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Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth - Properties - Nairaland

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Importance Of A Deed Of Gift In Land Matters / You Don't Have A Land, If You Don't Have A Deed Of Assignment / What Is A Deed Of Assignment (2) (3) (4)

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Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by ShoProperties(m): 6:53am On Feb 17, 2017
Protect Your Right to Your Land with a Deed
As a landowner, you should have a deed to your
property. A deed is a piece of paper which shows that
you own your land.1 The deed gives you title to your
property and title governs your legal right to your land.
Every time property is sold, willed, or given to
another person, a new deed must be written and
registered. This should be done by a lawyer. In the
deed, the person buying or inheriting the land is called
the grantee and the person selling, willing, or giving the
land is called the grantor. If you own land, make sure
you have a deed for it.

A. FEATURES OF A DEED
Every valid, legal deed must include the name of
the grantor, the name of the grantee, and a description of the land and its boundaries. The deed must also state
that the property is being passed to a new owner. For
example, "I hereby convey my land to Mr. X to have and
to hold...."
In Nigeria a conveyance of land is legal when:
(1) it is in writing (like a deed);

(2) the grantor
signed the deed and fully understands what he/she is
doing with the property;
(3) the deed is accepted by the
grantee or his/her agent;
(4) the description of the property in the deed is specific enough that the property can be identified.
(5) If you are buying a piece of property and you sign
a contract for sale before you sign a deed, the seller might make several promises in the contract. For instance, the seller might say in the contract that he or she guarantees you will not have any boundary problems. You must make sure that these promises also appear in the deed. If they do not, then those promises will be lost.
(6) In other words, the deed, not the contract, defines which legal rights you have. You should also make sure that the description of the land you are buying is the same in the contract as it is in the deed. A lawyer can help you with these matters.

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Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by nony43(m): 7:01am On Feb 17, 2017
Is it different from the C of O?, just asking
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by money121(m): 7:01am On Feb 17, 2017
Ok
ThNks Op.. I will grin grin

Are you ready to Roof that your Building? Kindly check my signature for the Current Price of Roofing in Nigeria market..
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by richinvestor: 7:02am On Feb 17, 2017
undecided angry
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by fghanni(m): 7:03am On Feb 17, 2017
informed...
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by Bilabong(m): 7:03am On Feb 17, 2017
Nice topic
short and understandable

1 Like

Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by ShoProperties(m): 7:03am On Feb 17, 2017
Contact me for your genuine land with c of o 08124579981

1 Like

Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by Nobody: 7:04am On Feb 17, 2017
Oh I see..... It's alright.... Thank you so much for the piece of the information smiley
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by HAH: 7:06am On Feb 17, 2017
Deed of assignment is the document that gives ownership of landed property, it is as important as the Cof O if not better.
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by 9iceboi(m): 7:07am On Feb 17, 2017
If u want to buy a land go and get a lawyer. Power of attorney can convey an interest in a property to another but it can never be a good root of title.

1 Like

Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by jhydebaba(m): 7:07am On Feb 17, 2017
Op, where can I get a plot of land for 300000 in Lagos
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by ShoProperties(m): 7:10am On Feb 17, 2017
jhydebaba:
Op, where can I get a plot of land for 300000 in Lagos
which location are you looking at? Message me or call me on 08124579981 or 08027493735 .

Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by virus05(m): 7:13am On Feb 17, 2017
does advertisments get to front page undecided
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by jhydebaba(m): 7:17am On Feb 17, 2017
ShoProperties:
which location are you looking at? Message me or call me on 08124579981 or 08027493735 .
Banana Island.
I can manage Lekki or Ikoyi.

1 Like

Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by Ephort: 7:31am On Feb 17, 2017
HAH:
Deed of assignment is the document that gives ownership of landed property, it is as important as the Cof O if not better.

You are not entirely right Sire.
C of O is the main original title document issued by the Governor of a State or Minister of FCT as the case may be. Deed of Assignment is a transfer document which conveys/assigns the title created by the C of O, Letter of Allocation or R of O to another party. Holder of C of O needs no Deed if issued in his name. Deed of Assignment becomes relevant when the holder is transferring to another party. In Lagos, Deed of Assignment is called Deed of Transfer, which shows by its name the purpose.

In a nutshell, C of O is the main document of title and can stand alone, while Deed of A is a document for transfer of title and cannot stand alone (except when registered) because there must be a source/title it's relying on. More so, there could be several Deed of Assignment on a property with each deriving from another, but there could only be one C of O which serves as the root of title.

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Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by ShoProperties(m): 7:32am On Feb 17, 2017
jhydebaba:

Banana Island.
I can manage Lekki or Ikoyi.

List Of Properties You can Invest On with C OF O ..

sunnyland courts
Location: 6 Minutes after Dangote Refinery, Ibeju Lekki,Lagos
Price: N3m Per Plot
Title: C of O


LEKKI ROSE GARDEN ESTATES located in Ibeju-Lekki less than 5min drive from the Lekki Free Trade zone.
Price: 4m
Size:600sqms
Location: Oshoroko Community, Ibeju-Lekki
Title: CofO
Limited plots available.




Lekki Crystal Garden
Location: Oshokoro town, ibeju-lekki (7 mins drive from Dangote refinery)
Price: N2,500,000
3 months installment: N 2,800,000
Title: C of O




LEKKI ROYAL GARDEN
Location: Oshoroko Town, Ibeju Lekki Lagos. 6 minutes drive from Dangote Refinery.
Title: Global C of O
Price: 4M



UPTOWN COURTS
TITLE: Global C of O.
PRICE: #3.5m per plot. || Half plot is #1.8m.
PAYMENT PLAN: Initial Deposit is #1.6m || #1.1m per Month.
LOCATION: Along Lekki Free Trade Zone (1mile from Dangote Refinery)



CHERRY-WOOD COURTS
TITLE: Global C of O.
PRICE: #3m per plot. || Half plot is #1.6m.
PAYMENT PLAN: Initial Deposit is #1.4m || #950,000 per Month.
LOCATION: Along Lekki Free Trade Zone (1mile from Dangote Refinery)



LAGOON COURTS
TITLE: Gazette
PRICE: #2m per plot. || Half plot is #1m.
PAYMENT PLAN: Initial Deposit is #1m || #650,000 per month.
LOCATION: Ibeju Agbe Town, Ibeju-Lekki (by New International Airport)



BROOKSVILLE COURTS
TITLE: Gazette.
PRICE: #3.5m per plot. || Half plot is #1.8m.
PAYMENT PLAN: Initial Deposit is #1.6m || #1.1m per month.
LOCATION: Ibeju Agbe Town, Ibeju-Lekki (by New International Airport)



SANDFIELD COURTS
TITLE: Global C of O.
PRICE: #4.5m per plot. || Half plot is #2.3m.
PAYMENT PLAN: Initial Deposit is #2m || #1.4m per month.
LOCATION: Along Lekki Free Trade Zone (1mile from Dangote Refinery)


HAMPTON COURTS
TITLE: Gazette in process
PRICE: #1.5m per plot. || Half plot is #850,000.
PAYMENT PLAN: Initial Deposit is #600,000. || #600,000 per month.
LOCATION: Onosa, Ibeju-Lekki (15minutes drive from Ajah)



WHITE-OAK COURTS
TITLE: Global C of O.
PRICE: #4m per plot. || Half plot is #2m.
PAYMENT PLAN: Initial Deposit is #1.9m. || #1.2m per month.
LOCATION: Along the Lekki Free Trade Zone (1mile from Dangote Refinery).



Please take note;
Physical Allocation of plots to the luckiest buyers commence immediately after the full payments.
Installment package is not available for half plot purchase.
The durations of instalment payment is three (3) months.

Contact us for more enquiries, subscription forms and site inspections :-

BB : 7A831D66
Whatsapp☎ 08124579981
08035331074 08027493735
shelterhomes4u@gmail.com
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by chingydaboss(m): 7:32am On Feb 17, 2017
Joker of life...
jhydebaba:

Banana Island.
I can manage Lekki or Ikoyi.

1 Like

Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by HAH: 7:37am On Feb 17, 2017
Ephort:


Wrong! C of O is the main original title document issued by the Governor or Minister of FCT as the case may be. Deed of Assignment us a transfer document which conveys/assigns the title created by the C of O, Letter of Allocation or R of O to another party. Holder of C of O needs no Deed. Deed becomes relevant when the holder is selling.
In a nutshell, C of O is the main document of title and can stand alone, while Deed of A is a document for transfer of title and cannot stand alone because the must be a source or title it's relying on.

Can a property not originally allocated to you by government just be your because you have Cof O, what if you stole the C of O? That is why I said if you are buying a landed property deed of assignment is as important as CofO if not better as it gives you ownership legally
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by Ephort: 7:47am On Feb 17, 2017
HAH:


Can a property not originally allocated to you by government just be your because you have Cof O, what if you stole the C of O? That is why I said if you are buying a landed property deed of assignment is as important as CofO if not better as it gives you ownership legally

Deed cannot stand on it's own. You can't even register it without presenting the C of O. My point is that C of O is sacrosanct. Anybody can prepare deed and execute. If you are buying any property, the first thing to look for is the original title document. It could be C of O, R of O, Allocation Letter, etc. and other transfer documents tracing back to the original title. However, when the transfer document is registered, it can stand on its own, while referencing the original title but registration comes after purchase. I think this is where our points parted.

1 Like

Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by HAH: 7:52am On Feb 17, 2017
Ephort:


Deed cannot stand on it's own. You can't even register it without presenting the C of O. My point is that C of O is sacrosanct. Anybody can prepare deed and execute. If you are buying any property, the first thing to look for is the original title document. It could be C of O, R of O, Allocation Letter, etc. and other transfer documents tracing back to the original title. However, when the transfer document is registered, it can stand on its own, while referencing the original title but registration comes after purchase. I think this is where our points parted.
We are just saying the same thing, yes CofO is the original tilttle document but the deed gives ownership if you are not original owner
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by abusurv(m): 7:56am On Feb 17, 2017
HAH:


Can a property not originally allocated to you by government just be your because you have Cof O, what if you stole the C of O? That is why I said if you are buying a landed property deed of assignment is as important as CofO if not better as it gives you ownership legally
After you get your deed of assignments start the process of registering it with the state government, by calling on a registered surveyor to do the survey and collect government beacon numbers then proceed to the office of the surveyor general of the state for charting and subsequent processes that at the end of the day must pass through the governor office who will sign it as the final stage.
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by miqos02(m): 8:32am On Feb 17, 2017
good
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by ShoProperties(m): 8:35am On Feb 17, 2017
.
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by greggng: 8:35am On Feb 17, 2017
nony43:
Is it different from the C of O?, just asking

Yes is different. C. Of o is the grandmaster. Of all the document as it relates to land but u will need ur deed of assignment or conveyance to process that

1 Like

Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by Lovine: 8:43am On Feb 17, 2017
What about lands bought over 15 years ago in the village?
Re: Protect Your Right To Your Land With A Deed Don't Believe In Word Of Mouth by GreatManBee: 8:58am On Feb 17, 2017
ShoProperties:
Protect Your Right to Your Land with a Deed
As a landowner, you should have a deed to your
property. A deed is a piece of paper which shows that
you own your land.1 The deed gives you title to your
property and title governs your legal right to your land.
Every time property is sold, willed, or given to
another person, a new deed must be written and
registered. This should be done by a lawyer. In the
deed, the person buying or inheriting the land is called
the grantee and the person selling, willing, or giving the
land is called the grantor. If you own land, make sure
you have a deed for it.

A. FEATURES OF A DEED
Every valid, legal deed must include the name of
the grantor, the name of the grantee, and a description of the land and its boundaries. The deed must also state
that the property is being passed to a new owner. For
example, "I hereby convey my land to Mr. X to have and
to hold...."
In Nigeria a conveyance of land is legal when:
(1) it is in writing (like a deed);

(2) the grantor
signed the deed and fully understands what he/she is
doing with the property;
(3) the deed is accepted by the
grantee or his/her agent;
(4) the description of the property in the deed is specific enough that the property can be identified.
(5) If you are buying a piece of property and you sign
a contract for sale before you sign a deed, the seller might make several promises in the contract. For instance, the seller might say in the contract that he or she guarantees you will not have any boundary problems. You must make sure that these promises also appear in the deed. If they do not, then those promises will be lost.
(6) In other words, the deed, not the contract, defines which legal rights you have. You should also make sure that the description of the land you are buying is the same in the contract as it is in the deed. A lawyer can help you with these matters.

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