Lad had little of the
value and few of the social and political implications which it had in England:
Where tradition and aristocratic interests combined to create a labyrinthine land law in
England, the obscurity of titles in New South Wales was based on an egalitarian
approach to land law. Land which had only a low value was dealt with casually, and
bought and sold as easily as a horse, sometimes much more cheaply. This, combined
with high levels of illiteracy, the lack of a large-scale legal profession, and a willingness to
disregard official Orders, let to local ways of doing things. (at 130)
As early as 1814, the law governing colonial land transactions had — despite its English origins
— developed into something quite different.
The colonial administration wanted to formalise land transactions for several reasons:
• To promote settlement
• To promote economic development through yeomanry
• To reduce enforcement costs
• To reduce the citizenry’s dependence upon lawyers in matters of conveyancing
The need for reform was clear: by 1857 there were over 40 000 to land in the colonies, of which
deeds three quarters had been lost and at least 5 000 impossible to trace or else defective.
Purchasers, and particularly mortgagors, lived in fear that their titles would be challenged by
some unexpected deed, the effect of which would be to render them liable for fraud and forfeiture
of their livelihood.
The early titles were basically receipts issued by the Commissioner of Public Lands. However,
even when descriptions of the parcels were appended to them, they were often meaningless. For
example, they often referred to land in highly approximate terms (‘about seventy paces from the
northwest corner…’) by reference to long since demolished landmarks, or departed or deceased
persons. The chaos is best illustrated by some buyers’ mistaken purchases of land already
4
belonging to them.
Dr Ulrich Hübbe, a Hamburg-born lawyer, effectively invented the Torrens system. However, it
was simply unfeasible to pass legislation in terms set forth by a German. From its inception,
then, the Torrens system was a German system masked as Australian for local popularity. A
Mr RR Torrens ‘popularised reform’, which is to say, he is alleged to have stolen the idea of title
by registration from Hübbe.
Initially, lawyers were opposed to the introduction of the system, thinking their monopoly on
conveyancing would be removed. The drafting and legislative process was carefully orchestrated
to prevent ‘professional tyranny’ from being exercised.
4
Real Property Law Commission, Report (1861) 17.
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On 2 July 1858, the system came into operation with RR Torrens as Registrar. The legal
profession generally accepted the system, though one was heard to remark that the newly-
passed Real Property Act 1858 (SA) was ‘foolish, unworkable and a most pernicious measure’.
Despite the new system, its first test in court was unsuccessful: a registrant lost possession with
their certificate of title, despite being the registered proprietor (Hutchinson v Leeworthy). This
was quickly rectified by legislative amendment. However, the Act’s next application was hardly
more successful, with the plaintiff’s appeal being struck out before it could reach the Supreme
Court on the grounds that Payne had become a lunatic (Payne v Dench).
Predictably, the Act faced further opposition from Boothby J, leading to what some termed as a
‘judge hunt’. Judge Boothby took great delight in finding local institutions and acts of Parliament
void or repugnant. This was put a stop to with the passing of the Colonial Laws Validity Act 1865
(Imp). From this point forwards, the newly-established Land Titles Office grew in stature and
acceptance, and confidence steadily grew in the new Torrens system of registration.
The development of land registration throughout the 1800s saw the what Golder and Kirkby
describe as the ‘democratisation of land ownership among the non-indigenous inhabitants’.
However, they also note tension within the colonial liberalist movement between objectives of
settlement (essentially conservative) and economic growth (essentially progressive). The latter
imperative sought to commoditise land and establish a free market.
This development was marked by several limitations upon a married woman’s capacity to buy
and sell property. The doctrine of coverture meant that, upon marriage, a wife’s properties were
subsumed within the estate of her husband, limiting her ability to alienate property without her
husband’s consent.
Reciprocally, the common law right of dower entitled a woman to the lands of her husband upon
his death, including lands alienated prior to the husband’s death. This was understandably
problematic for third parties, who may be unknowingly subject to a dower claim.
In short, Torrens reform inadvertently catalysed reforms beneficial to women. Torrens’ reforms
sought to make land more marketable, with the unintended side effect that married women and
their land were brought within its boundaries and made it simpler and more feasible to transact
with a married woman’s property.
Torrens’ reforms have been described by Kercher as ‘Australia’s legal gift to bourgeois land
owning’, perfecting as they did the commoditisation of land and increasing the egalitarian and
individualistic properties of private land ownership. Thus, encumbrances such as dower were
required to be inscribed upon the certificate. The Real Property Act also granted express
recognition, in some circumstances, to the right of a wife to be issued with a certificate of title.
However, the husband was still primarily responsible for dealings with land: women were ‘passive
recipient[s]’ (at 215).
However, the result of these reforms was to reduce certainty associated with dower and
coverture, reducing hesitance to deal with married women. Wives were able to dispose of land ‘in
the same manner as any other proprietor’. Women could be included on the register as co-
owner. Some women were even listed as sole owners on the register. However, most of these
changes were the result of ‘minor housekeeping of the Torrens system’ (at 217).
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The Torrens legislation and its interpretation by courts represents one way of balancing the
competing imperatives of certainty, security and efficiency on the one hand, and fairness to
holders of unregistered interests and defrauded parties on the other.
• Certainty?
o Security and simplicity of dealings with land was the primary objective
• Mirror/Completeness?
o The state of the register was to accurately and precisely reflect the interests held
in each parcel land
o However, it gives no indication whatsoever as to the existence of many interests,
including easements and equitable rights
o Many of those rights are caveated, but not all; incentive not provided since not
non-lodgement is not fatal in a priority dispute
o Knowledge of those interests irrelevant unless fraudulent, because of
indefeasibility; so the fact that they are recognised does little to undermine
completeness of claims of ownership
• Curtain?
o The idea that nothing behind the Register (cutain) can affect the registered
proprietor’s title
o Indefeasibility is immediate which prevents the purchaser from needing to
enquire about the proceeding transaction
o However, in personam exception means that a new registered proprietor will be
subject to the personal duties of the old
o But Torrens was never about exempting a party from their personal obligations
upon registration; recognition of these obligations does not substantially
undermine the register’s completeness because the obligations are owed only to
one party: the registered proprietor
Further, in personam is confined to recognised legal and equitable
causes of action and not a broad and amorphous concept like
unconscionability
This makes it reasonably straightforward for the party most likely to be
affected by an in personam claim (the registered proprietor) to ascertain
and fulfil their obligations
• Cost?
o Proportionate to the value of a transaction, the cost of establishing a mortgage
and transferring land has reduced
• Dominance of lawyers?
o Conveyancing clerks can perform basic tasks, but haven’t wholly removed the
monopoly of lawyers over land transactions
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Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
• Fairness?
o Several commentators are concerned that the Torrens system does not deliver
just outcomes to victims of fraudulent transfers, where such transfers are
subsequently registered
o Some degree of flexibility and discretion is needed to accommodate all
circumstances
o A purely statutory system — regardless of the precise balance it strikes —
cannot, strictly applied, hope to achieve fairness in all cases
o Instead, recognition and judicial accommodation of equitable interests, subject to
the proper recognition of ordered legislative processes, represents the best
compromise between certainty and fairness
o In the absence of a better legislative system having been implemented in any
jurisdiction, and the minimal (if any) practical detriment that can be shown to
result from such a compromise, it should rightfully be regarded as both warranted
and viable
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Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
A Basic Features
Deed registration attempted to reform the general law land system by making it more efficient to
show good title. It differs to the Torrens system in that the old general law system, which was
based on chains of title deeds, was still retained.
Today, the Torrens system forms the primary method of land management. Indeed, since 1
January 1998, instruments affecting land in Victoria may no longer be registered under the deed
registration system. However, the general law registration system is still important:
• Large tracts of Australian land continue to be regulated by the deed registration system;
• Although automatic conversation of general law land to Torrens title is provided for by
statute, this will still take decades to complete;
• Priorities between conflicting general law interests are still resolved according to the
general law rules;
• Section 6 of the Property Law Act 1958 (Vic) still determines some priority disputes
according to general law rules
Deed registration sought ‘to reduce the risk that a purchaser might acquire an interesting land
without knowledge of an earlier inconsistent interest. It did so by allowing all instruments
affecting land to be registered, except leases for less than three year durations. Instruments that
were so registered, and executed in good faith for value were afforded priority over interests
which could have been registered, but weren’t, or which were registered later. However, failure to
register an interest did not avoid it.
Order of priority:
3 Registrable deeds
Registrable but unregistered instruments
4 Non-registrable deeds
Unregistrable instruments
If the grantee of an instrument procured their interests by fraud or with actual or constructive
knowledge of a prior unregistered interest, they are said not to be acting bona fides.
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Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
A Overview
The Registrar of Titles (‘the Registrar’) maintains a written register of land holdings. Each folio
details the people holding interests in that parcel. Certificates of title are essentially just copies of
a folio. Not all interests are recorded in folios:
• Registered interests
o Mortgages
o Leases over three years
o Title
o Transfers
o Easements
• Unregistrable interests
o Interests incapable of registration but have priority
o Tenant in possession (less than three years)
o Adverse possession
o Equitable titles
These are normally protected by means of caveats
The Registered Proprietor (‘RP’) is the party named as holder of an interest in land described by
a given folio of the register. The RP is able to deal with land as owner, and may transact to sell,
lease, sublease, and mortgage their interest in ways provided for by the statutes.
The Registrar has various discretionary powers, including an ability to request documents and
require parties to give evidence.
Registered interests arise upon registration. In this sense, registration confers legal title.
However, some unregistrable interests may till be legal (and not equitable) in nature, despite not
being registered (eg, a short term lessee’s legal lease). Most unregistered but registrable
interests are equitable, however.
Because unregistered and unregistrable interests can (and, indeed, do) exist off the register, it
can never be an entirely complete record. Indeed, the Torrens legislation appears to
acknowledge this inevitability quite explicitly in its provisions for the lodgement of caveats.
Caveats are designed to protect unregistered interests.
• Voluntary
Interests need not be registered; registration is voluntary
• (Largely) Conclusive
Only valid interests are placed on the register; all registered interests are so recorded
• Certain
Registered titles are certain and valid, so there is no need to look beyond the register to
determine good root of title; unregistered interests always cede priority, except in case of
fraud, etc
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• Indefeasible
Bona fide registration confers unimpeachable title
• Compensable
For those suffering loss as a result of the register, an assurance fund offers
compensation (though not specific performance)
Guiding questions: what is the scope of unregistered equitable interests within the Torrens
system? Can it deal with them adequately? What is the position of mere equities?
The Torrens Register manages principally private interests in land. Each folio contains two kinds
of data:
• Legal text
Alphanumeric information about the parcel, interests in it, and the identity of parties
holding same
• Spatial information
Maps, plans, other geographical and surveying information
In order for the system to be certain and conclusive, both pieces of data must be accurate and
reliable. In most jurisdictions, certainty is provided by effectively guaranteeing accuracy of legal
text on the register. However, spatial information is not legally guaranteed. Victoria, for example,
adjusts plans to suit occupation, so adversely possessed boundaries are held as occupied and
title is updated to reflect the changed dimensions. By contrast, New South Wales adjusts
boundaries to suit plans; this means that a surveyor must check the boundaries after an auction.
The Torrens register updates its contents on the basis of textual records provided by banks,
lawyers, conveyancers, and individuals. It receives spatial information primarily through
surveyors.
The register does not record several important aspects of a parcel of land:
• Buildings (type, footprint, value, use) except as boundaries in strata or subdivision titles;
• Land values, zoning, rates, heritage classification, business approvals; or
• Roads (councils typically record these on a separate register).
Theory suggests that a land administration system should manage all rights, restrictions and
responsibilities relating to a parcel of land. However, current tenure-based systems, including
Torrens, focus only on organising rights.
The register is able to successfully and efficiently record land transactions and changes in land
ownership (whether by operation of law, as by probate, administration of intestate estates,
bankruptcies, and court orders, or by voluntary dealing). It can do so because of the simple fact
that, without registration there is no change in actual legal ownership. Registration brings the
change to the attention of the registry, allowing it to be recorded.
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However, the Registrar typically does not actively seek out changes to land ownership. Parties
must generally bring such changes to the Registrar’s attention. Because an interest registered
first in time wins, this can sometimes lead to what is known as a ‘race to the Register’.
Due to the efficiency and certainty provided by Torrens land registration, there exists high public
confidence in the land registry and its Registrar.
• Mirror
o The register reflects accurately and completely the current interests held in a
parcel of land
o A title is free of adverse claims or burdens unless they are mentioned on the title
o No claims are possible outside the register
This is presently the dominant interpretative principle
However, there are several important exceptions
• Curtain
o The current certificate of title contains all the information about the title
o A historical search to verify the root of title is unnecessary
o The registry is conclusive so there is no need to look beyond it, in general, even
if the purchaser is aware of the facts giving rise to an unregistered interest
In general, ‘don’t ask’
o This principle is not always applied consistently
• Insurance
o Compensation for loss of rights is available from the assurance fund established
by the legislation in each jurisdiction
o The register is guaranteed to reflect the correct status of land
o If, through human error, a flaw appears, the loss suffered is corrected by
compensating the party
However, this is often criticised as inadequate, both in terms of quantum
(compensation is often minimal) and significance (land is arguably
irreplaceable)
There is also often substantial inconvenience and delay
In many circumstances, parties suffering loss choose instead to sue their
lawyer
The register offers both positive warranties (as to ownership, boundaries, and interests held) and
negative warranties (that there are no other interests that could have priority).
Note: significant tension exists between the objective of completeness (ie, nothing exists
beyond the register) and fairness (ie, unregistered equitable interests should be recognised
where it would be against conscience not to do so. It has been accepted that unregistered
interests in land can be created since Barry v Heider. Completeness is thus by degree only.
5
See generally Theo Ruoff, An Englishman Looks at the Torrens System (1957).
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Section 4 — Definitions:
Crown grant the grant by Her Majesty of land whether in fee or for years;
folio of the Register means a folio of the Register under section 27;
land includes any estate or interest in land but does not include
interest in land arising under the Mineral Resources
Development Act 1990;
registered proprietor means any person appearing by the Register (other than an
identified folio) or by any registered instrument to be the
proprietor of any estate or interest in land;
(2) Every instrument when registered shall be of the same efficacy as if under seal …..
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In this way, the folio is conclusive. Registered titles mirror (at least in theory) interests actually
held, thus obviating the need to search behind the register in order to determine whether
inconsistent interests exist (curtain principle).
E Torrens in Practice
1 A standard conveyance
• Prior to purchase, search the register to locate the relevant title and verify the identity of
owner and purchaser
• Visually inspect the land, identifying any rights of way, tenants, or relevant third parties
• As soon as the auction is complete, use caveats to protect the purchaser’s equitable
interest in completion
• Obtain a duplicate certificate of title before handing over the funds (never hand over
money before that)
• Register the certificate of transfer as soon as humanly possible
Performing these steps with speed and accuracy makes it very likely that the purchaser will
prevail in a Torrens priority dispute.
In a deeds system, judges established strict conveyancing standards, forcing people to search all
the title history, even behind the formal documents.
Torrens is a public register protecting last registered interest. Simple search. Conveyancing
standards are different, and they remain vital to the integrity of the register. Note effect of legal
education in deeds given to HCA judges sitting in the late 20th century; influenced their treatment
of the Torrens statutes
3 International standards
Torrens is considered international best practice for land registration in a land administration
system. It provides:
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In addition, Torrens is simple to administer, cheap and efficient to run. However, it can be
expensive to establish (though not in Australia, where there was little in the way of existing
recognised tenures).
For these reasons, the Torrens system is much better than a deeds system. It is arguably the
best land registration system in the world. Although its interaction with equitable and adverse
possessory interests is not entirely satisfactory (see below), the system produces a just outcome
in the vast majority of cases (certainly a greater proportion than under a deeds system).
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IV Indefeasibility
A Definition
Indefeasibility of title ‘is a convenient description of the immunity from attack by adverse claim to
the land or interest in respect of which he is registered, which a registered proprietor enjoys’ (their
Lordships in Frazer v Walker). Indefeasibility is conferred by registration. It is, in essence, a
statutory guarantee against retrospective invalidation of title, subject to several exceptions (see
below Part VII).
As Windeyer J noted in Breskvar v Wall, indefeasibility is ‘the very essence of the Torrens
system’.
Some documents are a simple one page transfer of land and result in an immediate change in the
owner of the interest when registered. Others are more complicated; for example, many
mortgages contain personal and proprietary covenants. Other documents may refer to a
memorandum or standard form provisions.
Issue: are all these secondary provisions and interests created thereby also registered and,
hence, indefeasible when the primary instrument is registered?
Issue
• Can Shell renew the lease?
Reasoning
• The renewal covenant is proprietary and runs with the land
Decision
• The High Court allowed the protection of registration to encompass proprietary
covenants contained within the lease
Mercantile Credits suggests that mortgages and leases that create covenants will be binding
upon new owners of land to the extent that the rights created are proprietary (and not personal).
2 Registrable instruments
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If the instrument is registrable, bona fide registration confers prima facie indefeasibility, subject of
course to certain exceptions (see below Part VII):
Even if the registrant has actual or constructive notice of a prior unregistered interest, subsequent
registration will not be fraud, even though it has the effect of denying those earlier rights.
However, all this is subject to the exception that certificates fraudulently registered will be invalid.
This exception does not extend to subsequent bona fide purchasers dealing on faith of the
register, such that a further transaction to a third party will escape invalidation.
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Note: some interests (eg, trusts) cannot be registered (recorded on the register). These can be
protected using caveats. However, most interests can be placed on the register.
B Scope of Indefeasibility
2 Competing theories
Issue: at what point is an indefeasible title conveyed? Who should be given protection? All
people who register without fraud, only some registrants?
At first, deferred indefeasibility was favoured on the basis of an interpretation of TLA s 44.
According to this view, only second and subsequent registrations are protected by indefeasibility,
and only if they are themselves bona fides. Protection is ‘deferred’ to the second dealing.
By contrast, immediate Indefeasibility is now favoured on the basis of TLA s 42. Registrations
obtained without fraud are protected immediately.
The object of indefeasibility is to save purchasers from ‘the trouble and expensive of going behind
the register’. This is achieved by protecting any bona fide purchaser for value from adverse claim
where they purchase on faith of the register. Such a purchaser acquires an indefeasible right of
ownership ‘notwithstanding any infirmity in the title.’7
3 Historical development
The initial position favoured deferred indefeasibility, reflecting a deeds system interpretation of
Torrens legislation:
the justification for destroying a legal estate … is only to protect someone who deals on
the faith of the register …
According to Sir Anthony Mason, what Dixon J in Clements v Ellis did was to invest the Torrens
statute with ‘many of the characteristics of the existing law of real property and equity’. It is
‘obvious’ that Torrens is not wholly self-contained.
6
Sir Anthony Mason, ‘Indefeasibility — Logic or Legend’ in David Grinlinton (ed), Torrens in the
Twenty-first Century (2003) 3, 5.
7
CN and NA Davies Ltd v Laughton [1997] 3 NZLR 705, 712–13 (Thomas J).
Page 19 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
‘This controversy has centred on the concept…of “indefeasibility”, what it means or was intended
to mean and whether it should now be modified so as to permit just outcomes in a wide variety of
circumstances.’
‘The Privy Council settled this conflict in Frazer v Walker in favour of immediate indefeasibility.’
‘Frazer v Walker devided that, on registration of an instrument that is merely void by a purchaser
for value without fraud, the purchaser has an indefeasible title. Frazer v Walker distinguished
Gibbs v Messer and did not overrule it. So it still stands as authority for the proposition that
registration of a forged instrument in favour of a fictitious or non-existent person does not confer
an indefeasible title.’
Issue
• Is the transfer valid?
• Does Radmonski have ‘good’ title as derived title from forged instrument?
• Can Mr Walker obtain a declaration that his interest in the land was not affected by the
mortgage or subsequent transfer?
Reasoning
• Radomski, the first mortgagee —
o Forged instrument void at common law
o Could not pass the title at common law
o Court applies Boyd to hold indefeasible title may be derived from registration of
void instrument
• Section 63 (our s 42) protects the registered proprietor (Radmonski) except where he
(not Mrs Fraser) is guilty of fraud
o This is ‘immediate’ rather than deferred indefeasibility
o Court distinguished Gibbs v Messer as ‘fictitious person’: confined to factual
circumstances
• Even though there is a forgery, it is possible to derive good title from the mortgagee; the
title is indefeasible at that point and there is no need to engage in a second, subsequent
transaction
• No fraud on the part of Radomski
• Mr Frazer relied in Gibbs v Messer: rejected by the Privy Council
o Confined to its facts about dealing with a fictitious person
• Note s 183 of NZ Act: “nothing shall render subject to … deprivation of the estate … of
which he is registered … any bona fide purchaser for value on ground that the previous
person was registered through fraud or void or voidable instrument…’
• ‘[Indefeasibility] is a convenient description of the immunity from attack by adverse claim
to the land or interest in respect of which he is registered, which a registered proprietor
enjoys.’
Decision
• The sale is valid and Radomski’s title indefeasible
Page 20 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
More recently, the High Court of Australia has confirmed that immediate indefeasibility is the
correct approach:
4 Future approaches
The modern trend suggests that the most recent act of registration is, and will continue to be,
determinative. Previous conduct is generally ignored. Note, however, that each Australian
jurisdiction has differing provisions in relation to indefeasibility, and different bodies of case law
have grown out of each.
‘According to the deferred indefeasibility theory, the person registering a void instrument does not
necessarily secure protection from challenge by a second person seeking to set aside the
registration even if the first person has acted without fraud. Indefeasibility ensures only in favour
of a party who purchases in good faith from the registered proprietor, acts on the faith of the
8
register, and registers a valid instrument executed by him.’
Deferred indefeasibility may be viewed as an attempt to alleviate the occasionally harsh operation
of the (at this point) new Torrens system.
Issue
• Can Messer be restored as registered-proprietor?
• Must the MacIntyres' mortgage interest be recognised and the land owned subject to that
interest?
Reasoning
• Privy Council – protection by statute is limited to those who actually derive title from, and
deal with, a registered proprietor
o MacIntyres dealt with a fictitious person – could not derive good title from the
8
Sir Anthony Mason, above n 6, 5.
Page 21 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
forged instrument
o The mortgage, though registered, was invalid because of fraud
• The protection is limited to those who deal with and derive title from the registered
proprietor
o They couldn't derive good title from a fictitious proprietor
o This reflects a deeds-based approach to title
(Ie, title dependant upon predecessor's validity)
o Cf Torrens: title, once registered, is effective regardless of previous chain of title
• If there had been a second transaction from MacIntyres to a third party, the transfer
would have been valid
o Ie, must be one step away from the fraud: indefeasibility 'deferred' to the second
transaction
• If you're on the register and deal with land, the purchaser is entitled to treat you as owner
Decision
• Court held Messer restored as RP w/o mortgage
‘The view of Dixon J in Clement v Ellis … invest the statute with many of the existing
characteristics of the existing law of real property and equity. Just how much of that law and
equity should be imported into Torrens Title jurisprudence has always been a matter of
debate. It was, of course obvious that the system was not wholly self contained.’
Note – week one article by Justice Gummow probing how far equity should be imported into the
operation of the Torrens system.
Note view that ‘Recognition of equitable estates and interests lying beyond the state of the
register has proved an uncontroversial matter’ (Mason at 6)
Page 22 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
• Execution of a blank transfer was a breach of s 53(1) of the Stamps Act 1984 (Qld)
o Breskvar signed the transfer in lieu of a mortgage
• Petrie inserts his grandson's name (Wall) and had the transfer registered
• Wall knew of and is found to collude in the fraud
• Wall becomes the registered proprietor (though his title is defeasible for fraud)
o Wall registers in grandson's name, registers and sells to Alban
• Petrie then sells the land to Alban
• Alban’s solicitor searched the register before signing the contract and finds no evidence
of earlier interests
• Alban completes the sale
• Before Alban registers, the Breskvars discovered the fraud and lodged a caveat which
prevented Alban getting registered
• Alban wants to be protected on the basis of reliance on the register
Issue
• Is defeasibility deferred or immediate?
o Either way, the Breskvars will lose
o Although the Breskvars could have recovered their land for fraud at the time of
Wall’s registration, once Alban purchased on the basis of Wall’s purported
owner, the third party is protected
Reasoning
• Barwick CJ
o ‘…except in and for the purpose of such excepted proceedings, the
conclusiveness of the certificate of title is definitive of the title of the registered
proprietor.’
o ‘That is to say, in the jargon which has had currency, there is immediate
indefeasibility of title by the registration of the proprietor named in the register.’
o ‘It is really no impairment of the conclusiveness of the register that the proprietor
remains liable to one of the excepted actions any more than his liability for
“personal equities” derogates from that conclusiveness. So long as the
certificate is unamended it is conclusive and of course when amended it is
conclusive of the new particulars it contains.’
o ‘The Torrens system of registered title … is not a system of registration of title
but a system of title by registration.’
o ‘Consequently, a registration which results from a void instrument is effective
according to the terms of the registration. It matters not what the cause or
reason for which the instrument is void.’
o ‘The situation therefore immediately after the registration of the [memorandum],
by the endorsement of a memorial on the certificate of title was that the fee
simple in the land was vested in [Wall]’
o However, that transfer was procured by the fraud of the transferee;
‘Consequently, although the registered proprietor in whom the fee simple was
vested, [Wall] did hold his estate subject to the rights of the [Breskvars]. He did
not hold it on trust for the [Breskvars] but as between themselves and [Wall] they
had a right to sue to recover the land and to have the register rectified’
o ‘such a claim is an equitable claim enforceable by reason of the principles of the
Court of Chancery’ (it is not clear whether his Honour means to describe it as a
mere equity or otherwise)
o ‘If there had been no transaction by [Wall] with [Alban], the [Breskvars] would
have been entitled to succeed against [Wall]’
o ‘But the purchase by [Alban] bona fide for value and without notice intervened,
before that equitable right of the appellants was fulfilled. The third respondent
thus acquired an equitable interest in the land. The ability to create and the
Page 23 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
validity of an equitable estate in land the title to which is under the Torrens
system were fully established in Barry v Heider…’
• McTiernan J
o Wall’s registration confers good against the whole world except the Breskvars
o Therefore they had good title in relation to third parties dealing with him on faith
of the register
o The decision in Frazer requires this conclusion
o In this case, the register (which reported Wall as the registered proprietor) was
relied upon by Alban
o Therefore Wall passed an interest in land to Alban by memorandum of transfer
(equitable interest)
o Conduct of parties must be taken into consideration in order to determine the
better equity and the Breskvars were estopped from relying on their prior equity
because of their behaviour
• Menzies J:
o Upon registration, Wall became registered owner and the Breskvars ceased to
be registered owners
o The Breskvars’ interest became a right to impeach the defeasible title of Wall
o The signed transfer that the Breskvars gave Petrie was not valid, and therefore
could not be regarded as a good source of equitable rights
o But the transfer held by Alban was from the registered proprietor and as such a
transferee; his rights fall to be determined by s 48 which gave it an equitable
interest as unregistered purchaser of land
o Alban should have priority, not because the Breskvars armed Wall or because
that transfer was not capable of creating any interest, but because such a
transfer is in breach of the Stamps Act and it was this breach of law that enabled
Wall to become registered
o ‘Frazer v Walker is important here in establishing that, if and to the extent that
earlier decisions were to the effect that an indefeasible title cannot be acquired
by the registration of a void instrument, they have lost their authority. It must
now be recognised that, in the absence of fraud on the part of the
transferee, or some other statutory ground of exception, an indefeasible
title can be acquired by virtue of a void transfer... [but] where there is fraud ...
a transferee does, by registration of a void transfer, obtain a defeasible title’
• Walsh J:
o Prior to Frazer the result may have been different
o However, while this case differs, the principles laid down in Frazer are very
important
o No longer open to Breskvars to argue that the registration of wall as proprietor
was absolutely void and inoperative
o Effect of immediate indefeasibility is to pass title to Wall upon registration
o Effect of fraud was to give the Breskvars rights against Wall and as against Wall,
the Breskvars were entitled to be restored as registered proprietors
o Right is equitable right which enables court to provide a remedy as against Wall
o However, as against A, the question was whether that interest was one that
should take priority over A’s interest which arose out of the contract of sale and
the completion of the contract including their holding a transfer
o Not necessary to determine whether the Breskvars’ interest was a mere equity or
an equitable interest because Alban had no notice and the Bs had armed Petrie
and Wall with the transfer and certificate of title (postponing conduct)
Page 24 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
• General comments:
o Here Wall was a party to the fraud of Petrie (his grandfather) because he knew
about it
o So here Wall’s registration was procured by the actual fraud of the registered
proprietor, so therefore he held his title ‘subject to the rights of the appellants’
(the Breskvars); ie, defeasible
o Consequently, the issue of deferred indefeasibility vs immediate indefeasibility
did not arise on the facts because Alban had not become registered
o However, Frazer v Walker was cited with approval as authority for the
proposition of immediate indefeasibility (‘registration by a void instrument is
effective’ to pass title — an endorsement of immediate indefeasibility)
Decision
• Immediate indefeasibility is adopted: the Breskvars’ right to set aside the sale to Wall for
fraud is postponed to that held by Alban as purchaser under a specifically enforceable
contract
o Barwick CJ uses registration to protect a person not yet registered (Alban) who
bought from Wall, after Wall registered through Wall’s and Petrie’s fraud
o The Breskvar’s did something ‘very silly’ from which no court could protect them
• Ratio: Never sign and hand over a blank transfer and the certificate of title to secure a
loan, or, if you do, lodge a caveat immediately (before any third party dealings can take
place)
o Legal estate had passed to Wall on registration
o Thereafter, the Breskvars had either an equitable interest in land or an equity to
have the land retransferred to them (equity of rectification)
o Alban acquired the right to be registered as proprietor of the legal estate in fee
simple b/c it acquired an equitable interest at the point it acquired a transfer in
registrable form.
o Alban’s right to be registered had priority over the right of the plaintiff.
1 When you become the registered proprietor, you take the interest free from all other
interests that are not recorded in the register
o For example, if there is a mortgage over the land which is not recorded in the
register, generally speaking the registered proprietor does not take the land
subject to it
o The interest cannot be enforced against the registered proprietor, even if the
registered proprietor had notice of the interest: TLA s 43
o Unless there has been fraud or another exception applies: ss 42, 44 TLA
o Further, an indefeasible title means that the registered proprietor has a title that
cannot be set aside on the grounds that there was a defect in the title (such as a
void instrument due to forgery) before registration
o Vasso: the title is not historical or derivative; it is the title which registration itself
has vested in the proprietor that is relevant
o Breskvar: it matters not what the cause or reason is for which the instrument is
void (eg, for non-compliance with the Stamps Act)
Page 25 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
Bursill Enterprises Pty Ltd v Berger Bros Trading Co Pty Ltd (1971) HCA:
Facts
• The Registrar–General recorded a transfer on folio 7922
• He described the nature of the interest as an ‘easement’
• This transfer occurred between the two predecessors of title: Guy, Bursill’s predecessor,
granted to Long, Berger’s predecessor, in addition to rights to a building over a roadway
Issue
• Was the title burdened by an easement (as the relevant folio of the register appeared to
suggest) or did Transfer 7922 operate according to its terms by including rights to a
building?
Reasoning
• Per Windeyer J
o The grant of the building rights was not an easement but a conveyance
o Thus the issue was whether the rights in relation to the building were noted on
the register
o If so, then Bursill holds land subject to that right
o Otherwise, did transfer 7922 operate according to its terms granting rights to the
building?
o The NSW legislation provided that the RP’s title was ‘subject to such
encumbrances as may be notified on the folium of the register book’
o This holding was based in part on the view that ‘… prudent conveyancers would
have ascertained what it was that transfer 7922, referred to on the vendor’s
certificate of title, in law effected.’
Decision
• Court held that as transfer 7922 was noted on title the rights to the building were ‘notified
on the folium of the register book constituted by … the certificate of title within the
meaning of s 42.’
• The interest is therefore enforceable against Bursill
• Essentially, this case erodes the curtain principle: a ‘prudent conveyancer’ would look
beyond the register to the transfer
A void instrument is a conveyancing document not legally valid because it is fraudulent (eg, a
forgery). At common law, void instruments will be ineffective to transfer any interest.
However, under the Torrens system, because it is registration that confers title, not the instrument
under which the transfer is made, void instruments can, upon registration, nevertheless give rise
to an enforceable legal interest. Thus, once registration occurs the new registered proprietor has
title to land, that title will be indefeasible regardless of the fact that that registration relied on an
instrument void for fraud or some other deficiency. (However, if the registered proprietor was the
fraudster or forger, then title will be defeasible as against the previous owner.)
The rationale for this treatment is to render it irrelevant whether or not there was a defect in the
transaction that led to the registration. This supports the ‘curtain’ principle.
Page 26 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
Deed system
A Æ B Æ C
Deed Deed Deed
(title) (title) (title)
A Æ B Æ C
Deed Forged Nemo dat
(title) deed (No passing of title)
(no title)
Frazer v Walker
(AÆBÆC) [Registration]
Curtain RP Æ E people deal on faith of register
(no need to check) D (mirror) conclusive register
Breskvar v Wall
B Æ P Æ W Æ Alban
Transfer Forges || Contract of sale
|| (equitable interest: specifically
|| enforceable contract; Tanwar)
Has CT || Indefeasible title
Equitable \/
claim agst RP registered
W to set (defeasible) fraud
aside on basis
of fraud (mere eq? Latec)
In Mills v Stockman, Kitto J observed that registration of an interest under Torrens legislation will
confer upon the registrant indefeasibility as from existing unregistered interests, even if such
person has actual knowledge of the prior interest. This will not constitute fraud.
Page 27 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
Reasoning
• Barwick CJ:
o The agreement between Mills and Stockman did not create any new rights, and
Stockman’s equitable interest continues
• McTiernan J:
o Mills took title to the land in 1963, by which time she must have seen Stokman
removing slate from the land and learnt of his right to enter the land for same
o Mills was therefore not a purchaser for value without notice at common law
• Kitto J:
o However, for the portion of the land upon which the slate is situated which falls
under the provisions of the Real Property Act, ‘I think the position is different’
o Mills, having become the registered proprietor, ‘is unaffected by any interest not
on the register, even though she took with notice of it. It the case were one of
fraud it would be otherwise; but merely to take a transfer with notice or even
actual knowledge that its registration will defeat an existing unregistered
interest is not fraud’
o By contrast, if Mills had merely taken possession at common law, she would
have been bound by her actual notice of a prior equitable interest
o Knowledge of an unregistered interest and subsequent registration in order to
suppress it is not fraud
Decision
• Barwick CJ and Taylor J: dismiss the appeal
• McTiernan J: dismisses the appeal but allows a further trial of the issue of authority
• Kitto J: makes a declaration that Mills is the owner of the land, including the pile of dross,
and her interest prevails over Stockman’s equitable right to quarry the slate, and
dismisses the appeal
• Taylor J: dismisses the appeal but makes new declarations
G Policy Issues
1 Hypothetical
Mrs A owned a farm, inherited from her father and in her family for three generations. Her
parents’ ashes were scattered over the rose garden at the front door. Her pet dogs were
buried under the poplar trees her grandfather planted along the drive. Her son, Z, was
born in the second bedroom.
One day Z took the title from her locked file drawer and ‘sold’ the farm to B. B searched
the title and found that Mrs A was registered. Upon making a visual inspection, he saw
her doing the farming.
Page 28 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
At settlement, the son gave B the certificate of title and a transfer with a forged signature
of his mother. B registered the transfer. Z went to the casino and squandered the
money.
According to Barwick CJ, B must win on the basis of immediate indefeasibility. Mrs A loses her
farm. Though she may be able to obtain compensation (to the value of the land at the time of the
fraud) from the government, this is still an arguably unsatisfactory result given Mrs A’s strong
emotional connection with her land.
2 Possible reforms
It is sometimes thought that deferred indefeasibility yields more satisfactory results in cases
involving void instruments. As the experience of Canada demonstrates, it is a workable solution.
No significant problems have been raised by its adoption there.
In the view of Sir Anthony Mason, deferred indefeasibility would generate fairer results. However,
it is unclear whether such benefits would outweigh the detriments of change. How would the
change affect security of title, the cost of administering the system, and the speed with which
interests are registered? Would it move closer to achieving the goals of the Torrens system
(certainty, conclusiveness, etc)?
b) Equitable relief
Any reform must effectively balance security and certainty of title (from the purchaser’s
perspective) against the rights (and emotional attachment) of the original vendor. At present,
courts face the unenviable task of choosing between two ‘innocent’ (ie, non-fraudulent) parties.
There may be a role for equitable remedies in some cases. According to Sir Anthony Mason:
There was a traditional opposition to too much equity and an idea that excessive
equitable relief would be destructive of the objects of the Torrens system. This
opposition seems to misunderstand the nature of the indefeasibility for which the statutes
provided. The opposition seems to have been based on an idea that the register was
supposed to contain all estates or interests in land — as if there was an obligation on a
person claiming an estate or interest in land to register it. … relief against a registered
proprietor … should be available so long as it does not trench upon the principle of
indefeasibility. The availability of such relief is an essential element in doing justice under
the Torrens system. If such relief were unavailable, the registered proprietor would be in
an extraordinarily preferred position. It was never the object of the system to protect the
9
registered proprietor against such claims.
9
Sir Anthony Mason, above n 6, 16.
Page 29 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
Defeasibility is too rigid a rule. Deferred or discretionary indefeasibility may deliver fairer results.
Equitable remedies may undermine certainty to an insufferable degree.
c) Discretionary indefeasibility
This involves giving discretion to the Court in cases where a void instrument is registered. It may
either order that the former registered proprietor be restored to the register, or declare the
subsequent registrant’s title to be indefeasible.
The Victorian Law Commission prefers prima facie deferred indefeasibility, with a backup
discretionary power to be employed in cases of ‘undue hardship’.
Such an approach may also allow the court to consider whether any party to the transaction
would better be satisfied by compensation. New purchasers, for example, have less of an
emotional connection with land than an existing but defrauded vendor.
The Canadian Joint Titles Committee proposed several factors to determine whether the
discretion should be exercised:
(a) Nature of ownership and property use by each party (eg, commercial, residential
occupation, etc);
(b) Circumstances of the transaction;
(c) Special characteristics of the property;
(d) Willingness of a party to receive compensation;
(e) Ease of determining compensation; and
(f) Other circumstances ‘which, in the opinion of the Court, may make it just and
equitable for the Court to exercise or refuse to exercise its powers.’10
The primary problem with discretionary defeasibility is that it would increase uncertainty. A high
degree of confidence in the system is necessary for it to work properly. That confidence cannot
be maintained unless it performs as expected. If indefeasibility depends on discretionary
normative judgments, this aspect of the land registration system may be undermined.
Current legislation in some jurisdictions (eg, South Australia, New Zealand) permits the Registrar
to make alterations to the register where it is appropriate to do so. While this arguably generates
more uncertainty than a judicially determined approach to indefeasibility, it remains another
option.
For example, in the United Kingdom, the Land Registration Act 2002 (UK) permits the register to
be altered in special circumstances. However, something greater than fraud is required.
10
Joint Land Titles Committee, Renovating the Foundation: Proposals for a Model Recording and
Registration Act for the Provinces and the Territories of Canada (1990).
Page 30 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
Of course, no anti-fraud measure can be completely effective. For this reason, the legal
approach to indefeasibility remains of considerable importance to those parties who are inevitably
defrauded.
Page 31 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
V Miscellaneous Dealings
A Gifts of Land
For an effective gift of Torrens land in law, the property must be delivered and the titled vested in
the donee. If this were general law land, the conveyance would be by deed. Under the Torrens
system, however, registration is the relevant vehicle for vesting title. Thus, for a complete gift
under the Torrens system, there must be registration.
Re Rose is a qualification on the maxim that equity will not assist a volunteer. Of course, the
assistance is here not provided to the volunteer (donor) but to the donee who has not yet been
registered as owner.
In Brunker v Perpetual Trustee Co, Dixon J treats the traditional Milroy v Lord principles (of
equitable gifts) as completely inapplicable to Torrens land.
Brunker represents a strict view of the Torrens system. This position was relaxed slightly in Corin
v Patton, which rejected Brunker (Brennan J dissenting).
Page 32 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
Issue
• When did severance occur?
o That is, when was the gift complete?
Reasoning
• Mason CJ, McHugh J:
o Milroy v Lord principles applicable to determine whether there was an effective
gift in equity ie whether interest passed
o Donor must have done everything necessary to render the gift binding
Must sign transfer with intention to make a gift
Deliver possession of the transfer document to donee
Make arrangements for production of duplicate certificate of title
o Mrs Patton needed to have done everything necessary to be done by the donor
to render the gift binding for severance to take place inter vivos
o On the facts, she did not arrange for delivery of the certificate of title thus not all
steps were complete
• Deane J:
o Agreed with reasoning of Mason CJ and McHugh J
o Milroy v Lord principles are applicable
o The gift must be beyond recall
• Brennan J (dissenting)
o Dixon J in Brunker was correct: a donee does not acquire an equitable interest in
land prior to registration, but may acquire a right to obtain registration
• Toohey J (dissenting)
o On the facts the transaction was not a gift, so declined to apply Milroy v Lord
principles
According to Corin v Patton, then, general equitable principles from Milroy v Lord do apply to
incomplete gifts of Torrens land. Corin v Patton suggests that donees will obtain an equitable
interest prior to registration. It might be argued (as Brennan J did) that this is inconsistent with
the principle of title by registration (Breskvar v Wall).
However, in reality the position is very similar to what would occur if the dealing was a sale. The
purchaser would obviously have an equitable interest arising under the contract of sale prior to
registration (equitable interest in fee simple; tenancy in common: Barry v Heider), so proprietary
rights can clearly be created in equity prior to registration:
Page 33 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
The ability to create and the validity of an equitable estate in land the title to which is
under the Torrens system were fully established in Barry v Heider…
Both of these results may be contrasted with the actual intention of Sir Robert Torrens, who did
not intend proprietary rights to arise until registration.
The only interests that can exist in relation to Torrens System land are those recognised
by the system. Nonetheless, the system does recognise interests that are not set out in
the central register so that there are both registered and unregistered interests.
One of the primary aims of the Torrens system was that only registered interests are recognised.
Clearly this is not the case.
The current rules represent a balance between two competing policy goals: fairness for holders of
unregistered interests and economic efficiency (by conclusiveness of title). The result is a system
in which secure title is readily alienable, whilst informal dealings remain capable of recognition in
a majority of cases.
Hughson, Neave and O’Conner observe of the interactions between law and equity in the Torrens
system, that:
There is an inherent tension between the emphasis which equity places on enforcing
obligations of conscience and Torrens’ goal of protecting purchasers of interests. This
tension can be discerned in the very conception of Torrens reform of general land law.
Torrens’ intention appears to have been that no interest in land should come into
existence prior to registration. (at 461)
Was Equity shut out of the Torrens System? Clearly not: note complexities and tensions that
have arisen as a result:
Those principles had to operate alongside provisions such as s 41 [TLA] to the effect that
until registration of an instrument a transfer is ineffectual to pass an estate or interest in
the land.
The answer was that this prohibition did not touch whatever rights were behind the instrument, a
proposition derived from Barry v Heider itself.
Torrens’ view was a strict conception of how interests should be acquired and transferred:
Page 34 of 41
Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
Instruments when executed are merely personal contracts between the parties upon
which action for damages may be raised but they do not bind the land. The entry on the
folium of the Register alone passes the property, creates the charge or lesser estate,
discharges or transfers it.
Absolute adoption of this view would have entailed ‘abandonment of the principle that a
specifically enforceable contract passes an equitable interest in land.’ However, it has been
accepted that a specifically enforceable contract passes an equitable interest in land (Barry v
Heider; Bunny Industries; Bahr v Nicolay).
Interactions between registered and unregistered title in the Torrens system include:
• The system of equitable estates and interests in relation to land, which continue to be
held over Torrens land (Barry v Heider)
• The caveat system (which affords some measure of protection for equitable interests:
TLA ss 89–91)
• The exercise of the Court’s general jurisdiction to enforce common law rights and
equitable obligations and duties by in personam remedies
• Paramount interests (TLA s 42(2))
• Incomplete gifts (Corin v Patton) which equity would recognise as complete prior to
registration (treating as done that which ought to be done)
Indeed, equitable rights are sometimes critical to commercial certainty: that an interest arises
under a contract prior to registration affords some measure of confidence to the buyer of land that
the transaction will proceed to settlement and enables them to order their affairs on that basis.
Thus, where A sells to B but B is not yet registered (prior to settlement), there is an equitable
interest held prior to registration (Tanwar; Bunny Industries).
Gifts:
Their honours [in Corin v Patton] pointed out that the Torrens legislation was silent as to
the supposed right, and that statutes provided scant support for the notion of a personal
right apparently … All that can be said is that the legislation enables a donee to secure
registration … and that power stems not from statute but from the principles of equity.
Justice Gummow at 61.
The courts’ treatment of incomplete gifts highlights the tension between Torrens title by
registration and giving effect to equitable relief:
Where a donor, with the intention of making a gift, delivers to the donee an instrument of
transfer in registrable form with the certificate of title so as to enable him to obtain
registration, an equity arises, not from the transfer itself but from the execution and
delivery of the transfer and certificate of title in such circumstances as will enable the
donee to procure the vesting of the legal title in himself. Accordingly, s 41 does not
prevent the passing of an equitable estate to the donee under a completed transaction.
(Gummow at 62)
Torrens is a modern statutory system designed to avoid some of the problems inherent in the
general law system. It was designed to be more reliable, efficient and cheaper than general law
conveyancing.
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How successful has the Torrens system been in meeting its aims and achieving a balance
between commercial efficiency and fairness?
Critics of the recognition that is presently afforded to equitable interests and personal remedies
would do well to recognise that threat posed to the objectives of the Torrens system by overriding
statutory interests. Far from being ‘free from all encumbrances’, title is increasingly burdened
with onerous planning and environmental obligations, which arguably cause far greater
inconvenience to purchasers and incompleteness of the register than do equitable rights.
Indefeasibility of title
Deferred indefeasibility
• Registration of the void transfer will not give Beatrice an indefeasible title against Abigail
o If Beatrice sells to Candice, Candice will have an indefeasible title
o Indefeasibility is deferred until one transaction away from the void dealing
o Emphasis on provisions of the TLA that protect third parties dealing with the RP
especially TLA s 43, 44
• Cases supporting deferred indefeasibility
o Gibbs v Messer [1891] AC 248
o Clements v Ellis (1934) 51 CLR
Immediate Indefeasibility
• The primary means of protecting purchasers: title is created upon registration and is
immediately capable of passing good title (subject to exceptions)
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o Beatrice is not involved in the fraud herself and so will have an indefeasible title
against any claims by Abigail
• Emphasis on the provisions of the TLA protecting the person obtaining registration-
especially paramountcy provisions TLA s 42
• Early cases supported deferred indefeasibility, this is no longer the case- immediate
indefeasibility is clearly supported
• Immediate indefeasibility favours the later purchaser/ security interest holder by allowing
immediate immunity from challenge. Leaves earlier interest holder to seek compensation
[if available] as they will not be able to recover the land.
Note: tension between fairness to previous RP and certainty title for purchaser. How can the
unfairness caused by immediate indefeasibility be justified to an RP who loses out?
• Despite being void at common law, registration is effective to create the interest
• Even if Wall’s interest was defeasible as against the Breskvars because of fraud- did
registration give him any interest in the land?
• Whilst the register is unamended it is conclusive evidence of the particulars on the
register (Barwick CJ) (equivalent of TLA s 41)
• Could Wall create an interest in the land in Alban? Alban purchaser on faith of register
• Alban acquired an equitable interest – right to be registered thus eventually would be RP
• What is the function of the caveat provisions of the Transfer of Land Act?
• Are they to freeze the register to allow regularisation of an unregistered instrument.
• Are they to allow the caveator the opportunity to substantiate their claim.
• Are they intended to operate as a statutory injunction preventing the Registrar from
registering inconsistent interests?
• Are they intended to provide for a means of giving notice to others of interests in land that
the caveator claims?
The essence of Australian real property law is the Torrens system. This system should be
seen as changing the nature of interests in land. The system is one where title to land is
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derived from registration- it is a system of title by registration and not one of registration
of title
In the particular conditions of Australia, the shortcomings of the general law deeds conveyancing
system were exacerbated.
1 Introduction
• Purpose of caveat: ‘to prevent the registered proprietor from dealing with the land in a
manner which is inconsistent with the rights of the caveator’ (at 465)
• Reasons why this approach is to be preferred:
o Broad; should encompass all equitable interests
o Protective function
o All categories of interest able to be caveated
o Flexible function dependent on circumstances
• Note discussion of what constitutes estate or interest in land (at 467–74)
• If we accept that there is a difference between equitable interests and mere equities, is a
mere equity sufficient to support a caveat?
o Are mere equities ‘interests in land’ within the meaning of TLA s 89?
o According to current authority they are not: Swanston Mortgage
• Can a RP caveat to protect its own registered title?
o Swanston Mortgage v Trepan Investments: no, unless and until he or she has an
interest in the land that is separate and distinct from his or her title as registered
proprietor
o See Hughson at 475–6
• Should we recognise and protect equitable interests?
o ‘The financial and personal value of the properties protected by equitable
interests make them worthy of protection under the current system of property
law in Australia…’
• Permitting the holders of unregistered interests to caveat would provide them with some
protection without undermining the aim of protecting purchasers transacting on the faith
of the register who themselves become registered.’ (at 477)
• Law and economics argument:
o Notice of interest is another way of gathering all information about title into the
register
o Protecting more interests more strongly acts as an incentive for the lodgement of
caveats
• Torrens’ intention that no interest should pass until registration but if recognise equitable
interests under Torrens Title
o However, this raises the need to resolve priority conflicts between unregistered
interests
• Priorities rules:
o Better equity test, if equities equal
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Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
It would have been possible for courts to adapt equitable principles to the goals of the
Torrens system, by permitting postponement on the ground that the holder of the first
interest has not made use of the statutory mechanisms provided to protect it, …[for
example] by lodging a caveat. (at 479)
This approach was adopted in the early cases (see, eg, Butler). Later cases increased the
emphasis placed upon protecting the first in time interest holder rather than those who deal on
faith of the register.
The view that the effect of positive ‘arming’ conduct can be undone by using the statutory
mechanism for the protection of an equitable interest [a caveat] is quite consistent with
the notion that the register should mirror the state of the title. (at 481)
• Just shows that a failure to caveat is not of itself a reason to postpone but the effect of
mere failure is still unclear
• Note conflicting views (eg, Sharari; cf Avco).
Perhaps the most important reason for conferring priority on the person who caveats is
that this creates an incentive to do so. (at 488)
6 Reforms
See 488.
7 In personam claims
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Property II: Acquisitions and Dealings 7 – Torrens
o Substantive level
In personam enforceable against the person of the registered proprietor by
requiring him to deal with the property in accordance with the Court’s directions
Eg, specific performance of contract of resale in Bahr
• The formal level downplays inconsistency between indefeasibility and in personam claims
o Certain claims would undermine indefeasibility
o ‘The scope for substantive inconsistency with … [the] Torrens scheme assumed
greater importance following the endorsement of immediate indefeasibility’
(at 490)
o ‘Cognisant of the potential for in personam to outflank indefeasibility, courts have
restricted the class of claims…’
• See Kenworthy
o In personam has the tendency to outflank indefeasibility: although action is
brought against the person, it may lead to a court order directing a party to
perform their contract and resell the land (eg, Bahr v Nicolay).
o Judges at once accept in personam claims whilst denying any inconsistency with
Torrens objectives
o Courts don’t allow broad spectrum claims for in personam: forgery in transaction
is insufficient, rather there is emphasis on claims from the dealings or conduct of
the registered proprietor
o Claims are limited to specific equitable causes of action
• In personam claims relate to the personal conduct of registered proprietor; the trend has
been to narrowly interpret the exception:
The courts are concerned to exclude claims, which though seeking an in personam
remedy do not arise from some transaction or conduct attributable to the registered
proprietor personally. (at 489)
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9 Conclusions
• A central objective of the Torrens system was to provide a conclusive public register to
promote greater simplicity and certainty in land dealings; this was largely supposed to be
for the benefit of purchasers dealing on the faith of the register
• The scope of equity within the Torrens system has gradually been expanded to afford
greater recognition to holders of unregistered interests
• Some adaptations of the Torrens system have been made to accommodate equity (eg,
the caveat system)
• Some equitable principles from general law have been displaced (indefeasibility of title
replaced the equitable creation of the bona fide purchaser)
• The statutory scheme is arguably not self-sufficient because it requires recourse to equity
• Do we have a cheap, efficient and secure title system?
o Yes in most instances but with flexibility to accommodate a wide range of
interests; however, there are some anomalous policy aspects
o Efficient and commercially viable/certain
o Exported across the world — some measure of its success
o Note issues: tensions between competing goals and substantive fairness
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