Conveyancing
Language: English Series: Estates Gazette ; (548) 3 December 2005, 212-219(7)Publication details: 2005Subject(s): Summary: Group of features covering the impact of major changes in conveyancing on landowners, lessees and their various advisers including surveyors: "Ticking clock" describes the Land Registry's progress on its mission to get all land in England and Wales registered by 2012 and gives a historical overview of why some much land remains unregistered; "Sign up to complete the register" focuses on the Land Registry's promotion of voluntary registration; "Survival is a matter of knowledge" shows that small tenants are finding it increasingly difficult to keep up with the red tape governing leases; "Taking cover speeds the process" reports on the increasing popularity of title insurance policies; "Early learning key" suggests that practitioners should start preparing for the e-conveyancing future, and "Online community" warns that the chain matrix requires case-management systems to talk to each other.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | L131824 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 131824-1001 |
Group of features covering the impact of major changes in conveyancing on landowners, lessees and their various advisers including surveyors: "Ticking clock" describes the Land Registry's progress on its mission to get all land in England and Wales registered by 2012 and gives a historical overview of why some much land remains unregistered; "Sign up to complete the register" focuses on the Land Registry's promotion of voluntary registration; "Survival is a matter of knowledge" shows that small tenants are finding it increasingly difficult to keep up with the red tape governing leases; "Taking cover speeds the process" reports on the increasing popularity of title insurance policies; "Early learning key" suggests that practitioners should start preparing for the e-conveyancing future, and "Online community" warns that the chain matrix requires case-management systems to talk to each other.