// Customer Information Bulletin

Customer Information Bulletin #214 – Dec 2021

On this page:

  • Christmas and New Year closure
  • Victorian Land Registry Services announces rebrand as SERV (Secure Electronic Registries Victoria)
  • Future options for non-represented parties and certificates of title
  • Guide to Leases
  • Surveyor’s Report Requirements
  • Subdivision (Registrar’s Requirements) Regulations 2021
  • Applications to remove a caveat under section 89A of the Transfer of Land Act 1958 (TLA)

Christmas and New Year closure

Secure Electronic Registries Victoria (SERV), formerly Victorian Land Registries Victorias (VLRS), offices at Level 13, 697 Collins Street, Docklands and Land Registry Services offices at 57 Cherry Lane, Laverton remain closed due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) restrictions. Registration, call centre and search services continue to be provided remotely.

Registration and call centre services will be unavailable during the end of year holiday period, from 4.00 pm on Friday 24 December 2021, reopening at 8.30 am on Tuesday 4 January 2022. Online services including electronic lodgment will continue to be available during this period.

Customer queries (telephone messages or emails) will be responded to from 4 January 2022 onwards.

Victorian Land Registry Services announces rebrand as SERV (Secure Electronic Registries Victoria)

VLRS which provides administrative services to the Land Registry Services has announced that it has rebranded as SERV, short for Secure Electronic Registries Victoria.

VLRS began trading as SERV (pronounced ‘serve’) on Tuesday 30 November 2021. For more information please visit the SERV website. (Homepage – SERV (servictoria.com.au)

Future options for non-represented parties and certificates of title

Customers were notified of the Future Options for Non-represented Parties and Certificates of Title Consultation Paper on 1 October 2021. Consultation closed on 1 November 2021. Land Use Victoria (LUV) would like to thank stakeholders for their comments. To view LUV’s responses to feedback, visit the Consultation papers page on the Land.Vic website.

Guide to Leases

LUV has published a ‘Guide to Leases’ available through the Fees, Guides and Forms page of land.vic.gov.au. Customers are encouraged to refer to the Guide when preparing a lease or sublease, a variation of lease, a surrender of lease or other removal of lease. The Guide sets out the common issues that are encountered when these documents are lodged for registration.

To view the full Guide, visit the Fees, Guides and Forms page on the Land.Vic website.

Surveyor’s Report Requirements

Licensed surveyors must adhere to the Victorian Cadastral Surveys Practice Directives when submitting survey documentation to Land Registry Services (LRS). LRS will either refuse lodgment of the application or requisition licensed surveyor’s reports if the Directive is not complied with. If requisitions are not answered adequately, the application may be rejected, with fees forfeited.

Requisitions may include content relating to purpose, folio (title) particulars, Crown description, municipality, road abuttals, survey information used/perused, need for amendment of the title diagram and currency.

Key components that must be accurately and comprehensively described within the surveyor’s report to assist in accepting the survey re-establishment of the subject land are:

Datum relationship

Clearly describe the derivation of the cadastral datum and document comparisons between the survey and the prior survey(s) for any datum points nominated that assist in confirming a rotation.

Alignments and boundaries adopted

How road alignments, intersections and parcel boundaries were adopted must be comprehensively described and easily verified by the information shown on the abstract of field records. Any differences to title diagram and/or other registered surveys, however minor, must also be reported and justified.

While LRS reviews the surveyor’s report and abstract of field records, it is not the role of LRS to re-establish the subject land.

For more information refer to the Surveyors report template found here.

Subdivision (Registrar’s Requirements) Regulations 2021

The Subdivision (Registrar’s Requirements) Regulations 2021 came into operation on 10 November 2021, replacing the Subdivision (Registrar’s Requirements) Regulations 2011. The new regulations are substantially the same as the 2011 regulations, with only minor changes to accommodate amendments made to the Subdivision Act 1988 since the 2011 regulations were made. These changes are largely administrative and are not expected to have an impact on customers. Meanwhile, LUV is conducting a detailed review of these regulations and will consult with industry in 2022.

Applications to remove a caveat under section 89A of the Transfer of Land Act 1958 (TLA)

The Registrar is changing processes in relation to caveat removal applications under section 89A of the TLA. The purpose of these changes is to create efficiencies and remove redundant practices.

When a caveat is lodged, it remains recorded until it is withdrawn, lapsed or removed. See Customer Information Bulletin 132 for information about caveats and their removal.

If an application to remove a caveat is lodged under section 89A, the Registrar sends notice to the caveator advising of the application and the requirements of section 89A.

Once this notice is sent, the caveator can choose to bring proceedings, withdraw the caveat or do nothing. The applicant can also choose to have their section 89A application abandoned with the consent of the caveator. The Registrar’s practice has been to send appropriate notices to the parties advising them of these actions. From 1 February 2022, the Registrar will cease sending some notices.

The following table sets out the different scenarios and the notification that will be sent using the Dealing Activity on Title alert service:

An 89A application is lodged andAction by LRSAlert service notification
The caveator provides notice of proceedings that complies with section
89A(3)(b)
The 89A application is abandoned
Notice sent to section 89A
applicant
The caveat remains recorded
Application to Remove Caveat
Abandoned
The applicant requests that the 89A application be abandoned with the
consent of the caveator under section 89A(3)(a)
The 89A application is abandoned
No notice sent 
The caveat remains recorded
Application to Remove Caveat
Abandoned
The caveator takes no action within the statutory periodThe 89A application is recorded
No notice sent 
The caveat is lapsed
Application to Remove Caveat
Registered

The Registrar will continue to send notice to applicants advising if notice of proceedings has been received and the 89A application abandoned in accordance with section 89A(3)(b).

In every other circumstance, it is recommended that parties lodging an 89A application consider subscribing to an alert service, refer to Where To Find Information About Land Titles to find a list of title alert service providers. If customers do not wish to obtain an alert service, the above information may be obtained from a folio search.

Page last updated: 11/07/23

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Disclaimer

The Customer Information Bulletins (CIB) Search Tool (“Tool”) is provided by SERV to assist users in locating Customer Information Bulletins (CIBs) issued by Land Use Victoria (https://www.land.vic.gov.au/land-registration). This Tool provides a list of available CIBs based on search terms entered by users, displaying results in order from newest to oldest.

By using this Tool, users agree to these terms and acknowledge that SERV makes no warranties regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the search results. Users accept responsibility for verifying the information obtained through the Tool against the original sources, including the official Customer Information Bulletins found here (https://www.land.vic.gov.au/land-registration) and any other requirements issued by the Registrar of Titles from time to time in accordance with the Transfer of Land Act 1958.