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To restrict or not to restrict?

Section 42(2) of the Land Registration Act 2002 prohibits the registration of a restriction to protect the priority of an interest that is, or could be, protected by a notice. This means that buyers must register notices to protect contracts to purchase land – and not restrictions. But, if a seller contracts not to sell its land to anyone else without consent – which often happens where a seller grants an option – the buyer will be entitled to register a restriction preventing the registration of a disposition, unless it consents. In other words, notices and restrictions perform different functions.

The facts behind the decision in Sensar Ltd v Chief Land Registrar [2021] EWHC 13 (Admin) are much more complicated than the summary that follows suggests. Suffice it to say that the litigation concerned joint venture agreements, pursuant to which companies advanced funds so that a landowner could construct dwellings on its land. The agreements were accompanied by correspondence stating that a legal charge will be registered “against the Property, which will protect your interest and stop the Property being sold without your consent”. The charges were never executed. But the companies sought to register restrictions anyway.

The Land Registry rejected the applications because it could not identify any provision in the agreements prohibiting the sale of the land without the companies’ consent. But following subsequent litigation, culminating in a judgment (to be found at [2018] EWHC 888 (Admin)), the Land Registry’s decision was quashed because that it was not based on a sufficiently careful review of the documents and was not clearly explained.

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