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Home > Law > Law glossary > Law glossary
Trust of land
Last modified: Thu Feb 23 16:37:38 2006
The term `trust of land' can be used in a general sense to
mean any Trust that has, or includes, land as its
trust property. Until the
TrustsOfLandAndAppointmentOfTrusteesAct1996
(TOLATA) came into force, there were two main administrative frameworks
for trusts that included land: the SettledLandActSettlement, governed
by the SettledLandAct1925,
and the TrustForSale, created by the courts. Whether one form existed, or the other,
depended on
technicalities of the wording of the instrument creating the trust. Rather
inconveniently (in modern times, at least), the law presumed a Settled Land Act (SLA)
settlement if the settlor did not evince a clear intention to create
a trust for sale. So both trusts for sale and SLA settlements were trusts of land
in this broad sense.
Since 1997, when TOLATA came into force, there has been only one recognized
form of trust that includes land. Consequently the term
`trust of land' can also mean a TOLATA trust. This is a rather narrower
sense of the term. Unfortunately we still need to be careful whether
we are using the term `trust of land' in the broad sense or the narrow sense,
because TOLATA allows that existing SLA settlements can continue to exist.
So, in short, the term `trust of land' now means either
an SLA settlement, or
a TOLATA trust of land
However, when the term `trust of land' is used in, for example, a case report
from before 1997, it might by referring to a trust for sale.
For an overview of the provisions the TOLATA trust, see TOLATATrustOfLand.
LandAndPropertyLaw
TrustLaw
Law glossary index
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