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Does a TR1 form which is unexecuted by the purchasers create an express declaration of trust? Nicola Muir examines the issue

The difference between beneficial ownership as joint tenants and ownership as tenants in common is one which eludes most couples. By ticking the wrong “declaration of trust” box on the Land Registry TR1 form a new co-owner can be deprived of his or her investment in the property, but surprisingly they don’t even need to sign the form – an “x” is enough. It is now more than 10 years since Baroness Hale (as she then was) highlighted this problem in Stack v Dowden [2007] UKHL 17 yet we seem to be little further forward. Two recent decisions highlight the difficult question of whether or not a valid trust can be created by the TR1 form if it is not executed.

The problem

The Land Registry’s prescribed forms of transfer – TR1 and TP1 – include a box entitled “declaration of trust” and where the transferee is more than one person, it gives three options – one of which should be ticked. They can either hold the property on trust for themselves (1) as joint tenants; (2) as tenants in common in equal shares; or (3) on some other trust, for example, an unequal split of the equity. Joint tenants each own the whole of the beneficial interest so where one of the joint tenants dies, the whole of the beneficial interest will automatically vest in the other. Tenants in common each own a distinct share of the beneficial interest and if one of them dies, his share will pass to his estate.

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