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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Recreational Holdings 1 (Jamaica) Ltd v Lazarus (Jamaica) [2016] UKPC 22 (27 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2016/22.html Cite as: [2016] UKPC 22 |
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Trinity Term
[2016] UKPC 22
Privy Council Appeal No 0085 of 2015
JUDGMENT
Recreational Holdings 1 (Jamaica) Ltd (Appellant) v Lazarus (Respondent) (Jamaica)
From the Court of Appeal of Jamaica
before
Lord Neuberger
Lord Mance
Lord Wilson
Lord Carnwath
Lord Hodge
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
27 July 2016
Heard on 13 June 2016
Appellant Peter Knox QC Dr Lloyd Barnett Weiden Daley (Instructed by Simons Muirhead and Burton) |
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Respondent Allan S Wood QC Miguel D A Williams (Instructed by M A Law (Solicitors) LLP) |
the opinion of the board was drafted by LORD WILSON:
“No person shall make an entry [on to land], or bring an action … to recover any land … but within 12 years next after the time at which the right to make such entry, or to bring such action …, shall have first accrued …”
Section 30 provides:
“At the determination of the period limited by [section 3] to any person for making an entry, or bringing any action …, the right and title of such person to the land … for the recovery whereof such entry, action … might have been made or brought within such period, shall be extinguished.”
“… the proprietor of … any estate or interest in land under the operation of this Act shall, except in case of fraud, hold the same as the same may be described or identified in the certificate of title, subject to … [recorded] incumbrances … but absolutely free from all other incumbrances whatsoever, except the estate or interest of a proprietor claiming the same land under a prior registered certificate of title, and except …”
Mr Lazarus’ certificate of title had not been registered prior to registration of the certificate of Mr McGann. So the latter prevailed.
10. Nevertheless, in contending that it had a real prospect of successfully defending his claim to ownership of the disputed land by adverse possession, the company sought to rely on Mr Lazarus’ certificate of title. Its main argument before the judge, which remained its first ground of appeal to the Court of Appeal, was that Mr Lazarus’ possession could not be adverse if it arose under cover of a registered title. The company relied, for example, on the observation of Lord Millett in a judgment delivered on behalf of the Board in Ramnarace v Lutchman, [2001] 1 WLR 1651, at para 10 that “[p]ossession is not normally adverse if it is enjoyed by a lawful title or with the consent of the true owner”. But the difficulty for the company’s argument was, as the judge and the Court of Appeal both held, that Mr Lazarus’ registered title, far from being lawful, was entirely ineffective.
12. The company’s reliance upon this ground faces an initial difficulty. It is in conflict with the opinion of the Board on an appeal from the Court of Appeal of Jamaica in Chisholm v Hall [1959] AC 719.
“… every certificate of title issued under any of the provisions herein contained shall be received in all courts as evidence of the particulars therein set forth … and shall, subject to the subsequent operation of any statute of limitations, be conclusive evidence that the person named in such certificate as the proprietor of or having any estate or interest in … the land therein described is seised or possessed of such estate or interest …”
The main part of section 70 has largely been set out in para 9 above. It provides that, apart from incumbrances recorded on the certificate of title and subject to cases of fraud and to two further specified exceptions, the registered proprietor holds the land “absolutely free from all other incumbrances whatsoever”. But then follows a proviso which reads:
“Provided always that the land which shall be included in any certificate of title … shall be deemed to be subject to … any rights acquired over such land since the same was brought under the operation of this Act under any statute of limitations, and to any public rights of way … and to any unpaid rates…and also to the interests of any tenant of the land for a term not exceeding three years, notwithstanding the same respectively may not be specially notified as incumbrances in such certificate …”
“The scheme of section 70 is reasonably plain. The registration of the first proprietor is made to destroy any rights previously acquired against him by limitation, in reliance, no doubt, on the provisions as to the investigation of the title to the property and as to notices and advertisements, which are considered a sufficient protection to anyone claiming any rights of that description. But from and after the first registration the first proprietor and his successors are exposed to the risk of losing the land or any part of it under any relevant statute of limitations to some other person whose rights when acquired rank as if they were registered incumbrances noted in the certificate, and accordingly are not only binding upon the proprietor against whom they are originally acquired but are not displaced by any subsequent transfer or transmission.”
20. But Mr Knox has three particular contentions, each relative to a section of the Act.
21. First, section 161. On the face of it the section exhaustively identifies six different situations in which entitlement to land may successfully be asserted against its registered proprietor. None of those situations, says the company, applies to an action by an adverse possessor such as Mr Lazarus to assert entitlement to land against a bona fide purchaser of it for value such as itself. As will be seen, the section refers to an action for the “recovery” of land. But, even if (as to which the judge made no finding) Mr Lazarus remained in actual occupation of the disputed land at the time of the issue of his proceedings, the company is right to describe them as an action for “recovery” of it because in this context to “recover” is widely defined to mean to “obtain any land by judgment of the Court”: Williams v Thomas [1909] 1 Ch 713 at 730, Buckley LJ.
“No action of ejectment or other action … for the recovery of any land shall lie … against the person registered as proprietor thereof under the provisions of this Act except in any of the following cases, that is to say -
(a) the case of a mortgagee as against a mortgagor in default;
(b) the case of an annuitant as against a grantor in default;
(c) the case of a lessor as against a lessee in default;
(d) the case of a person deprived of any land by fraud as against the person registered as proprietor of such land through fraud, or as against a person deriving otherwise than as a transferee bona fide for value from or through a person so registered through fraud;
(e) the case of a person deprived of or claiming any land included in any certificate of title of other land by misdescription of such other land, or of its boundaries, as against the registered proprietor of such other land not being a transferee thereof bona fide for value;
(f) the case of a registered proprietor with an absolute title claiming under a certificate of title prior in date of registration under the provisions of this Act, in any case in which two or more certificates of title … may be registered … in respect of the same land,
and in any other case … the production of the certificate of title … shall be held … to be an absolute bar … to any such action against the person named in such document as the proprietor … of the land … any rule of law or equity to the contrary notwithstanding.”
24. The submission of the company is that the six cases specified in section 161 of the Act exhaustively describe the claims which can be made to recover land from its registered proprietor. Section 161 is, so it submits, the pivot around which, and therefore necessarily consonant with which, the other provisions of the Act (in particular the proviso to section 70) turn. It cites the Opinion of the Board in Pottinger v Raffone [2007] UKPC 22, on appeal from the Court of Appeal of Jamaica, in which Lord Rodger of Earlsferry on its behalf said:
“20. The main aim of this system of registration of title is to ensure that, once a person is registered as proprietor of the land in question, his title is secure and indefeasible except in certain limited circumstances which are identified in the legislation. This is achieved by section 161 …”
29. The Real Property Act in force in Trinidad and Tobago has many similarities with the Act. In particular section 143 of the Real Property Act, although compressing the six cases into four, is, for all relevant purposes, identical to section 161 of the Act; and, in particular, section 143(c) specifies the case of misdescription in terms effectively identical to those of section 161(e). In Republic Bank Ltd v Seepersad, S268 of 2014, the Court of Appeal of Trinidad and Tobago, by judgments delivered as recently as 27 April 2015, held that, were the respondent able to establish his claim of adverse possession of land since 1965, his as yet unregistered rights would prevail over the registered rights of bona fide purchasers for value of the land in 2011 and over those of their mortgagee. In giving the only substantive judgment Mendonça JA observed at paras 45 and 46 that none of the four cases identified in section 143 of the Real Property Act included the claim of an adverse possessor and that it was wrong to read section 143 in isolation from the other provisions of the Act. The Board respectfully agrees.
30. Second, section 71. This provides:
“Except in the case of fraud, no person … taking … a transfer … from the proprietor of any registered land … shall be affected by notice, actual or constructive, of any trust or unregistered interest, any rule of law or equity to the contrary notwithstanding …”
The company argues that, at the time of its purchase of the land in 2011, Mr McGann, having in 1998 suffered the extinction of his right and title to it under section 30 of the Limitation Act, nevertheless remained its registered proprietor and so must be regarded as a bare trustee holding it from then onwards on trust for Mr Lazarus as its beneficial owner; and that the effect of section 71 is that, even if, at the time of its purchase, it had notice of the rights of Mr Lazarus under the trust (which it did not), the company would not have been affected by them.
31. It would be extraordinary if the effect of a proviso to section 70 of the Act which expressly preserved unregistered rights under any statute of limitations was to be negatived by reference to a trust in the section which immediately follows it. But it is clear that in Jamaica the relationship of Mr McGann and Mr Lazarus after 1998 was not one of legal owner and equitable owner. In In re Atkinson and Horsell’s Contract [1912] 2 Ch 1 Cozens-Hardy MR described at p 9 the effect of the statutory provision in England equivalent to section 30 of the Limitation Act as being that “the person who has been in possession for more than the statutory period [gets] an absolute legal estate in the fee”. Indeed the fact that the land has been brought under the operation of the Act makes no difference. In an illuminating article entitled “The Land Registration System and Possessory Titles - A Jamaican Perspective”, (1998) WILJ 72, Dr Barnett explains:
“13. On the effluxion of the statutory periods, the Limitation Act expressly extinguishes the title of the owner who has been out of possession and implicitly confers a good and legal title on the adverse possessor. Since he can no longer be ejected by the former owner whether he was registered or not or by any third party he acquires a right in rem.”
Under section 75(1) of the Land Registration Act 1925 which was introduced in England and Wales (and is now repealed), the registered proprietor was indeed to be deemed to hold the land in trust for the adverse possessor. But this new concept was “wholly inconsistent with the conceptions of the Limitation Acts as previously understood” (Fairweather v St Marylebone Property Co Ltd [1963] AC 510, 542, Lord Radcliffe). Nothing equivalent to section 75(1) has ever been introduced in Jamaica.
32. Third, section 163. This provides:
“Nothing in this Act contained shall be so interpreted as to leave subject to an action for the recovery of the land ... any purchaser bona fide for valuable consideration of land under the operation of this Act, on the ground that the proprietor through … whom he claims may have been registered as proprietor through fraud or error…and this whether such fraud or error shall consist in wrong description of the boundaries or of the parcels of any land, or otherwise howsoever.”
The company argues that loyalty to the purpose behind the Act, namely to give nearly paramount effect to a registration, demands that a broad construction be given to section 163; that the words “or otherwise howsoever” show that there is no limit to the type of error which it addresses; that indeed there came a time, namely in 1998, when Mr McGann became registered as proprietor through error; and that therefore the section precludes Mr Lazarus from recovering the land from the company, as a purchaser bona fide for valuable consideration, on the grounds of his adverse possession and, in consequence, of Mr McGann’s erroneous registration.
34. So the Board rejects each of the company’s contentions. It concludes as follows:
(a) the Board’s Opinion in the Chisholm case was correct;
(b) the proviso to section 70 of the Act explicitly subordinates the title of the registered proprietor to such unregistered rights under the Limitation Act as have begun to accrue since the first registration under the Act; and no exception is made, as it is elsewhere in the Act, for the registered proprietor who can claim to have been a bona fide purchaser for value;
(c) section 68 of the Act does not (to borrow the word from Mr Knox) trump the proviso to section 70 because, as was held in the Chisholm case, the word “subsequent” in section 68 means “subsequent to the first registration”, with the result that section 68 is complementary to the proviso;
(d) notwithstanding the near paramountcy under it of the registered title and the often favoured status under it of the bona fide purchaser for value, the Act does nothing to disturb this obvious conclusion: that, if the vendor’s title has been “extinguished” under section 30 of the Limitation Act, there remains no title for the vendor to pass…and none for his purchaser to receive; and
(e) the decision of the Court of Appeal, explained in a judgment of Morrison JA to the clarity of which the Board pays respectful tribute, was correct.
“4. From a practical point of view, the major qualification of the principle of indefeasibility [of the registered title] is the possessory title. This is especially so, because of the number of landowners who have migrated, the shortages and high cost of good agricultural or building land, the widespread squatting on lands which prevails throughout Jamaica, and the highly developed techniques of capturing land. Section 70 contains the relevant statutory provision.”