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Crorermaeiit t\otice, TAND TRANSFER ACT LANDS ALIENATED or contracted to be alienated from the Crown in fee prior to the coming into operation of " The Land Transfer Act, 1570," may be brought under the provisions of the Act by application from the persons entitled thereto. All Lands alienated from the Crown after the coming into operation of "The Land Transfer Act, 1870," are subject to, and must be dealt with, in manner prescribed by the Act. The following are examples of the fee, payable for bringing the land under the provisions of the Land Transfer Act : — 1, When -the Title consists of a Grant, dated on or subsequent to the 28th ' December, 1841, none of the land included in which, has been dealt with — Where the Certificate of title is ; directed to issue in the name of the Applicant : Value of land ; £100, ... ... ... ... £0 11- 2 Where the Certificate of title is , directed to issue in the name of the Purchaser : Value of land £100 ... ... ... ... 110 0 These charges are increased by 4s 2d (Assurance Fund) for every additional £100 in value. 2. When the Applicant is the original Grantee, and the land has been dealt with ; or where the Applicant is not the original Grantee — Where the value of the land is £100 ... £2 14 2 Where the value of the land is i £200 3 3 4 Where the value of the land is £300 3 12 6 Where the value of the land is £400 ... 4 18 Where the value of land is above £400, the fees increase at the rate of 4s 2d (Assurance for every additional £100 in value. These charges 1 also represent the cost of Conveying Land, Inasmuch as applicants to bring land under the Act can direct the Certificates of Title to issue in the names of any other persons. Credit for Fees is Given, When desired by the Applicant, in all cases where the proprietor applies to have the land registered under the Act in his own name, and the fees may remain unpaid until land is dealt with. Any 'person,: therefore, who. wishes to bring his land under the provisions of the Act in order .that iwheneyer he deals with if he may be in a position' to avail himself ef the facilities afforded by having a Registered Title, can do so Without Any Present Cost, by allowing the fees to remain unpaid until such dealing takes place. He will then be in a position to Mortgage, Transfer, Lease, or otherwise deal with his land at a moment's notice. " ■ Any Title, however long and complex, may be investigated at a cost to the Applicant of only Five Shillings ; for if the Title is rejected all fees are returned, with the -exception of -that amount. . CERTIFICATES OF TITLE ARE ABSOLUTELY INDEFEASIBLE. Under the old system of Conveyancing, if a single deed is lost, the title is in many cases rendered absolutely defective, and therefore unmarketable, while in others it can only be tectified at great cost. Persons who bring their land under the Act, surrender all theh" deeds, and receive in exchange a Certificate of Title, a duplicate of which is retained in the office. If the Certificate in the possession of the registered proprietor is at any time lost or destroyed by fire, &c, a new Certificate is supplied by the Registrar at a small cost. ALL TITLES ARE GUARANTEED BY THE GOVERNMENT. On all Conveyances. by ; Deed under the old system, the cost of Registration in the Deeds Registry, over and above the Solicitor's charge, is never less than Fifteen Shillings, frequently very much more ; while land which has been brought under the provisions of " The Land Transfer Act " can be transferred at a Total Cost of Eleven Shillings where a whole section is conveyed ; and where only part is conveyed (and therefore a fresh Certificate of Title is necessi- | tated), of Thirty-one Shillings, which is the highest sum. allowed : bythe Act, no matter what the value or area of the land. Under the Regulations in force on and after the Ist January, 1872, the charge for Certificates of Title issued upon Memoranda of- Transfer is Reduced to Ten Shillings in all cases where the value of the land is under Ten Pounds. The total cost of executing a Mortgage or Lease of land, registered under the Act, s Twelve Shillings, no: matter what the amount involved. A Mortgage may be transferred or discharged, or lease transferred or surrendered for Five Shillings. THESE OPERATIONS INVOLVE NO DELAYS. The following are some of the advantages nferred by the Land Transfer system : — 1. It secures the principal benefits and advantages sought to be attained in a system of registration of deeds. 2. It renders retrospective investigation of title unnecessary as to all land . .registered. 3. It.flunpliJSes the Titles to Real Property for the future. 4. It makes purchasers of the fee and leases perfectly, secure, 5. It simplifies, to the utmost possible extent, the forms of transfer and the . : modes of conveyance.. '• ". 6. It increases the saleable value of land. 7. It tends to lower the rate of interest on loans secured on lands. S. It gives facilities for the sale of large estates in allotments. 9. Transactions can be effected at a moment's notice, and at a minimum of cost. 10. Frauds in the purchase and sale of land are effectually prevented, because the Certificate of Title hi the possession of the Vendor shows the exact condition of the estate, i.e., if the estate be mortgaged, encumbered, or leased. Memoranda disclosing the particulars of any such transactions affecting the estate are written upon the Certificate of Title. Lands purchased from the Crown since the coming into operation of "The Land Transfer Act" cannot be dealt with under the old Bystem. , : > ■ ; : JOSHOA STRANGF WILLIAMS

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GRA18740814.2.15.3

Bibliographic details

Grey River Argus, Volume XV, Issue 1880, 14 August 1874, Page 4

Word Count
973

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Grey River Argus, Volume XV, Issue 1880, 14 August 1874, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Grey River Argus, Volume XV, Issue 1880, 14 August 1874, Page 4