El registro de la propiedad en la República Dominicana

Land registry has both a legal and economic nature. It is of a legal nature due to the strong effects that that which is made public has on real estate commerce, either by formal registration, disclosure or publicity, which disclosure or publicity constitute the core purpose of the registration itse...

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Autor principal: Adames Rojas, Ariella
Formato: Artículo
Idioma:Castellano
Publicado: 2022
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Acceso en línea:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=8500599
Fuente:Saber y Justicia, ISSN 2305-2589, Vol. 1, Nº. 21, 2022 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Saber y Justicia), pags. 88-107
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Sumario: Land registry has both a legal and economic nature. It is of a legal nature due to the strong effects that that which is made public has on real estate commerce, either by formal registration, disclosure or publicity, which disclosure or publicity constitute the core purpose of the registration itself. It is economic in nature because it promotes the issuance of credit as well as the circulation of wealth based on real estate assets, making titled property stronger. Land registry is different to purely administrative registries in that it creates rights, rather than merely storing data for the Administration for statistical or fiscal purposes. The Dominican land registry system inherited the principle of “public registry faith” from the Australian Torrens system. The principle of public registry faith protects bona fide third parties, which are those that acquire title under the terms and conditions of the legal system. Similarly, the Dominican land registry system inherited other relevant characteristics from the Australian Torrens system, which characteristics are proper for an effective system in terms of organization and in their ability to guarantee registered ownership.