week four Flashcards

1
Q

what is a manifest injustice situation where a mortgage can be taken off

A

where a mortgage is taken off a property and the property is given back without the mortgage because the fraud was manifestly injust

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2
Q

what does s55 (3) of the 2017 LTA say

A

if you can solve the problem with money you can do that instead of upsetting the system

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3
Q

what is compensation usually capped at

A

usually the value of the asset

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4
Q

what do sections 54 - 57 of the LTA say

A

in exceptional circumstances the situation can reverse and you can get the property back, or back without the mortgage. there are however guidelines around manifest injustice

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5
Q

what is the main exception to immediate indefeasibility

A

fraud

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6
Q

its not fraud if you know of the equitable interest but dont?

A

intend to cheat

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7
Q

unless there is fraud, someone taking or dealing with land from a registered proprietor need not?

A
  • inquire as to how the RP became registered
  • worry about what happened to the purchase money
  • be affected by notice of any trust or unregistered interest
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8
Q

in hard copy times, there was a big gap between what 3 events that affected you depending on when you found out about the equitable interest

A

sale and purchase, settlement and registration

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9
Q

what were the 2 ratios of frazer v walker

A

immediate indefeasibility of title and that mortgagees are as safe as a purchaser

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10
Q

what are the two attacks on indefeasibility of title

A

fraud against the registered owner, fraud against an unregistered interest

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11
Q

what agreement was there between X and the NZ Meat Nominees in New Zealand Meat Nominees v Sim

A

an agreement for meat nominees to park in X’s carpark

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12
Q

X’s mortgage to Q fell in default and Q sold to Y. What didn’t Y like and what did they do? (New Zealand Meat Nominees v Sim)

A

that meat nominees were using the carpark - he put pamphlets on the cars telling them to leave

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13
Q

what was the question in New Zealand Meat Nominees v Sim

A

whether he was guilty of fraud for ignoring an unregistered lease outside the title

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14
Q

what was the result of New Zealand Meat Nominees v Sim

A

Mr Sim (Y) was guilty of fraud because he intended to cheat meat nominees out of their unregistered interest. He made it obvious with the pamphlets that he wanted to kick them out and because he knew about the interest and dishonestly intended to cheat this was enough for the court to say he was guilty of fraud

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15
Q

who scammed the Burmeisters out of their property

A

Mr O’Brien, junior

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16
Q

what did the O’Brien trust do with the Burmeisters property?

A

Mortgaged it to the ASB

17
Q

what was wrong with the solicitor in Burmesiter v O’Brien

A

he was acting for both the ASB and the O’Brien family trust. He knew the O’Brien trust had been fraudulent and still registered the mortgage

18
Q

is the ASB safe in Burmesiter v O’Brien

A

yes, they did everything properly

19
Q

could the Burmesiters get their property back

A

Yes because of the fraud, but the mortgage to ASB was still on it because the ASB was innocent. They could get compensation from the state, but it would be capped at the $430k ish the house was worth not the $640k ish on the mortgage

20
Q

what happened in Cook v Abdallah

A

Cook gave her property to Mr Abdallah because he said he wanted to come and live in Greymouth and needed to show that he had property in NZ to get a visa. It was obviously a scam and when she contacted him to get the property back he said she needed to pay him. She lost a lot of money but eventually got the title transferred back because there was no one defending the claim anyways.

21
Q

what is a caveat

A

a warning to the world that somebody has a claim on that particular piece of land for whatever reason

22
Q

who can lodge a caveat

A

anyone who claims an estate or interest in the land - a beneficial estate or interest

23
Q

what is the person who lodged the caveat called

A

a caveator

24
Q

what is the purpose of a caveat

A

to warn the world and means the registrar cannot take any action on that land

25
Q

when will a caveat lapse

A

when the RO applies to the registrar for a lapse the registrar gives notice to the caveator and it is up to the caveator to make an application to the court in order that that caveat may not lapse

26
Q

who was the caveator in North Shore Aero CLub v Black River

A

North Shore Aero Club

27
Q

who were the registered owners in North Shore Aero Club v Black River

A

originally sunrise, who then sold to Black River (RO in these proceedings)

28
Q

who were the mortgagors in North Shore Aero Club v Black River

A

Spinnaker + Black River

29
Q

what order did the court make in North Shore Aero Club v Black River

A

removal of the Aero Club’s caveat

30
Q

what was the conclusion of North Shore Aero Club v Black River

A

that Black River didn’t commit fraud because there was no equity left in order for there to be an equitable interest because it made sense for Sunrise to sell to pay for Black River to pay off the debt to Spinnaker and the Aero Club knew about the sale so it would be the exact same as if they were selling to a third party

31
Q

under s6 of the LTA 2017, fraud means?

A

forgery or other dishonest conduct by the registered owner or the registered owner’s agent in acquiring a registered estate or interest in land

32
Q

what are the two main categories of cases involving fraud?

A

fraud against a previous registered proprietor and fraud against the holder of an unregistered interest

33
Q

what is a caveat

A

a warning to the world that somebody has a claim on that particular piece of land for whatever reason

34
Q

who can lodge a caveat

A

anyone who claims an estate or interest in the land

35
Q

when does a caveat lapse

A

when the RO applies to the registrar for the lapse of the caveat, who gives notice to the caveator and then the caveator would have to make an application to the court for an order that the caveat may not lapse if they want it to stay