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Federal Court to deliver major decision on property sales by forgers this Thursday | Federal Court to deliver major decision on property sales by forgers this Thursday |
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| Monday, 18 January 2010 11:09am | ||||||
KUALA LUMPUR, Mon: All eyes will be on the Federal Court this Thursday as it delivers a major decision whether to end nine years of gross injustice caused by the 2000 decision of the Federal Court in Adorna Properties Sdn Bhd v Boonsom Boonyanit ("Adorna Properties") or to follow and further entrench Adorna Properties in the laws relating to property sales by forgers in this country. It is one case which will be closely watched by property owners and conveyancers both within and without this country. On October 29 last year, a strong five-member Federal Court, presided by Chief Justice Tun Zaki Azmi, was asked to determine the question "whether an acquirer of a registered charge or other interest or title under the National Land Code, 1965 by means of a forged instrument acquires an immediate indefeasible interest or title." The other judges were Court of Appeal President Tan Sri Alauddin Mohd Sheriff, Chief Judge of Malaya Tan Sri Arifin Zakaria and Federal Court judges Datuk Zulkefli Ahmad Makinudin and Datuk James Foong Cheng Yuen. In the 2000 decision of Adorna Properties, delivered by the then Chief Justice Tun Eusoff Chin in a four-page judgment, the Federal Court ruled that such an acquirer could acquire an immediate indefeasible title and interest from a forger under section 340 of the National Land Code, 1965. S 340 reads as follows:
The main thrust of Eusoff Chin's decision was that the proviso in s 340(3) would also apply to sub-section 340(2). Hence, Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd. ("Adorna") which was a body falling within the meaning of sub-section 340(2) had obtained a good title by virtue of the proviso of sub-section (3) even though the properties were transferred to Adorna by way of a forged instrument of transfer. Briefly, in Adorna Properties, a Thai, Boonsom
Boonyanit, who resided in Thailand was
the registered proprietor of two lots land in Tanjung Bungah, Pulau Pinang ("the
said lands"). An impostor, one Mrs Boonsoom Boonyanit, claiming to be "Sun Yok Eng @ Boonsom Boonyanit"
had affirmed a statutory declaration on June 18, 1988 that she had lost the
original title to the said lands. The impostor then managed to obtain a
certified copy of the title from the land office. In simple terms, the principle of deferred indefeasibility operates in this way: For example, A is the registered owner of the land. B forges A's signature and transfers the land to himself. B later sells and transfers the land to C. C has no knowledge of the forgery, and C obtains an indefeasible title. Or if B forges A's signature and transfers the land from A to C and C later transfers the land to D. Then, D and not C, who has no knowledge of the forgery, will obtain an indefeasible title. C and D in the first and second examples are known as subsequent purchasers under s 340(3). However, after Adorna Properties which embraces the principle of immediate indefeasibility, C will still get an indefeasible title if B forges A's signature and transfers the land immediately to C without first having transferred to B himself. Hence, had the Federal Court in Adorna Properties applied the principle of deferred indefeasibility, Adorna would not have had obtained an indefeasible title because the land had not first been transferred to the impostor before it was transferred to Adorna and as such Adorna was not a "subsequent purchaser" within the meaning of sub-section 340(3). Two unsuccessful attempts had also been subsequently made by Boonyanit’s family asking the Federal Court to review the main judgment. In the first attempt, the main ground advanced was that when the main judgment was delivered, Eusoff Chin had retired on Dec 19, 2000. Steve Shim, Haidar Mohd Noor and Mokhtar Abdullah dismissed the application in a judgment dated Feb 26, 2001. In the second attempt, the Federal Court comprising P.S. Gill, Rahmah Hussein and Richard Malanjun ruled in its judgment dated Aug 27, 2004 that they were not convinced that the interpretation given in the main judgment was patently wrong and had resulted in grave injustice. There is, no doubt, that Adorna Properties has wreaked havoc in land transactions for the past nine years. Many landowners had also lost their properties due to forgery when their lands were immediately transferred to bona fide purchasers by forgers using forged instruments. As Adorna Properties is the decision of the apex court, it remains good law until it is legislatively reversed by an Act of Parliament or by another decision of the Federal Court. Unfortunately, when the opportunity arose in 2007, the Federal Court decided not to grant leave to appeal in the case Au Meng Nam & Anor v Ung Yak Chew & Ors 2007. On Thursday, the Federal Court will have an opportunity to revisit Adorna Properties to decide whether to overrule it or follow this much criticised decision. The case before the Federal Court on Thursday can be traced back to 1976 when without the knowledge of the appellant (plaintiff), Tan Yin Hong, the Pahang State Government had alienated and issued the document of title of a piece of land in Kuantan in favour of him. The appellant only came to know about the existence of the said Land in 1985 when he received a letter from the Third Respondent, United Malayan Banking Corporation Bhd (now RHB Bank Bhd) demanding repayment of the sums of RM111,825.95 and RM197,244.01 being the respective sums owing under an overdraft facility and term loan facility granted by the Third Respondent to the Second Respondent, Cini Timber Industries Sdn. Bhd. Upon enquiry, the appellant discovered that the First Respondent, Tan Sian San, who is now missing and not related to the appellant, had forged the appellant's signature by creating a power of attorney in favour of the First Respondent on February 7, 1977. With the forged power of attorney, the First Respondent had charged the said Land to the Third Respondent in 1984 as security for the loan facilities granted to the Second Respondent. The appellant then sued the respondents in 1987 asking for various declaratory reliefs including an order that the charge and power of attorney be declared void ab initio. At the High Court at Kuantan, Justice Datuk Abu Samah Bin Nordin dismissed the appellant's claim on July 4, 2003. Upon appeal to the Court of Appeal, Justices Suriyadi Halim Omar, Zainun Ali and Ahmad Haji Maarop dismissed the appellant's appeal on February 19, 2009, holding that the Third Respondent had obtained immediate indefeasibility of its interest by applying the principle in Adorna Properties. On October 29 last year, counsel T. Mura Raju who acted for the appellant and counsel Datuk Bastian Pius Vendargon and Ong Siew Wan who acted for the Third Respondent submitted that the question posed to the Federal Court should be answered in the negative, in that, the Adorna Properties had been wrongly decided and ought to be overruled. Both counsel emphasised that Eusoff Chin had erred as it was very clear in s 340(3) that the proviso only applied to "this sub-section (3)". Vendargon, however, submitted that the declaratory reliefs sought by the appellant ought to be dismissed on procedural grounds. Head of the Civil Division in the A-G’s Chambers, See Mee Chun and its Deputy Head of Civil Division I, Azizah binti Nawawi who appeared for the Attorney General as amicus curiae agreed with the submissions by the counsel for the appellant and the Third Respondent in that Adorna Properties should be overruled. See also revealed that the Attorney General's Chambers were looking at the possibility of amending s 340(3). When invited to submit by Tun Zaki, counsel Roger Tan who held a watching brief for the Bar Council together with Tony Woon, informed the court that the Bar agreed with the submissions by all the counsel in that the principle of deferred indefeasibility should apply to s 340 and Adorna Properties was wrongly decided. However, Tan said he disagreed with the submissions by the counsel for the appellant and Third Respondent with regard to using the decision of the Court of Appeal in OCBC Bank (M) Bhd v Pendaftar Hakmilik, Negeri Johor Darul Takzim 1999 (OCBC Bank) as an authority on the application of deferred indefeasibility. Tan submitted that the decision in OCBC Bank was wrong as the learned Court of Appeal judge, Datuk NH Chan had misapplied the principle of deferred indefeasibility by overstretching it. Tan, who is also the former Chairman of Conveyancing Practice Committee of the Bar Council, added that had the principle been properly applied, the charge in favour of the appellant bank would have been valid as the land had already been transferred to the forger before the charge was created and the bank was therefore a "subsequent purchaser" entitled to protection under the proviso of s 340(3). In OCBC Bank, the appellant bank was the chargee of a plot of land in Batu Pahat, Johor ('the said land'). The charge in favour of the appellant had been granted by one Ng See Chow who was the registered proprietor of the said land. When the said Ng See Chow failed to pay for the overdraft facility, the appellant applied for, and the court granted, an order for sale of the land. However, one Ng Kim Hwa lodged a police report claiming that the land belonged to him and he claimed that he had not executed any transfer form in favour of Ng See Chow in respect of the land. The Court of Appeal, comprising Justices NH Chan, Abdul Malek and Mokhtar Sidin dismissed the appellant bank's appeal. Justice NH Chan ruled that the charge was invalid as any interest granted by an immediate proprietor or holder was also liable to be set aside. Tan then referred to the paper entitled "Basics of Indefeasibility under the National Land Code" presented by Professor Teo Keang Sood at the 14th Malaysian Law Conference in October 2007 where the learned professor of law from the National University of Singapore said:
The Federal Court will now deliver its decision on Thursday, January 21 at 9.30am. Related articles:
•
A-G’s Chambers to amend National Land Code
Comments (10)
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Federal Court to deliver major decision on property sales by forgers this Thursday
written by Shanmuga Kanesalingam, Monday, January 18 2010 02:54 pm
KARMA WILL OPERATE ...
written by Stephen Tan Ban Cheng, Monday, January 18 2010 04:19 pm
This is a very well-written and comprehensive approach to the Adorna decision that enfeebled most property owners.
ENLIGHTEN US ...
written by Stephen Tan Ban Cheng, Monday, January 18 2010 04:33 pm
My dear Shanmuga
OCBC case - mea culpa
written by Shanmuga Kanesalingam, Monday, January 18 2010 04:45 pm
It's been pointed out to me that in OCBC, the Charge was presented some time after the forged transfer. Thus on the facts the decision is probably wrongly decided, and the Bank in that case was probably in fact and in law equity's darling. I therefore owe counsel for the Bar Council an apology.
DO YOU SHARE MY VIEW?
written by Stephen Tan Ban Cheng, Monday, January 18 2010 05:13 pm
My dear Shanmuga
Balancing act by Federal Court
written by Ong Siew Wan, Monday, January 18 2010 11:14 pm
I am the counsel acting for the 3rd respondent at Court of Appeal level and assist Dato Bastian at Federal Court. The following is my personal view.
Indefeasibility to protect Fraudsters?
written by Tan Peek Guat, Tuesday, January 19 2010 09:16 am
I wonder if it is Parliament's desire that "Indefeasibility" is meant to allow for any fraudulent conduct in dealings in Land matters.
The Bank's solicitors ought to surface!
written by Tan Peek Guat, Tuesday, January 19 2010 09:26 am
Dear Ong,
The safeguard is the INSURANCE PRINCIPLE.
written by Tan Peek Guat, Tuesday, January 19 2010 09:56 am
The 3 principles of the Torrens System ought to be adhered to and be promoted by all parties in Malaysia since the Indefeasibility Principle has been copied from Australia :
The Bank's Solicitors ought to surface written by Ong Siew Wan, Tuesday, January 19 2010 04:31 pm
Dear Tan Write comment
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Hopefully the decision will bring some common sense to this pressing problem.
However, with respect, I disagree with counsel for the Bar in his submission on the OCBC case. Whilst there is universal condemnation for Adorna, I do not think OCBC attracts the same level of criticism.
Although in technical terms, the charge is a "subsequent" transaction on a strict reading of the National Land Code, in reality and in most cases the Transfer and Charge are part and parcel of 1 composite transaction.
The Transfer cannot exist without the Charge since the consideration specified in the Transfer would not be paid if not for the Charge. Both documents are inevitably presented together at the Land Registry by the bank's solicitors. In many cases, the solicitors attending to the Charge and Transfer are the same.
Hence, I would think that a purposive construction of the NLC would recognize that these situations are better considered (depending on the facts) as indivisible parts of a composite transaction involving SPA, Loan Agreement, Transfer and Charge.
After all, it is just as unjust for the original landowner to lose his land to the forger as it is to lose it to the bank who assisted the forger.
Shanmuga Kanesalingam