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Queensland: Property Law Act 1974 [14] Land Titles Act 1994 [15] Northern Territory: Law of Property Act [16] Land Title Act [17] South Australia: Law of Property Act 1936 [18] Real Property Act 1886 [19] Tasmania: Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1884 [20] Land Titles Act 1980 [21] Western Australia: Property Law Act 1969 [22] Transfer of ...
The doctrine of adverse possession was reviewed in publications such as "A Critique of the Doctrine of Adverse Possession", "The effect of adverse possession on part of a registered title land parcel" and "Adverse possession of Torrens land: Parliamentary inquiry strays out of bounds". The first article states that the "application of adverse ...
The South East Queensland Regional Plan 2009-2031 (SEQRP 2009) [1] is a statutory plan designed to guide regional growth and development in South East Queensland, Australia. It was established under the Integrated Planning Act 1997 , which has now been replaced by The Sustainable Planning Act 2009 .
Within these are individual land parcels such as lots; in total there are estimated to be about 10.2 million of these in Australia. [1] The various cadastral units appear on certificates of title, which are given volume and folio numbers; these numbers by themselves are sometimes used to identify land parcels, or in combination with the other ...
The ALA establishes authority for the Queensland Government to acquire land for specific purposes including the creation of roads, railways, and other essential infrastructure. The acquisition of land in this way is referred to in Australian legal jurisdictions as ‘compulsory acquisition’, known internationally as eminent domain .
Queensland had been divided into 109 counties in the nineteenth century, before the Land Act of 1897 subdivided many of these counties to 319. Some of the eastern counties remained the same, with most of the subdivisions occurring in the west and north. The current counties were named and bounded by the Governor in Council on 7 March 1901. [3] [4]
Ban Ban is a rural locality in the North Burnett Region, Queensland, Australia. [3] In the 2021 census, Ban Ban had a population of 25 people. [1] Geography.
A land parcel or cadastral parcel is defined as "a continuous area, or more appropriately volume, that is identified by a unique set of homogeneous property rights". [3] Cadastral surveys document the boundaries of land ownership, by the production of documents, diagrams, sketches, plans (plats in the US), charts, and maps. They were originally ...