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     Protecting the landowners 
    17/03/2008 The Star 
     
    HOLDING on to a piece of land title used to be the most secure way for 
    landowners to state ownership of their properties.  
     
    The situation has however turned wobbly lately with the implementation of 
    the computerised e-Tanah system.  
     
    Fraudulent land ownership transfers can be done at the click of the mouse. 
    It can happen quickly and right under one’s nose.  
     
    Designed to streamline land transactions and ownership, the system was 
    introduced late last year with a noble intention.  
     
    It aimed to cut transaction time in half, enable online comprehensive land 
    database collection and make the application and registration of titles more 
    efficient.  
     
    However, the new system which was gazetted through the National Land Code 
    (Amendment) Act 2007 did not address the bigger problems of land fraud and 
    the loophole in Section 340 of the National Land Code (NLC) 1965.  
     
    The loophole had resulted in the Federal Court’s landmark ruling in Adorna 
    Properties Sdn Bhd v Boonsom Boonyanit in 2001.  
     
    The case revolves around a Thai woman, Boonsom Boonyanit, who lost two 
    pieces of prime land in Tanjong Bungah, Penang, to a third party – Adorna 
    Properties Sdn Bhd – after some unscrupulous parties forged her signature to 
    sell and transfer the land.  
     
    The result of the case, which was heard right up to the Federal Court, could 
    be said to be unfair to Boonsom. At the end of it, she lost everything.  
     
    The court held that Adorna Properties could rightly claim ownership over the 
    two pieces of land worth millions of ringgit because it was an innocent 
    buyer.  
     
    Since then some have felt that justice had not been administered according 
    to the law stated in Section 340 of the NLC as the section does not contain 
    any remedy for landowners.  
     
    The most senior Court of Appeal judge, Datuk Gopal Sri Ram, said on July 13 
    last year in Au Meng Nam & Anor v Ung Yak Chew & others that the 
    controversial decision of the Adorna Properties case should not be followed 
    because it was wrongly decided.  
     
    His view, however, immediately drew flak from then Chief Justice Tun Ahmad 
    Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim who chided him for ignoring the ruling of a 
    superior court merely on the grounds that someone felt the higher court had 
    made a wrong decision.  
     
    This dilemma has got the Bar Council working on a memorandum which it 
    submitted to the then Natural Resources and Environment Minister Datuk Seri 
    Azmi Khalid on July 24, last year.  
     
    In the memorandum, the Bar Council proposed several amendments to be made to 
    the relevant sections of the NLC, especially Sections 340(3) and (4) and 
    187B.  
     
    The move, however, did not bring about any change to the status quo as 
    amendments to the NLC in December last year did not include Section 340.  
     
    It was only during a workshop on Thursday, organised by the Land and Mines 
    Department to find ways to overcome the Adorna case, that a glimmer of light 
    was seen at the end of the tunnel.  
     
    Land and Mines director-general Datuk Zoal Azha Yusof, whose department had 
    organised the workshop, said the change was necessary to restore property 
    owners’ rights.  
     
    “It is not fair to property owners to have their rights taken away,” he had 
    said before.  
     
    The Bar Council’s Conveyancing Practice Committee chairman Roger Tan said 
    the step was a positive move towards giving protection to land owners.  
     
    Apart from the Adorna Properties case, there were a serious number of 
    fraudulent cases involving land in the country.  
     
    Statistics disclosed by police showed that 16 cases were recorded in 2001, 
    19 in 2002, 22 in 2003, 32 in 2004, 35 in 2005 and 40 in 2006.  
     
    The Consumers Association of Penang has cried foul over why hardly anyone 
    had been prosecuted for the crimes.  
     
    The Government has also not been sitting idle. The National Resources and 
    Environment Ministry has been correcting some of the teething problems in 
    the e-Tanah system.  
     
    Among the measures noted for action since December were the use of digital 
    signatures and security codes to increase security for land matters such as 
    keeping data on transferring property in a special read-only database to 
    prevent tampering.  
     
    Steps had also been taken to stop fraudsters from getting land titles by 
    claiming that they had “lost” their land titles and trying to apply for new 
    ones via their lawyers.  
     
    Now, landowners have to go personally to the Land Office to get replacement 
    titles to ensure they are the legitimate owners.  
     
    These measures would definitely help to solve some of the teething problems 
    but it is hoped that the amendment to Section 340 will provide the quantum 
    leap for a more drastic change in the law for the benefit of bona fide 
    landlords.   |