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To acquire a right to be registered as the owner of land through adverse possession you need to meet three conditions:
You need to have met the above conditions for a certain length of time, and follow a particular process to be registered as the owner. The specifics depend upon which category you fall into:
To be precise, are you claiming ownership of unregistered land or registered land where the right was acquired prior to 13th October 2003.
You must be able to evidence that all three conditions have been met continuously for at least 12 years before you acquire a right to be registered as the owner. The 12-year period needs to have occurred before 13th October 2003 and be continuing to date. A previous occupier can pass on their period of time to you.
If the application has sufficient evidence, a surveyor from the Land Registry will be sent to inspect the land. If the Land Registry is satisfied following the inspection they will write to all owners of neighbouring properties and any interested parties to notify them of the application.
If there are no responses from the notified parties, the application will be successful.
If a notified party does object and the Land Registry believes that their objection is not groundless there will be an option to negotiate or have the matter referred to the First-Tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) to arrange a Hearing. At this stage, and if you have not done so already, you will need to seek expert legal advice from a property litigation lawyer. Click here to contact us .
To be precise, are you claiming ownership of registered land where the right was acquired post 13th October 2003?
You must be able to evidence that all three conditions have been met continuously for at least 10 years before you acquire a right to be registered as the owner. A previous occupier CAN NOT pass on their period of time to you.
If the application has sufficient evidence a surveyor from the Land Registry will be sent to inspect the land. If the Land Registry is satisfied following the inspection they will write to the registered owner of the property and any interested parties to notify them of the application. They will be given three options to respond to the application:
If the registered owner does not respond, the application will be successful.
If they respond and object on some other ground, the parties will be given the option to negotiate or have the matter referred to the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) to arrange a Hearing. At this stage, and if you have not done so already, you will need to seek expert legal advice from a property litigation lawyer. Click here to contact us.
If the registered owner requires the application to be dealt with under Paragraph 5 Schedule 6, the application will be rejected unless the applicant is able to come under one of the three conditions in Paragraph 5.
The conditions are:
If the application is still disputed, the parties will be given the option to negotiate or have the matter referred to the First-Tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) to arrange a Hearing.
If an application is rejected as a result of an objection being raised, the applicant will be prohibited from making a further application for two years. The registered owner can take action during this two-year period to extinguish any claim by evicting the applicant.
If you would like to discuss your particular application or contest an application for adverse possession, please contact one of our specialist residential property litigation solicitors.
The contents of this article are for the purposes of general awareness only. They do not purport to constitute legal or professional advice. The law may have changed since this article was published. Readers should not act on the basis of the information included and should take appropriate professional advice upon their own particular circumstances.