Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Land Registry
My husband wanted to know if his name was still on the title deeds of a house he owned with his first wife many years ago. We wrote to the Land Registry and they replied but we don't understand the wording on the document. It says:-
'No registered estate, caution against first registration or application for first registration or application for a caution against first registration is shown on the index map in relation to the Property'
Hope someone can help please.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Janbuck. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There are around 19 million properties, or areas of land, which are registered. If you take into account that this includes shops, factories, offices, agricultural land, etc., it should be obvious that many properties are not included on the register. Up until October, 2002 there was no compulsion for a property to be registered. Since then, it only became necessary to register the land when the property changes hands.
If the property is not registered, then the only legal record of ownership is likely to be contained within the bundle of deeds relating to the house.
I think that I've correctly interpreted the wording of the document which you've received but, for a definitive answer, you could phone the Land Registry Office for the relevant area. You can find the phone number by clicking on the appropriate link, here:
http://www.landregistry.gov.uk/regional/areas/
Chris
Well, if he had in fact opted out of joint names to make the ex sole proprietor this would have counted as a sale and it would have been legally obligatory to register the property. The law requiring that an unregistered property is registered at the next change of title has been around for a lot longer than twenty years. From what you now say is it possible that he gave the deed to the ex and that she still has it? If so, it will still be in joint names and perhaps the ex doesn't know what to do. If they owned it in a joint tenancy it is a bit of mess, as if she dies first it should all automatically come to your husband, and if your husband goes first it should all automatically go to the ex. But before anything of any sort can happen it is very necessary to first find that deed or have it "reconstructed" if it is truly lost.