The Impact of eConveyancing on Title Registration


Book Description

This work is an assessment of how to manage risk in property transactions in the context of the move from paper-based to electronic conveyancing (eConveyancing). In particular the focus is on risks that impact on title registration, and the security, protection or lack thereof that this registration offers to land owners, third parties and property claimants. The impact is the extent to which a change in the transactional process may unintentionally affect risk (being the consequence of change and the likelihood of that consequence having a negative effect). The risks are identified, analysed and evaluated against the backdrop of title registration and the development of eConveyancing through a comparative analysis of the systems in Ireland and Ontario, while also referencing other developing electronic systems around the globe.




Title Searching and Conveyancing in Ontario


Book Description

"Coverage of.... * Electronic drafting, registration and closing - whether acting for a purchaser or a vendor * Implications of the Condominium Act for searching and closing * Current land registration practice, including new features of the recently released Teraview 5.1 * Impact of title insurance on the title search and conveyancing process * New Law Society rules with respect to the delegation of conveyancing routines to non-lawyers * Impact of recent family law developments (including the legal recognition of same-sex marriages) on conveyancing and land registration documents."







Title Searching in Ontario


Book Description




Law of the Land


Book Description

How was it that the Torrens system, a mid-nineteenth-century reform of land titles registration from distant South Australia, gradually replaced the inherited Anglo-Canadian common law system of land registration? In The Law of the Land, Greg Taylor traces the spread of the Torrens system, from its arrival in the far-flung outpost of 1860s Victoria, British Columbia, right up to twenty-first century Ontario. Examining the peculiarity of how this system of land reform swept through some provinces like wildfire, and yet still remains completely unknown in three provinces, Taylor shows how the different histories of various regions in Canada continue to shape the law in the present day. Presenting a concise and illuminating history of land reform, he also demonstrates the power of lobbying, by examining the influence of both moneylenders and lawyers who were the first to introduce the Torrens system to Canada east of the Rockies. An exact and fluent legal history of regional law reforms, The Law of the Land is a fascinating examination of commonwealth influence, and ongoing regional differences in Canada.




Real Estate Transactions


Book Description