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Title reform – Conveyancing – NSW

11 October 2021 by By Lawyers

Title reform – involving the cancellation of certificates of title and other changes to the NSW land titles system – commenced on 11 October 2021. Certificates of title are abolished and the Torrens Register is the single source of truth as to a person’s interest or estate in land. All documents to be registered on the Torrens Register must be lodged by a subscriber, who must verify the identity of the client and establish that they have the right to deal with the land.

These significant changes were introduced in part by the Real Property Amendment (Certificates of Title) Act 2021. The Act provides for the cancellation of certificates of title (CTs) and progression towards 100% electronic lodgment of land transactions.

Title reform  – Cancellation of certificates of title

From 11 October 2021:

  • All certificates of title have been cancelled and will no longer be issued.
  • Existing CTs cannot be required to be produced to have a dealing or plan lodged for registration.
  • Practitioners no longer need to obtain a copy of the CT from their client for a property dealing.
  • Banks are no longer issued with ‘control of the right to deal’ (CoRD) and all recordings relating to CoRD holders have been removed from the Register.
  • Banks can no longer be asked to provide CoRD holder consent in a workspace when a mortgagor wants to lodge a dealing for registration, including a subsequent mortgage.
  • Mortgagee consent still needs to be obtained for the registration of certain dealings.
  • Subscribers are no longer requested to enter the CAC (Certificate Authentication Code) details taken from a CT for consent purposes in the workspace. The concept of the CAC is redundant and is no longer required to be kept securely.
  • Where a subscriber has relied on a CT to establish a right to deal in a transaction conducted before 11 October 2021, the CT or a copy of it must be retained, in line with the requirements for retaining supporting evidence in the NSW Participation Rules.
  • Otherwise, firms holding CTs in safe custody after commencement of this title reform have the following options:
    • seek instructions from each client on what to do with their CT;
    • return all CTs to clients;
    • take a ‘do nothing’ approach.

It is not necessary for firms to stamp a CT as cancelled or mark it in any way if returning it to their client.

Information Notice

From 11 October 2021, in all instances of property ownership, an Information Notice will issue. Details on this notice will include the folio identifier, the dealings registered including registration numbers, the subscriber’s reference and the date of registration. As an Information Notice is not a definitive statement of the state of the Register, a title search will be necessary to acquire accurate title information.

All land dealings must be lodged electronically

From 11 October 2021:

  • Lodging land dealings in paper is no longer permitted. All land dealings are to be lodged with NSW Land Registry Services electronically by a subscriber to an Electronic Lodgment Network such as Sympli or PEXA.
  • The Lodgment Rules specify when out-of-scope electronic dealings can depart from the usual manner of preparing an electronic dealing.
  • Paper dealing prepared before 11 October 2021 can still be lodged with NSW Land Registry Services electronically. They are uploaded as a PDF attachment to the electronic dealing known as ‘Dealing with Exception’. Once lodged, NSW Land Registry Services will examine the paper dealing.

All By Lawyers NSW Conveyancing & Property publications have been updated to reflect these changes.

Filed Under: Conveyancing and Property, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Publication Updates Tagged With: By Lawyers, CAC, Cancellation of certificates of title, conveyancing, CoRD, Information Notice, PEXA, property, Purchase of Real Property, right to deal, safe custody, Sale of Real property, SYMPLI, Torrens Register, VOI

Certificates of title – NSW

8 February 2021 by By Lawyers

The NSW Government has approved the cancellation of all remaining paper certificates of title as part of the implementation of electronic conveyancing. All remaining paper certificates of title are expected to be cancelled in April 2021. Certificates of title will then no longer be evidence of indefeasible title. The By Lawyers Conveyancing and Property guides will be amended accordingly at that point.

Implications

  • For solicitors and conveyancers any lien held over a certificate of title as a form of security for payment of costs will become ineffective.
  • Equitable mortgagees holding certificates of title as security will need to make alternative security arrangements.

Alternative security for professional costs 

  • A solicitor’s lien over all client documents created or obtained in the matter.
  • Creating a charge for the repayment of costs over the client’s real property which entitles the firm to lodge a caveat on title until all costs are paid.
  • Authority to pay professional fees and disbursements from client funds held in the trust account.
  • Guarantee clause for the performance of the agreement by a guarantor, and creating a charge over the guarantor’s real property.

All By Lawyers Costs Agreements provide for these methods of security.

Alternative protection for lenders 

  • Lien over other documents or assets held by the borrower to secure the repayment of the loan.
  • Ensuring that loan agreements contain a right to register a mortgage.
  • Lodging a caveat.

The By Lawyers Mortgages (NSW) Guide contain a ‘Mortgage Linked Loan Agreement’ that is linked to the mortgage and incorporates the provisions found in the By Lawyers ‘Registered Memorandum AJ843928’. A copy of the memorandum of common provisions is recorded at NSW Land Registry Services and can be used at no additional cost by our users.

The By Lawyers Mortgages (NSW) Guide also covers caveats and contains an ‘Acknowledgement of debt – Caveatable Interest’ that creates an interest in the borrower’s real property entitling the lender to register a caveat on the property to secure repayments.

Cancellation of ALL certificates of title

Keep an eye out for the upcoming cancellation of ALL certificates of title, paper and electronic, in NSW. This will see the removal of the requirement to lodge consents and changes to the requirements relating to verification of identity, right to deal and retention of proper evidence.

There will be another Obiter post from By Lawyers when our guides are updated for these developments.

Filed Under: Conveyancing and Property, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Practice Management Tagged With: Authority to pay, By Lawyers, By Lawyers Mortgages (NSW) Guide, Cancellation of certificates of title, charge, costs agreements, guarantee, lien, Loan agreement, mortgage, Mortgages (NSW) Guide

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