Land Law 1 DEFINITION OF LAND

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DEFINITION OF LAND

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Transcript of Land Law 1 DEFINITION OF LAND

Page 1: Land Law 1 DEFINITION OF LAND

DEFINITION OF LAND

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What is covered

1. Definition of ‘land’ under NLC

2. English Law of Fixtures: Holland v Hodgson

3. Degree of Annexation Test

4. Purpose of Annexation Test

5. Applicability in Malaysia: Goh Chong Hin v Consolidated Malay Rubber Estate

6. Effect of a Retention of Title clause

7. Exceptions to the law of fixtures

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Definition of ‘land’ under NLC• S 5 NLC:

Land includes:

a) The surface of the earth and all substances forming that surface;

b) The earth below the surface and all substances therein;

c) All vegetation and other natural products, whether or not requiring the periodical application of labour to their production and whether on or below the surface;

d) All things attached to the earth or permanently fastened to anything attached to the earth, whether on or below the surface; and

e) Land covered by water.

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• 1st limb• (d) all things attached to the earth or permanently

fastened to anything attached to the earth, whether on or below the surface;

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• 2nd limb• (d) all things attached to the earth or permanently

fastened to anything attached to the earth, whether on or below the surface;

• whether on or below the surface

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Importance of defining what constitutes land

1. To determine the right of a purchaser on certain items in a sale and purchase transaction of a piece of land.

Example• Mr A is the registered proprietor of a piece of land with a

house built on it. He wishes to sell the land to Mr B. Who has the right over all the items attached to the house on the land?

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2. To determine the right of chargee banks over the land charged to them as security.Example• Mr A is the registered owner of a piece of land. He applies

for loan from a bank. As security for the loan, he charges the land to the bank. Therefore, if Mr A defaults in payment, the bank can sell the land. Who has the right over all the items attached to the house on the land?

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Legal maxim on fixtures• Quicquid plantatur solo, solo cedit• "whatever is affixed to the soil belongs to the soil”• This legal principle means that something that is or

becomes affixed to the land becomes part of the land; therefore, title to the fixture is a part of and passes with title to the land and consequently whosoever owns that piece of land will also own the things attached.

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Fixtures and Chattels

FIXTURE• a fixture is an item that is attached to the land and immovable.

• shall form part of land

CHATTEL• a chattel is an item even if attached to the land, it is removable.

• shall not form part of land

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The English law of fixturesLaid down in Holland v. Hodgson• (1872) L.R. 7 C.P. 328• The owner of a mill purchased some looms for use in his

mill. They were attached to the stone floor by nails driven into wooden beams. They could quite easily be removed. The owner then mortgaged the mill and failed to keep up the payments and the mill was repossessed. The question for the court was whether the looms were fixtures forming part of the land or whether they remained chattels.

• Held: The looms had become fixtures and thus formed part of the land mortgaged.

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• Blackburn J introduced the degree and object of annexation test:

“Thus blocks of stone placed one on the top of another without any mortar or cement for the purpose of forming a dry stone wall would become part of the land, though the same stones, if deposited in a builder's yard and for convenience sake stacked on the top of each other in the form of a wall, would remain chattels. On the other hand, an article may be very firmly fixed to the land, and yet the circumstances may be such as to show that it was never intended to be part of the land, and then it does not become part of the land.”

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• He continued:“…articles not otherwise attached to the land than by their own weight are not to be considered as part of the land, unless the circumstances are such as to shew that they were intended to be part of the land, the onus of shewing that they were so intended lying on those who assert that they have ceased to be chattels, and that, on the contrary, an article which is affixed to the land even slightly is to be considered as part of the land, unless the circumstances are such as to shew that it was intended all along to continue a chattel, the onus lying on those who contend that it is a chattel."

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English Law of Fixtures• Two tests to determine if an article is a fixture or a chattel:

1. Degree of annexation test

2. Purpose/object of annexation test

• BOTH tests must be applied

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Degree of annexation test• An objective test on the physical attachment of the article.• Raises a prima facie finding of fact by looking at the

degree to which an article is affixed to the land.• (Raises a PRESUMPTION which can be rebutted by the

Purpose Test)

1. If an article is affixed to the land even slightly the presumption is that it is a fixture.

2. If an article is attached to the land by its own weight remains a chattel.

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1. If the removal of the article would result in damage to the article the presumption is that it is a fixture.

2. If the removal of the article does not result in damage to the article cannot presume that it is a chattel but to look at the purpose

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Purpose of annexation test• The prima facie finding in the Degree Test may be

strengthened or rebutted by the Purpose Test.

• If there is no physical attachment to the land the presumption is that it is a chattel.

• However, Blackburn J. in Holland v. Hodgson : "But even in such a case, if the intention is apparent to make the articles part of the land, they do become part of the land.“

• Intention in this context is to be assessed objectively and not subjectively.

• It is the purpose which the object is serving which has to be regarded, not the purpose of the person who put it there.

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• The question is whether the object is designed for the use or enjoyment of the land or for the more complete or convenient use or enjoyment of the thing itself.

1. If an article is attached to the land for the better enjoyment of the land as a whole so as to improve its usefulness and value strengthens the presumption that it is a fixture.

2. If an article is attached to the land merely for the more complete enjoyment and use of the item as a chattel rebuts the presumption that it is a fixture.

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Application to Malaysia• The English law of fixtures applies to Malaysia• Goh Chong Hin v. Consolidated Malay Rubber (1924)

5 FMSLR 86:

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Goh Chong Hin v ConsolidatedApril 1921 - Goh Chong Hin charged his land including buildings and factory to SRMS Lechman Chetty (chargee).

There were machinery in the factory. Annexed by nuts and bolts to concrete foundations sunk in the soil.

June 1921 – Goh Chong Hin executed Bill of Sale over the machinery in the factory to Consolidated Malay Rubber Estates Ltd (grantee)

October 1923 – The chargee by the consent of Goh Chong Hin took possession of the land and the factory.

December 1923 - The grantee applied for order to seize and sell the machinery by virtue of the Bill of Sale.

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land machinery

Goh Chong Hin(LANDOWNER)

CHARGEEGRANTEE

(Respondent)

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Item in dispute:

Machinery in the factory. Annexed by nuts and bolts to concrete foundations sunk in the soil.

• Chargee: They are fixtures!!!

• Grantee/Respondent: They are chattels!!!

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• Court: ???

• Trial judge held in favour of grantee/respondent• The machinery chattel.

• On appeal, held:• English law of fixtures applies.• Applied the test laid down in Holland v Hodgson• The machinery fixture.

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• Reason for decision:• Based on the Degree Test, the presumption is that the

machinery were fixtures and applying the Purpose Test, the machinery were attached to enhance the value and utility of the land for a rubber estate. This strengthens the presumption that the machinery were fixtures.

• (Note: The respondent/grantee had failed to rebut the presumption that the machinery were fixtures.)

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• Importance of this case:

• The first case in Malaysia where the court accepted the English Law of Fixtures.

• Sproule CJC:• “ I have no doubt that we are to apply in this

country the ordinary English law of fixtures”

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The Shell Company v Commissioner• Underground tanks at petrol station buried two feet below

ground level, turfed over and covered with concrete.• The manner of their removal, if it has to be done, shows

how firmly the tanks are embedded in the earth:• The tanks, when places underground, were intended to

remain there.

• Court: They are fixtures.

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Retention of Title Clause

• Also called the Romalpa Clause

• Title to the goods remains vested in the seller until fully paid by the buyer.

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Wiggins Teape (M) Sdn Bhd v Bahagia Trading Sdn Bhd• Issue:

• Whether a printing machine affixed by bolts to the floor and ground of the defendants’ premises on a land charged to the chargee has become a fixture despite the existence of a hire-purchase agreement by which the owner of the printing machine had retained the title until full payment?

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• There was a ‘retention of title’ clause.

• e.g. “the hirer is the absolute owner of the hired item until full payment of the purchase price”

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Court:

The machine has become a fixture and passes to the chargee notwithstanding the retention of title

clause.

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Sungei Way Leasing v Lian Seng Properties

• The defendant, owner of KL Plaza had took up a loan and charged the building.

• Later, a ‘custom-made’ air conditioning unit bought under a hire-purchase agreement, was affixed to the building.

• Clause 11 of the HP Agreement provided that the lessor was to remain as the owner of the unit and the lessee had no right to pass title of the air-cond. to any third party

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land air-cond.

unit

LANDOWNER(Chargor/Lessee)

CHARGOR LESSOR

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Dispute:

• Lessor sought to remove the air-cond. unit from the building.

• The chargee bank objected

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Held:

Although the air-cond. unit was in the nature of a fixture as it was ‘custom-made’ for the building, the court must give effect to the intention of the parties arising from the hire purchase agreement. Thus, the lessor had a better right to the air-cond. unit.

“The chargee was not entitled to the equipment affixed to the land as there was a retention of title clause in favour of the plaintiffs”

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MBF Finance v Global PacificTextiles S/B & Anor. [1993]• Issue:

• Whether 2 sets of dyeing machines obtained under an ‘equipment rental’ agreement and affixed to the land are considered part of the land?

• There was a retention of title clause.• Defendant defaulted in paying the rental for the equipment

and the lessor terminated the agreement and sought to remove the machines from the land.

• Defendant and chargee objected claiming the machines had become part of the land.

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Held:

The retention of title clause rendered the machines to continue as chattels although attached to the land.

Since the machines were installed in the factory temporarily, their removal would not cause material injury to the land.

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Exceptions to the law of fixtures• There are several exceptions to the law of fixtures:

1. Tenants fixtures • Trade fixtures• Agricultural fixtures• Domestic fixtures

2. Malay wooden house

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Tenant’s fixtures• Spyer v Phillipson [1931]• Held:• A tenant has the right to remove his fixtures provided no

substantial damage was done to the premises.

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Smith v City Petroleum [1940] 1 All ER 260,

Held:

A tenant could remove petrol pumps from the land because they were trade fixtures and could easily removed since they were only bolted to the land. However, it was held that the petrol tanks could not be removed because they have become an integral part of the land and could not easily detached.

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Malay wooden house• An exception to the law of fixtures based on custom.

Re Tiambi bt Ma’amin (1904) Innes 285

A Malay wooden house is moveable property and thus, a chattel and can be removed.

 Kiah v Som [1953]

A Malay traditional wooden house built on stilts are regarded as personalty by proved custom and not subject to the English law of fixtures.