week fourteen Flashcards

1
Q

what is an option to purchase

A

the right to purchase the property at any time

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2
Q

what is a right of first refusal

A

a personal right to be offered the property first if and when the owner decides to sell

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3
Q

what does an option to purchase give the grantee (person who has it)

A

an equitable interest in land that is sufficient to support a caveat because it can be exercised at any time during the lease

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4
Q

what does a right of first refusal give a grantee (person who has it)

A

the landlord will be liable for damages due to breach of contract if they fail to offer the property to the lessee first on those terms on which they are willing to sell before a third party.

a caveat is not supported

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5
Q

what is authority for the grantee of an enforceable option to purchase acquiring an immediate equitable interest in the land capable of supporting a caveat

A

Bevin v Smith

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6
Q

if an option to purchase is contained in a registered lease, what is the tenant able to do

A

not only do they have an indefeasible registered leasehold interest by virtue of the registered lease, they also have an equitable interest through their option to purchase sitting within that lease.

Waters v Auckland City Council - if lease is registered, the tenant can caveat the landlord’s title to protect its equitable interest as a grantee of an option to purchase

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7
Q

why lodge a caveat by virtue of your option to purchase when you already have a registered lease?

A

a registered lease won’t prevent the sale of the property but a caveat stops a transfer going ahead without notification of the tenants equitable interest under its option to purchase

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8
Q

does a right of first refusal impose any obligation on the owner to sell the land

A

no

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9
Q

what case is authority for a right of first refusal not being a caveatable interest because it is only a personal right against the owner?

A

Re Rutherford

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10
Q

how could a right of first refusal become an option to purchase

A

if there is a triggering event

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11
Q

in what case did Tipping J outline the 4 stages in the progression from a mere right of first refusal to a contract?

A

Motorworks Ltd v Westminister Auto Services

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12
Q

what are Tipping J’s 4 stages in the progression from a mere first right of refusal to a contract

A

stage 1 - only right of first refusal, no interest in land, no caveatable interest (Re Rutherford)

stage 2 - a triggering event occurs that requires an offer to be made to the person with the right of first refusal - no interest in land or caveatable interest unless the vendor has offered sufficiently certain terms on which he/she is prepared to sell

stage 3 - an offer has been made (where the terms can be ascertained) pursuant to the right of first refusal - an option to purchase is created and there is a caveatable interest in land as control falls to the tenant

stage 4 - a contract results from the acceptance of the offer under the right of first refusal - a contract is in existence and there is a caveatable interest in land

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13
Q

what happened in Botany Land Development Ltd v Auckland Council

A

Auckland Council lodged a caveat over the title to stop sale and purchase of Botany Land Development going ahead.

The brother and sister which owned the property were happy to sell it to the council for it to become public property. At the time of the agreement, both parties had it in their respective trusts.

Council lodged an encumbrance (restriction/limitation) on the title when the trust agreed in 1998 - giving council right of first refusal as and when the trust was prepared to sell it.

Brothers block had smooth negotiations.

The agreement said that “when certain named persons no longer reside there it is to be offered to the Council for sale.”

Sister wasn’t happy with the council and tried to sell elsewhere - Botany Land Development. They entered into an unconditional ASAP.

Council heard of this and lodged a caveat on the basis of its covenant on the title so the ASAP could not be completed.

The sister and the trust got around the term by not leaving the property until sold at which time Botany Land Development would have an indefeasible registered interest unable to be touched.

CA held that under the terms of the encumbrance the Council would have no caveatable interest until the property was vacated. They would only be able to exercise their right of first refusal when the family left.

Because the council had notice from the trust they were going to sell, there was nothing to stop them from applying for an order for specific performance and they had a reasonably arguable case for an interest which could be completed through specific performance. This ability protected them enough.

Overall - no caveatable interest under the right of first refusal, but can protect the interest through other methods (specific performance)

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14
Q

what happened in McLachlan v Mercury Geotherm Ltd

A

McLachlan owned land with geothermal activity and entered into a joint venture with other companies to make use of it. They sold their land to these companies and leased the land not required for the power station back for their farming. A right of first refusal was contained in these lease.

The venture failed and the lessors was placed in receivership. The receiver for the lessor advised McLachlan they were looking to sell but entered a contract with Contact Energy, who had a right of first refusal in respect of the land itself that could only be exercised after the McLachlan lease was dealt with (terminated or offer to McLachlan).

HC/CA/PC held: no evidence of terms and conditions of the proposed sale to Contact Energy - no clear terms = lessee’s right of first refusal was not triggered.

Terms and conditions of the sale are essential before the court can become involved by specific performance. Here there were no clear terms on which the receivers were prepared to sell as well as no clear evidence of the receivers’ intention to sell, which both would be needed before the lessee’s right of first refusal was triggered under the Motorworks 4 stage test.

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15
Q

can a conditional ASAP be a caveatable interest? authority?

A

yes, Bevin v Smith

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16
Q

where the interest isn’t as straightforward as in Bevin v Smith, the court must look to?

A

the terms of the contract and the intention of the parties (Mcdonald v Isaac Construction)

17
Q

if there is intention to be bound by the conditional ASAP when it is entered, is there a caveatable interest

A

yes

18
Q

if there is no intention to be bound by the conditional ASAP when it is entered, is there a caveatable interest

A

no

19
Q

in NZ, we can assume that most people intend to be bound by a conditional ASAp when

A

they enter the contract - therefore, look for facts that suggest otherwise

20
Q

if you don’t complete a condition that is for your sole benefit on a conditional ASAP, what happend

A

you can get out of the contract because you haven’t done it on time or you can waive the condition (which you can’t do if it is for both parties - only if its sole benefit of the purchaser)

21
Q

how do you go about a problem question with a right of first refusal

A
  • state no caveatable interest and why
  • say it can turn into an option to purchase if there is a triggering event and is has to come within stage 2 - must be able to provide evidence of the vendors intention to sell and sufficiently clear terms on which they are prepared to sell. If they have entered into an ASAP, both of these conditions are clearly met.
22
Q

under the 2017 Act, the equitable interest for a mortgagee to exercise their power of sale over a caveat must be what?

A

either an unregistered mortgage or an agreement to mortgage

23
Q

what must a caveat state under s138(3) LTA 2017

A

a caveat against dealings document must contain the prescribed information - found in Land Transfer Regulations 2018 regulation 5 and schedule 2

24
Q

what are the two objectives to drafting an application to lodge a caveat

A
  1. needs to be accepted by the registrar

2. needs to be able to stand up to the scrutiny of the high court if it is challenged

25
Q

every caveat must … (7 items)

A
  1. be executed by caveator (or their agent)
  2. state the name of the caveator
  3. describe with sufficient certainty the nature of the estate or interest claimed by the caveator (or describe the matters that establish there is a risk that the estate or interest may be lost through FRAUD for a caveat under s138(1)(d)(ii)
  4. detail how the estate or interest claimed is derived from the RO
  5. state what the caveat is intended to prevent i.e. will it prevent all entries being made on the title or only some?
  6. if the caveat relates to only a part of the estate or interest in a record of title, it should contain a description of that part
  7. state the caveator’s address for receiving notices about the caveat
26
Q

what is point 1 of what a caveat must state under the Land Transfer Regulations 2018

A

A description of the nature of the estate or interest by the caveator (which must be stated with sufficient certainty)

27
Q

what are some cases and examples of descriptions of the nature of the estate or interest being stated with sufficient certainty (4)

A

Re Peychers’ Caveat - beneficial interest “as cestui que trust of which my wife Beulah Annie Peychers is trustee” = good

Buddle v Russel - “by virtue of a constructive trust” = good - judge said need to keep simplicity and speed, look at case by case basis

Norrie v Registrar General of Land - “as beneficiary of the Norrie Family Trust” = good - bare minimum

Zhong v Wang - “beneficial interest in the land contained in the above certificate of title as cestui que trust of which the registered proprietor Wang is trust” = requirements met, clear link to RO

28
Q

what is point 2 of what a caveat must state under the Land Transfer Regulations 2018

A

a caveat must provide detail of how the estate or interest claimed is derived from the RO - generally courts will apply this requirement strictly

29
Q

what has to be clear to the RO for lodging a caveat?

A

why the caveator has lodged a caveat

30
Q

what is point 3 of what a caveat must state under the Land Transfer Regulations 2018

A

where a caveator claims an interest in part of land, not the whole, the caveat should relate to only that part

31
Q

what is the law about caveatable interests in area from Taylor v Couchman

A

“the caveator’s caveatable interest is limited to that part of the land in which an interest can properly be claimed”

32
Q

what happened in Lu Trustee Ltd v Parkland Instruct Ltd

A

Trinity were going to sell some of their land to Summerset. Summerset decided to buy 201 and sell to trinity and trinity would sell them land for their development.

PLI wanted to buy top land from NZTA but needed access through lot 3 - through 201 up lot 3 and onto their back section. They hadn’t purchased the land but entered into what PLI thought was an easement with Lu Trustee who owned the Trinity land.

PLI took a caveat over the whole of the Trinity land. When Lu Trustees came to sell to Summerset they couldn’t because there was a caveat on their title.

PLI argued they should have a caveat over the whole lot because they weren’t finished deciding where they would access.

CA held there was no proper basis for sustaining the basis over the whole lot, because it help up the other agreements that were supposed to be taking place.

Although caveat procedure is quick, substantive proceeding goes into ordinary court timetabling and can take up to two years to happen - Lu Trustees would lose.

CA ordered the caveat removed.

33
Q

if a caveat does not comply with requirements for lodging, what might happen

A
  • court may order removal (s142)

- the caveat is allowed to lapse (s143)

34
Q

are minor defects that do not affect the operation or effect of a caveat okay?

A

may be - Willigers v McFarlane (2005)

35
Q

what are 2 possible ways a caveat with a defect can be saved?

A
  • caveator could apply to the Court for leave under s 146

- caveator may be able to obtain an injunction to restrain RO from dealing with the land

36
Q

what are the registrar’s powers of alteration under s21

A

b) correct an error made by a person in preparing or submitting a document or information for registration

BUT not if alteration would would materially affect the registered estate or interest of any person