Strategy 2002-2003
Electronic conveyancing (e-conveyancing)
The public desire a quicker and less stressful way of buying and selling
property and we are aim to re-engineer the conveyancing process. The Land
Registration Act 2002 (in force October 2003) provides most of the legislative
framework for a fully electronic process that handles transactions online.
It is essential that practitioners are at ease with a process that will
fundamentally change the relationship between themselves and the Land Registry
and which meets their working needs as well as ours.
Our present expectation is that, under the new system, conveyancers will prepare electronic documents and
verify the details against the register. They will then be able to use a secure
network to communicate drafts to the other parties to the transaction and obtain
approval of the documents. When they are finally approved, documents can
automatically be given legal effect through the results being entered on the
Land Register. Setting the system up will be our single most important task over the next
decade.
We will consult all those involved in the process, first on broad system
design and then on specific (particularly regulatory) issues. A 3 month
nationwide consultation exercise will gather views. These will form part of a
report to Ministers in early 2003. We will hold discussions with potential
suppliers and procure the system, ready to pilot it in 2005 and implement it in
2006.
In March, we were awarded £1,556,025 over two years (February 2003, March
2004) under the Invest to Save Budget. This funding will be used to design,
build and pilot the proposed new system of conveyancing and to develop a full
business case for national implementation.
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