Registration of Deeds Act 1856

 

Registration of Deeds Act 1856

Contents

1.Application of Act1

2.Office1

2A.Assistant Registrar of Deeds and Transfers2

3.Priority according to date of registration2

4.Times for registration3

5.Purchaser not disturbed by suppressed will if unregistered3

6.Memorial for registration3

7.Claimant’s signature to affidavit authorises registration4

8.Particulars required in memorials4

9.Order of time5

10.Memorials to be registered in succession, and books and indexes to be kept5

11.Mortgages and judgments6

12.Contents of certificate7

13.Anyone may deposit for safe custody, any deed or will7

14.Enrolment8

15.Lost instrument8

16.Prior registrations even if informal evidence of facts and circumstances9

19.Court may cancel false or fraudulent registration9

20.Mistake or omission, if not wilful, may be rectified by court10

22.Regulations11

22AA.Certain prescribed fees may exceed cost recovery11

22AB.Expiry of section 22AA12

22A.Validation13

25.Short title13

Notes

Compilation table14

Other notes15

Defined terms

 

Registration of Deeds Act 1856

An Act to consolidate and amend the laws relating to the registration of deeds, wills, judgments and conveyances affecting real property.

[Long title amended: No. 17 of 1974 s. 9.]

Preamble

Whereas it is expedient to consolidate and amend the laws relating to the registration of wills, deeds and other instruments affecting real property in the State of Western Australia, and for that purpose to repeal the existing Ordinances on that subject.

Be it enacted — 

1.Application of Act

No memorial may be registered pursuant to this Act in respect of any land, whether Crown, freehold or leasehold, that is under the operation of the Transfer of Land Act 1893.

[Section 1 inserted: No. 59 of 2004 s. 135.]

2.Office

That the Western Australian Land Information Authority established by the Land Information Authority Act 2006 section 5 (called the Authority in this Act) is to maintain in this State a public office for the registration of deeds, conveyances and other instruments, wills and judgments in manner hereinafter appointed, in which shall be kept for safe custody and reference all books, records, documents and papers relating to any such instruments, wills and judgments registered before the passing of this Act; and that the Registrar of Titles under the Transfer of Land Act 1893, shall, by virtue of his office, be the Registrar of Deeds and Transfers; and that all conveyances, deeds, wills, devises and other instruments in writing, now or hereafter to be made or executed, and all judgments now or hereafter to be obtained (by which conveyances, deeds, wills or other instruments in writing, and judgments, any lands, tenements or hereditaments in Western Australia or its Dependencies now are or shall or may be affected) may, if not registered under any previous Ordinance, be entered and registered in the said office in the manner hereinafter directed.

[Section 2 amended: No. 17 of 1974 s. 3 and 9; No. 60 of 2006 s. 150(2).]

2A.Assistant Registrar of Deeds and Transfers

That a person holding an office because of which the person is an assistant registrar under the Transfer of Land Act 1893, shall be, by virtue of that office, an assistant registrar of deeds and transfers for the purpose of this Act, and anything which is by this Act appointed or authorised or required to be done or signed by the Registrar of Deeds and Transfers may be lawfully done or signed by an assistant registrar of deeds and transfers.

[Section 2A inserted: No. 17 of 1974 s. 4; amended: No. 60 of 2006 s. 150(3).]

3.Priority according to date of registration

That all such judgments, deeds, conveyances or instruments in writing, registered in pursuance of this Act, shall have priority one over the other according to the priority of their respective dates of registration; and that all such judgments, deeds, conveyances, devises or instruments in writing not registered in pursuance of this or some former Act, shall (as against any subsequent bona fide purchaser or mortgagee of the same lands, tenements or hereditaments for valuable consideration) be absolutely null and void to all intents and purposes: Provided that nothing herein contained shall extend to bona fide leases at rack rent for any term not exceeding 14 years.

[Section 3 amended: No. 17 of 1974 s. 9.]

4.Times for registration

That all judgments, deeds, wills, conveyances or instruments in writing which shall be duly registered within the respective times next mentioned, that is to say, all deeds, conveyances, and other instruments in writing, except wills, which, if executed in Western Australia or its Dependencies, shall be registered within 2 months, or which, if executed in any other place, shall be registered within 8 months after the time of execution thereof respectively, and all wills which, if the devisor die in Western Australia or its Dependencies, shall be registered within 2 months, or which, if the devisor die in any other place, shall be registered within 12 months after the decease of every devisor respectively, and all future judgments, which shall be registered within 2 months after the entry or recording thereof, shall severally be in like manner entitled to priority, and shall take effect respectively by relation to the date thereof only in the same manner as if this Act had never been made.

[Section 4 amended: No. 14 of 1974 s. 9.]

5.Purchaser not disturbed by suppressed will if unregistered

That in case of any concealment or suppression of any will no purchaser or incumbrancer for valuable consideration shall be defeated or disturbed in his purchase or of his debt by any title made or devised by such will, unless such will be actually registered within 3 years after the death of the devisor.

6.Memorial for registration

That the registration intended by this Act shall be made by delivering to the Authority a memorial containing the particulars hereinafter specified, and signed either by a lawyer or by any other person requiring the registration thereof: Provided that if such memorial is signed by some person other than a lawyer as aforesaid, their signature must be attested by a witness qualified to attest the execution of instruments under the Transfer of Land Act 1893.

[Section 6 inserted: No. 23 of 1923 s. 2; amended: No. 17 of 1974 s. 9; No. 65 of 2003 s. 60; No. 60 of 2006 s. 150(4); No. 21 of 2008 s. 697; No. 9 of 2022 s. 424.]

7.Claimant’s signature to affidavit authorises registration

That any person claiming by affidavit to be sworn before any justice of the peace any estate or interest under any deed or other instrument, will or judgment affecting real property in the said State, may lawfully require the same to be registered, and his or her signature to the memorial thereof annexing such affidavit to such memorial shall be sufficient to authorise such registration.

8.Particulars required in memorials

That every memorial of any judgment shall contain the following particulars, that is to say, the names (and when known the additions) of the plaintiffs and defendants respectively, the sums thereby recovered or secured, the time of entry or recording of the same and the sum of money bona fide due thereon, and every memorial of any deed or conveyance, will or other instrument, shall contain and set forth the date of such deed, conveyance, will or other instrument and the particular nature and object thereof, the names (and when known the additions) of all the parties to such deed, conveyance and instrument and of the devisor and devisee or devisees of such will, and the names (and when known the additions) of all the witnesses thereto, and shall especially particularise and express the lands, tenements and hereditaments affected or intended to be affected by such deed, conveyance, will or instrument, and the proper and ordinary and accustomed names of the districts, towns or places where the same shall be situated and (except in case of wills) the pecuniary or other consideration for the same: Provided always that when there shall be more writings than one for perfecting the same conveyance, devise or security affecting the same lands, tenements or hereditaments, all such writings shall be stated in one and the same memorial, in which it shall be sufficient to particularise such lands, tenements and hereditaments only once.

9.Order of time

That on delivery of any such memorial as aforesaid, the said Registrar shall number the same according to the order of time in which it shall have been so delivered, and shall give a receipt for the same, in which receipt shall be specified the certain day and time of day when such memorial shall have been so delivered, and the proper number thereof given by the Registrar; and he shall also in like manner immediately endorse on the back of such memorial a certificate containing the day and time of day when the same was so delivered, and the name and place of abode of the person delivering the same; and shall sign the said certificate when so indorsed; and such certificate shall be taken and allowed as evidence of the registration, and the time of registration of every such judgment, deed, will, devise, conveyance or other instrument whereof such memorial shall be so made.

[Section 9 amended: No. 60 of 2006 s. 150(5).]

10.Memorials to be registered in succession, and books and indexes to be kept

That every such memorial shall as soon after the receipt thereof as practicable be carefully registered by the Registrar in regular succession as received, according to its proper number, in a particular book to be kept by him for that purpose, and shall afterwards be by him deposited in some secure place in the Authority’s office, and there kept for future reference when required; and he shall also keep an alphabetical index of the districts, towns and places mentioned in every such memorial, and also a like index or indexes of the names of the several parties to conveyances and other deeds or instruments, and of devisors and devisees in wills, and of the plaintiff and defendant in case of judgments, with accurate references in all such indexes respectively to the number and page of registry of the memorial to which any entry in such index or indexes shall relate, which said book of registry and index or indexes shall, as well as all other books of registry and indexes relating to registrations made before the passing of this Act, be open at convenient times in the said office to the inspection of persons desirous of searching the same.

[Section 10 amended: No. 17 of 1974 s. 9; No. 60 of 2006 s. 150(6).]

11.Mortgages and judgments

That in case of mortgages and judgments registered in pursuance of this Act, if at any time afterwards such verified certificate as is hereinafter next mentioned, shall be brought to the said Registrar, signed respectively by the mortgagee or any of the mortgagees, or by the plaintiff or any of the plaintiffs, or in case of the death or absence from the State of all such parties respectively, then by any personal representative or specially authorised agent of all or any of the said parties, and attested by at least 2 credible witnesses, whereby it shall appear that the whole of the moneys due on any such mortgage or judgment have been fully paid, or that such mortgage or judgment is otherwise satisfied, then the said Registrar shall make a short entry or memorandum thereof on the memorial, and on the margent of the registry of such mortgage or judgment, and shall afterwards carefully register the same certificate in one of the register books under this Act; and the said Registrar shall also make an entry thereof in his alphabetical index or indexes, referring accurately to the page of registry of such certificate.

[Section 11 amended: No. 17 of 1974 s. 9; No. 60 of 2006 s. 150(7).]

12.Contents of certificate

That every such certificate shall contain the following particulars, that is to say — in case of judgments, the names (and when known the additions) of the plaintiffs and defendants, the time of entering up and recording the same, the sum or sums thereby recovered, the date or dates of payment or other satisfaction of the amount bona fide due thereon; and in case of mortgages, the names (and when known the additions) of the original parties, the date of the instrument, the sum thereby secured, and the time or times of payment or other satisfaction thereof; and every such certificate shall be verified by the oath of some competent person that the same contains a just and true account of the several particulars therein set forth, which oath may be taken before any justice of the peace in this State or in the British dominions, or before any judge of any court of law in any foreign dominion, who are hereby authorised to administer the same; and on the back of such verified certificate the Registrar shall immediately endorse the date when the same was received by him, and the name and place of abode of the person verifying the same; and the said certificate shall, after being so endorsed and entered as aforesaid, be safely kept in the Authority’s office for future reference when required.

[Section 12 amended: No. 60 of 2006 s. 150(8).]

13.Anyone may deposit for safe custody, any deed or will

That any person or persons may deposit in the Authority’s office for safe custody any conveyance, deed, power of attorney or instrument in writing whatsoever, or his or her last will and testament; of which deed, will, conveyance or other instrument the said Registrar shall (first giving a receipt for the same) immediately make an entry or entries in a book to be kept for that purpose, to which book he shall keep an accurate alphabetical index, having reference therein as well to the name of the testator or parties to each deed or instrument as to the person or persons depositing the same; and the said Registrar shall carefully and securely keep all such deeds, wills or other instruments in the Authority’s office until required by the party or parties depositing the same to deliver them back again: Provided that every such will or testament shall be enclosed within a cover or envelope, sealed with the seal of the testator or testatrix, whose name shall be endorsed by the Registrar on such envelope or cover; and every such will shall remain in the said office until the decease of the testator or testatrix, unless he or she shall previously require the same to be delivered back; and upon the death of the testator or testatrix the said Registrar shall, after examining such will, deliver the same to the executor first named therein, or such other person as the Supreme Court shall, upon petition, order.

[Section 13 amended: No. 59 of 2004 s. 136; No. 60 of 2006 s. 150(9).]

14.Enrolment

That the Registrar shall also carefully enrol in a particular book, to be kept by him for that purpose, any instrument affecting lands, tenements or hereditaments in this State, which shall be delivered to him for the purpose of enrolment; and he shall also keep an alphabetical index of the names of the parties to such instruments, and of the district, letter and number by which such lands are therein particularised, with accurate references in such index to the number and page of enrolment to which any entry in such index shall relate.

15.Lost instrument

That on production of an affidavit, to be sworn before any justice of the peace, setting forth that the original of any such enrolled instrument has been lost, or cannot be found after due and diligent search and inquiry, or has been wholly or partially effaced or destroyed, and that the party by whom or on whose behalf such affidavit is tendered claims interest under such instrument, the Registrar shall issue to the party delivering such affidavit a full copy, certified by him to be correct, of the instrument referred to by such affidavit; and every copy so certified shall be received in any court of justice within the said State as conclusive evidence of the contents of the instrument so lost, effaced or destroyed, proof having been first made to the satisfaction of such court that such instrument is lost and cannot be found, and of the signature of the Registrar to such certificate.

16.Prior registrations even if informal evidence of facts and circumstances

That registration of any instrument or judgment under the provisions of this or any former Act, relative to the registration of instruments affecting real property, whether such registration shall have been made before or after the passing of this Act, and, whether strictly in accordance with such provisions or not, shall be deemed to be notice of all facts, circumstances and particulars referred to in the memorial of such registration of any instrument or judgment as aforesaid, with reference to all contracts entered into after the passing of this Act.

[Section 16 amended: No. 17 of 1974 s. 9.]

[17, 18.Deleted: 1 and 2 Edw. VII No. 14 s. 3.]

19.Court may cancel false or fraudulent registration

That it shall be lawful for the Supreme Court to receive a petition from any person praying relief against any registration affecting any interest of such petitioner in any lands or hereditaments, and alleged by him to be false or fraudulent; and if the said court shall by any means be fully satisfied of the truth of such allegation, it shall be lawful for the said court to order summarily that such registration be cancelled; and the said Registrar, on being personally served with such order, shall make such cancellation accordingly, and shall safely keep such order, making due reference thereto in his books of registry and indexes.

[Section 19 amended: No. 59 of 2004 s. 136.]

20.Mistake or omission, if not wilful, may be rectified by court

That in case it shall be made to appear to the satisfaction of the Supreme Court that any registration purporting or intended to be made in conformity with the provisions of this Act is imperfect by reason of any mistake or omission on the part of the said Registrar or any person in his employ, or of any person concerned in effecting such registration, and that such mistake or omission was not wilful or fraudulent, and that the same may be rectified without wrong or injury to any person lawfully claiming an interest in the subject matter of such registration, then and in such case it shall be lawful for the said court, on such terms and conditions (if any) as to it shall seem meet, to order that such mistake or omission be duly rectified; and if any person whose act or signature would, in strict conformity with law, have been requisite to the original sufficiency of registration, shall be dead or absent from this State, or under any incapacity, the said court may further order that any other person named in such order shall sign or act in lieu of the person so deceased, absent or incapacitated; and the said Registrar, on being served with any such order, shall forthwith obey the same, and make all necessary or convenient references to such order in his books of registry and indexes; and every registration when so amended shall, from the date of such amendment, be as valid and effectual to all intents and purposes as if the same had been originally complete and regular.

[Section 20 amended: No. 17 of 1974 s. 9; No. 59 of 2004 s. 136.]

[21.Deleted: No. 17 of 1974 s. 5.]

22.Regulations

(1)That it shall be lawful for the Governor to make regulations for or with respect to — 

(a)the medium in which judgments, deeds, wills, conveyances or instruments presented for registration shall be written and executed and the size and quality of the paper to be used; and

(b)the fees which may be charged by the Registrar of Deeds and Transfers; and

(c)all matters and things authorised to be prescribed or necessary or expedient to be prescribed to give effect to this Act.

(2)On the coming into operation of the Land Information Authority Act 2006 section 150(10) (the commencement), regulations made by the Commissioner of Titles under this section before the commencement become of the same effect as if they were made by the Governor under subsection (1) of this section as amended by the Land Information Authority Act 2006 section 150(10).

(3)Subsection (2) does not prevent the Governor from amending regulations to which that subsection applies.

[Section 22 inserted: No. 17 of 1974 s. 6; amended: No. 60 of 2006 s. 150(10).]

22AA.Certain prescribed fees may exceed cost recovery

(1)Regulations made under section 22 prescribing a fee that may be charged by the Registrar of Deeds and Transfers may prescribe a fee that is more than the amount, or an estimate of the amount, needed to allow recovery of expenditure —

(a)incurred in connection with the matter in relation to which the fee is charged; or

(b)that is relevant to —

(i)the scheme or system under which the action to which the fee relates is taken; or

(ii)the performance of any function to which the fee relates.

(2A)To the extent that regulations to which subsection (1) applies prescribe a fee that includes an amount that is a tax, the regulations may impose the tax.

(2)This section does not limit the Interpretation Act 1984 section 45A.

[Section 22AA inserted: No. 11 of 2015 s. 6; amended: No. 12 of 2015 s. 4.]

22AB.Expiry of section 22AA

(1)Section 22AA expires at the end of 31 December 2019 2.

(2)However, the Governor, on the recommendation of the Minister, may, by proclamation made before section 22AA expires, postpone the expiry of section 22AA until the end of a date specified in the proclamation, and in that case that section expires at the end of that date.

(3)The Minister cannot make a recommendation under subsection (2) unless the Minister is satisfied, on the basis of the most recent report laid before each House of Parliament under the Land Information Authority Act 2006 section 93(2), that the expiry of section 22AA should be postponed.

(4)There is no limit on the number of times the expiry of section 22AA may be postponed, but each postponement cannot be for longer than 5 years beginning on the day after the most recent date on which section 22AA would expire if that expiry were not postponed.

(5)The Interpretation Act 1984 section 42 applies to and in relation to a proclamation made under subsection (2) as if the proclamation were a regulation.

(6)The expiry of section 22AA does not affect the validity of any regulations made under section 22 and in effect immediately before that expiry.

[Section 22AB inserted: No. 11 of 2015 s. 6.]

[Note: The expiry of section 22AA is postponed until the end of 31 December 2024 by the Land Legislation (Postponement of Expiry) Proclamation 2018 (see Gazette 21 Dec 2018 p. 4845-6).]

22A.Validation

That any act, matter or thing under this Act done by a person who has held or holds the office of Registrar of Titles under the Transfer of Land Act 1893, before the coming into operation of the Registration of Deeds Ordinance Amendment Act 1974, shall be deemed to have been done by the Registrar of Deeds and Transfers.

[Section 22A inserted: No. 17 of 1974 s. 7.]

[23.Deleted: No. 17 of 1974 s. 8.]

[24.Deleted: 1 and 2 Edw. VII No. 14 s. 3.]

25.Short title

This Act may be cited as the Registration of Deeds Act 1856.

[Section 25 inserted: No. 81 of 1966 s. 2; amended: No. 17 of 1974 s. 1 and s. 9.]

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Notes

This is a compilation of the Registration of Deeds Act 1856 and includes amendments made by other written laws. For provisions that have come into operation, and for information about any reprints, see the compilation table.

Compilation table

Short title

Number and year

Assent

Commencement

Untitled Act 1

1856 (19 Vict. No. 14)

14 Jun 1856

14 Jun 1856

Criminal Code Act 1902 s. 3

1902 (1 and 2 Edw. VII No. 14)

19 Feb 1902

1 May 1902 (see s. 2)

Untitled Act

36 of 1909
(9 Edw. VII No. 32)

21 Dec 1909

21 Dec 1909

Registration of Deeds Amendment Act 1923

23 of 1923
(14 Geo. V No. 2)

8 Oct 1923

8 Oct 1923

Statute Law Revision (Short Titles) Act 1966 s. 2

81 of 1966

12 Dec 1966

12 Dec 1966

Registration of Deeds Ordinance Amendment Act 1974

17 of 1974

16 Oct 1974

Act other than s. 6: 16 Oct 1974 (see s. 2(2));
s. 6: 10 Jan 1975 (see s. 2(1) and Gazette 10 Jan 1975 p. 41)

Reprint of the Registration of Deeds Act 1856 approved 16 Mar 1976 (includes amendments listed above)

Acts Amendment and Repeal (Courts and Legal Practice) Act 2003 s. 60

65 of 2003

4 Dec 2003

1 Jan 2004 (see s. 2 and Gazette 30 Dec 2003 p. 5722)

Reprint 2: The Registration of Deeds Act 1856 as at 9 Apr 2004 (includes amendments listed above)

Courts Legislation Amendment and Repeal Act 2004 Pt. 20 Div. 1

59 of 2004

23 Nov 2004

1 May 2005 (see s. 2 and Gazette 31 Dec 2004 p. 7128)

Land Information Authority Act 2006 s. 150

60 of 2006

16 Nov 2006

1 Jan 2007 (see s. 2(1) and Gazette 8 Dec 2006 p. 5369)

Legal Profession Act 2008 s. 697

21 of 2008

27 May 2008

1 Mar 2009 (see s. 2(b) and Gazette 27 Feb 2009 p. 511)

Reprint 3: The Registration of Deeds Act 1856 as at 7 Nov 2014 (includes amendments listed above)

Land Legislation Amendment Act 2015 Pt. 3

11 of 2015

29 Apr 2015

30 Jun 2015 (see s. 2(b) and Gazette 2 Jun 2015 p. 1937)

Land Legislation Amendment (Taxing) Act 2015 Pt. 2

12 of 2015

29 Apr 2015

30 Jun 2015 (see s. 2(b) and Gazette 2 Jun 2015 p. 1937)

Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2022 Pt. 17 Div. 17

9 of 2022

14 Apr 2022

1 Jul 2022 (see s. 2(c) and SL 2022/113 cl. 2)

Other notes

1Now known as the Registration of Deeds Act 1856; short title inserted and amended (see note under s. 25).

2The Land Legislation (Postponement of Expiry) Proclamation 2018 published by Gazette 21 Dec 2018 p. 4845-6 provides that the expiry of section 22AA is postponed until the end of 31 December 2024.

 

Defined terms

 

[This is a list of terms defined and the provisions where they are defined. The list is not part of the law.]

Defined termProvision(s)

Authority2

commencement22(2)