Rejection Policy and Procedures
General
The occasions when an application for registration is considered defective and must be rejected are defined by the provisions of the 2012 Act. Rejection is defined as the non-acceptance of an application for registration by the Keeper - it may occur at any time from receipt at Intake/Create to the point where an application is confirmed at legal settle.
In terms of section 21(3) for applications for the registration of a deed, and section 27(4) for applications for voluntary registration, the Keeper must reject an application if, at the date of application an applicant does not satisfy the Keeper that the application meets:
- the general application conditions (specified in section 22), and
- the conditions of registration which apply to the particular type of application being made (specified in sections 23, 25, 26 and 28).
This part of the registration manual highlights each of the relevant conditions, providing examples of the reasons under each condition why an application for registration of a deed or for voluntary registration may be rejected and links to relevant sections of the manual for further explanation and guidance. Additional guidance on rejection of applications by prescriptive claimants is held separately.
General Application Conditions
Both applications for registration of a deed in terms of section 21(2) and applications for voluntary registration by virtue of section 27(3)(a)(i) of the Act must meet the general application conditions set out in Section 22. This part summarises the general application conditions and the various reasons for rejection which fall within them.
Conditions of Registration
The conditions of registration are specified in sections 23, 25, 26 and 28 of the Act. This part summarises the conditions of registration and the various reasons for rejection which fall within those conditions of registration. Which of these sections applies depends upon the type of application with which the registration officer is dealing.
First registration
Dealings affecting the whole of a registered plot
Transfers of part and/or dealings with part of a registered plot
Common Rejection Reasons and Conditions
For further information see Authentication of Registrable Deeds, Designations and Requirements of Registrable Deeds and the following examples of reasons for rejection:
Reasons for Rejection other than General Application Conditions or Conditions of Registration
There are other provisions in the 2012 Act which may require a registration officer to reject a particular application for registration:
Dependent Applications
Where a lead application is rejected as it has failed to meet one or more of the general application conditions or conditions of registration applying, subsequent applications may also require to be rejected as a consequence where the deed can no longer be valid.
Typically, this will be for one or both of the following reasons:
Limited Requisitions
Section 34(1)(b) provides that, while an application for registration is pending, an applicant is not permitted to substitute or amend the application, except with the consent of the Keeper. This provision does not, however, permit the Keeper to consent to amendment or substitution in any circumstances. A registration officer can only make a requisition (and an applicant can only submit additional information) where the application did meet the general application conditions and the conditions of registration at the date of application, but reinforcement is being sought. Examples of the limited cases in which additional information may be submitted after the date of application can be found at Substitution or Amendment - Requisition Policy and Procedures.
Authorisation of Rejection
Rejection of an application must be authorised by a senior team leader or a senior caseworker, before the application is passed to the rejections officer. This is achieved by completing an LR34 (available from the application workdesk print function in LRS). A partial rejection is where the application for one registrable deed is being rejected, but another registrable deed is not and both were created under the same application number in LRS. Each registrable deed has its own application form and is an application in its own right (irrespective of whether it has a separate application number in LRS). Once authorisation is received, the casebag(s) and completed form(s) should be passed to the Rejections Officer to remove the application(s) from LRS etc.
The authorising officer should check whether the application has been inadvertently "completed" prior to seeking rejection; if it has, this action causes the finance system to allocate the fee. Any instance where the application has been inadvertently completed and it subsequently becomes necessary to re-open the application to reject (either wholly or partially), the matter should be raised with finance section.
Withdrawal of Application for Registration
Section 34(1)(a) permits an applicant to withdraw their application for registration at any time whilst the application is pending completion. This applies both to:
- an application for registration of a deed or
- an application for voluntary registration.
A request should be made in writing (either an email or letter will suffice) from the applicant or from their agent as named on the application. This request should be added to the business record.
If the request is not received directly from the applicant but from their purported agent (who is different from the agent on the application form for the particular deed), then the change of arrangement should be confirmed by a letter or email from the submitting agent as well, so that it is clear that authority for withdrawal is being appropriately made. The registration officer may require to request this. Again such evidence should be added to the business record.
Section 34(1)(a) does not permit an applicant to withdraw an application for an advance notice, discharge of advance notice or application relating to a caveat.
Notification of Rejection and Withdrawal
The terms of the rejection or withdrawal notification will be the same for each party being notified of the rejection or withdrawal.
There are letter templates in the LRS application workdesk for post-intake rejections and withdrawals. Pre-intake rejection letters are available at the Intake Officer page in the Rejections process steps in the User Guides
In the case of a rejection, the registration officer must enter the appropriate reason or reasons for rejection in the relevant letter template. Suggested wording is provided for use in rejection letters for a range of rejection reasons, see Common Rejection Reasons and Conditions above.
If a dependent application is being rejected as a consequence of the rejection or withdrawal of the lead application, the appropriate pre-intake or post-intake dependent application rejection letter should be used. The withdrawal letter is only appropriate for the parties to the withdrawn application.
Once the post-intake rejection process is complete, the rejection officer will upload the rejection letter to the notifications handler system. The handler system will pull information through from LRS. Email addresses for the applicant and granter should be provided on the application form for notification purposes, and these will be entered in LRS during the intake process. Once the rejection is completed on LRS, notifications will be sent automatically overnight to the email addresses provided. For pre-intake rejections, the rejection letter will be uploaded onto the notification handler, and email addresses entered manually. In both cases, the email notification will contain a link allowing the parties to view a copy of the rejection or withdrawal letter.
A hard copy of the rejection or withdrawal letter will be sent to the agent with the other returned documentation.
Special notification arrangements exist for prescriptive claimant applications. Further guidance can be found at the Prescriptive Claimants pages.
Rejection and Withdrawal Fees
As of 1 April 2021, these are no longer charged.
Backdating an Application for Registration
Priority of registration is usually determined by the relative dates of registration of applications relating to the same land or right in land, unless an advance notice exists. Many important effects flow from the priority of registration, consequently a registration officer must not:
- change the date of application/registration of a pending application to an earlier date; or
- retrospectively amend the application record of the Land Register in material respects (e.g. complete alterations in names of parties rather than correcting minor discrepancies from deed or form, or registrable deed type).
In order to maintain the integrity of the Land Register, only designated users with special permissions can amend the date of application on the LRS.
The rule against materially altering the application record retrospectively means that once an application has been rejected and returned to the presenting agent, it cannot under any circumstances be reinstated in the application record on its original date. Even if the application has been rejected in error, the rule must be strictly observed. In the event of loss being suffered as a result of a breach of this rule, the Keeper might have to consider a claim under warranty.
Once rejected or withdrawn for a breach of either the general application conditions or the conditions of registration applying to the application type, an application can only re-enter the application record on the date of its resubmission.
Creation of administrative LRS applications for purposes of (1) shared plot (2) tenement
The general prohibition referred to does not include LRS applications created to administer properly the creation of cadastral units. This is distinct from situations (where there must be a registrable deed and registration application form) where the Keeper is permitted under section 13 to combine, remove or divide a cadastral unit and its title sheet (or a lease title sheet alone) and an administrative LRS application is required to obtain access to and update the Land Register to reflect such a decision.
In terms of section 13(2), the Keeper may combine cadastral units, remove a cadastral unit from the map or divide a cadastral unit. In addition, by virtue of section 13(3), on division of a cadastral unit, the resultant parts can be combined with a different cadastral unit. Any necessary changes to the other parts of the Land Register resulting from combination, removal or division, such as changes to the title sheet record, must also be made. There are occasions where registration officers will need to create a cadastral unit for a tenement steading where a flat is transferred after the designated day and these discretions allow for such occasions. Further, section 17 permits the the Keeper to create a cadastral unit for a shared plot and a relative title sheet in certain circumstances and the Keeper will do so where necessary using LRS applications created on an administrative basis in addition to those applications for registration which derive from registrable deeds or applications for voluntary registration.
Where decisions are made to divide an existing cadastral unit, for example to create a cadastral unit for a tenement steading and its associated title sheet, the proprietor will be notified. Applications for the registration of deeds which do not contain the "correct" title number received soon after that notification may be considered acceptable.
Backdating the date of application for an application for registration of a deed or for an application for voluntary registration, other than administrative applications identified above, is a serious matter. If a registration officer believes they have identified a pressing reason for this to happen, this must be authorised by a senior caseworker in writing. They will consider the circumstances and the risks of doing so, including that a claim for compensation for loss may be made as a result of an inaccurate report being issued either by RoS or by a private searcher acting in reliance on the contents of the application record at a particular date in time.
Registers of Scotland (RoS) seeks to ensure that the information published in the 2012 Act Registration Manual is up to date and accurate but it may be amended from time to time.
The Manual is an internal document intended for RoS staff only. The information in the Manual does not constitute legal or professional advice and RoS cannot accept any liability for actions arising from its use.
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