Definitions Land Title
Definitions Land Title
Definitions Land Title
Definitions
Land Title
It is the evidence of the right of the owner or the extent of his interest, and by which
means he can maintain control, and as a rule, assert right to exclusive possession and
enjoyment of the property.
Deed
A written instrument executed in accordance with law, wherein a person grants or
conveys to another certain land, tenements or hereditaments.
Torrens title
A Torrens title is the certificate of ownership issued under the Torrens system of
registration by the government, thru the Register of Deeds naming and declaring the owner
in fee simple of the real property described therein, free from all liens and encumbrances
except such as may be expressly noted thereon or otherwise reserved by law.
Fee Simple
An absolute title; it is an absolute estate in perpetuity. It is where title to land is
conferred upon a man and his heirs absolutely and without any limitation imposed upon the
estate.
Lis pendens
Latin term for pending suit or litigation. It indicates the control which a court has,
during the pendency of an action, over the property involved therein.
Registration Recording
The State provides a public record of the Provide for the recording of deeds of
title itself upon which a prospective conveyance and other instruments, without
purchaser or someone else interested may guaranteeing the title, leaving to the
rely. prospective purchasers or other persons
interested to examine the instruments in the
records and formulate their own conclusions
as to their effect on the title.
3. Modes of acquiring land titles
(a) by public grant; (e) by private grant or voluntary transfer;
(b) by adverse possession; (f) by involuntary alienation;
(c) by accretion; (g) by descent or devise; and
(d) by reclamation; (h) by emancipation patent.
4. Rights of Co-owners
Under the co-ownership, the ownership of an undivided thing or right belongs to
different persons. During the existence of the co-ownership, no individual can claim title to
any definite portion of the community property until the partition thereof; and prior to the
partition, all that the co-owner has is an ideal or abstract quota or proportionate share in
the entire land or thing.
A judgment may always be considered a decree, not all decrees are judgments.