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NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE π 6 (124) 2011 Founded and published by: CONTENTS CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE: PRESENT STATE AND PROSPECTS OF DEVELOPMENT (Razumkov Centre’s analytic report) ............................................................................... 2 WHAT SHOULD THE CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE LOOK LIKE: EXPERT POLL (Annex 1) ...................................................................................................................... 28 UKRAINIAN CENTRE FOR ECONOMIC & POLITICAL STUDIES NAMED AFTER OLEXANDER RAZUMKOV Director General Editor-in-Chief Layout and design Technical & computer support Anatoliy Rachok Yevhen Shulha Volodymyr Kushnirenko Oleksandr Shaptala Volodymyr Kekukh This journal is registered with the State Committee of Ukraine for Information Policy, registration certificate KB №4122 Printed in Ukrainian and English Circulation: 3,800 Editorial address: 16 Lavrska str., 2nd floor, Kyiv, 01015 tel.: (380 44) 201-11-98 fax: (380 44) 201-11-99 e-mail: [email protected] website: www.razumkov.org.ua Reprinted or used materials must refer to “National Security & Defence” PUBLIC OPINION ABOUT THE LAND MARKET AND CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM AS ITS ELEMENT ........................................ 30 STATE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE: EXPERT OPINIONS (Roundtable by correspondence).................................................................................. 38 THE MAIN QUESTION LIES NOT AS MUCH IN THE NUMBER OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS AS IN THE PROCEDURE OF THEIR FILLING AND OPERATION Valeriy BEVZENKO ............................................................................................... 38 STATE LAND CADASTRE IN UKRAINE: THE STATE AND PROSPECTS Mykola KALYUZHNYI ........................................................................................... 39 STATE LAND CADASTRE AND REGISTRATION OF TITLE TO IMMOVABLE PROPERTY: JOINTLY OR SEPARATELY? Volodymyr RYBAK ............................................................................................... 40 CADASTRE AND REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE: PROSPECTS OF COEXISTENCE Roman TKACH ..................................................................................................... 41 TO DECIDE ON THE OBJECTIVES AND PRIORITIES OF THE STATE LAND POLICY AND REGAIN PROFESSIONALISM OF STATE LAND SERVICES Іhor YATSUK ........................................................................................................ 43 ARTICLES A SYSTEM OF CADASTRE, OR A REGISTER OF TITLE? WHAT WE ARE CREATING, AND FOR WHOM Serhiy KUBAKH ............................................................................................................. 44 PROSPECTS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT IN UKRAINE Andriy MARTYN ............................................................................................................ 48 Photos: r_catalog.ua – р.7 novaya.com.ua – р.11, www.zem.ru – р.12, anaparegion.ru – р.39, www.itogi.ru – р.41, gazeta.a42.ru – р.42, nnm.ru – р.57, bataysk.narod.ru – р.63 UKRAINIAN PARADOXES AND PROBLEMS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT Anton TRETYAK ............................................................................................................ 52 The project was implemented through support provided by the International Renaissance Foundation RESULTS OF THE LAND RELATIONS REFORM AND PROSPECTS OF THE LAND MARKET INTRODUCTION IN UKRAINE Anatoliy YURCHENKO ................................................................................................... 61 The publication of this journal has been supported by the National Endowment for Democracy (USA) © Razumkov Centre, 2011 AN IDEALIZED MODEL LAND ADMINISTRATION SYSTEM: A THOUGHT EXPERIMENT Malcolm D. CHILDRES .................................................................................................. 56 LAND REFORM, CADASTRE OF IMMOVABLE PROPERTY AND CARTOGRAPHIC, GEODETIC AND CADASTRAL SERVICES IN UKRAINE AND THE CZECH REPUBLIC Aleš TŘÍSKA, Milan KOCÁB, Alexandr DRBAL ................................................................... 64 ЗАОЧНИЙ КРУГЛИЙ СТІЛ CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE: PRESENT STATE AND PROSPECTS OF DEVELOPMENT A proper state land policy, a transparent and investment-friendly market of land (and immovable property in general) in the first place require thorough and full land records, impartial grounds for their valuation and unconditional protection of ownership rights to immovable property (land parcels and immovable property inseparably related with them.)1 In the world practice, the outcome data of those processes are stored either in a single state cadastre registration system, or in a state land cadastre and a state system of registration of rights to immovable property2 (Insert “Cadastre registration system: reference”, p.4–5). If the cadastre and/or the mentioned systems are absent, the state cannot properly manage land resources (including collection of reasonable rates of the land tax and immovable property tax, guarantee of efficient use and protection of land, and, finally, introduction of the free market of land, including farming land),3 individuals and legal entities are not protected against encroachments on their property, agricultural producers cannot freely dispose of their land parcels and adequately use mortgage mechanisms. Such situation persists in Ukraine even now, despite the fact that independent Ukraine faced the task of building the cadastre registration system when Western Europe was already implementing the “cadastral” reform started in 1980s. Ukraine could well use its experience, moreover that, first, many post-socialist countries did the same; second, the EU member states, other developed countries of the world, supporting Ukraine’s European aspirations, were ready not only to share the gained experience and “best practices”4, pay for study tours of Ukrainian politicians, officials and experts, development and publication of methodological guides and drafts of regulatory acts, etc. but also to finance or credit projects of introduction of the world best practices in Ukraine.5 For instance, in 2003, Ukraine obtained a preferential credit from the World Bank for creation, among other things, of a single automated cadastre registration system. However, Ukraine missed even that opportunity to create such an advanced system. Now, this subject is actualised, first, by the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine adopting the Law “On State Land Cadastre” that, along with amendments to the Law “On Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Encumbrances” passed in 2010, once again fundamentally changed the conceptual approach to the cadastre registration system building in Ukraine. While previously, the talk was mainly about a single (unitary) automated system, now, the Government plans building a two-component (dual) one, where the state land cadastre is created and kept by one agency, and the register of ownership rights by another one. Second, it is actualised by the authorities’ intention to introduce the farming land market from the beginning of 2012.6 Indeed, Ukraine has been losing a lot economically in course of the 10-year moratorium on purchase and sale of farming land.7 On the other hand, there are risks of the “free market” evolution into a process similar to the “voucher privatisation” of the early 1990s, since there is still no proper institutional basis for market circulation of immovable property, including land parcels. Presented below is a summary analytical-information report that briefly describes the present state and efficiency of the operational elements of the cadastral and registration systems in Ukraine: the completeness and quality of their data, the state of protection of ownership rights. It also draws conclusions and proposes some steps and measures aimed at minimisation of effects of introduction of the dual cadastre registration system and cancellation of the moratorium on purchase and sale of farming land in the present Ukrainian conditions. 1 For more detail on the rationale, economic and social reasons for introduction of the cadastre registration system see the article by Serhiy Kubakh “A system of cadastre, or a register of title? What we are building, and for whom?” published in this journal. 2 Exactly those institutes are seen as the necessary key elements of the institutional basis of the land market. 3 For more detail on the present state land policy see: State land policy in Ukraine: standing and development strategy. Razumkov Centre analytical materials. – National Security & Defence, 2009, No.3, p.218. 4 See, e.g., the article by A. Tříska, M.Kocáb, A.Drbal “Land reform, cadastre of immovable property and cartographic, geodetic and cadastral services in Ukraine and the Czech Republic” published in this journal. 5 Among long-term projects one can mention, e.g., the Project in support for land privatisation in Ukraine (supported by the US Agency for International Development (USAID)), the German-Ukrainian Agricultural Policy Dialogue (supported by the Bundesministerium für Ernährung, Landwirtschaft Verbraucherschutz), etc. 6 Noteworthy, the annual Presidential Address “Modernisation of Ukraine – our strategic choice” spoke of introduction of the land market from January 1, 2013. The relevant section of the Address named the steps that should precede market liberalisation, e.g.: adoption of the Laws “On State Land Cadastre”, “On State Land (Mortgage) Bank”; “On Land Mortgage”; “On State Land Inventory”; “On State Land Service”; “On Land Zoning”; “On Management of State-Owned Lands”; “On State Support for Conservation and Rehabilitation of Soil Fertility”; “On Economic Encouragement of Rational Use of Farming Land”; and the need to “finish creation of the state land cadastre”. – Official Internet office of the President of Ukraine, p.115 (in Ukrainian). However, as soon as April 7, 2011, presenting the Address, the President said: “The main task [includes] the launch of a fully-fledged land market in the forthcoming years and simultaneous provision of reliable legal guarantees of land use according to its direct purpose.” – Ibid. (emphasis added – Ed.). By the way, the Address makes no mention of the state and prospects of enhancement of ownership rights protection in Ukraine. It only speaks of perfection of the regulatory and tax policy. 7 For instance, according to the UN Economic Commission for Europe (UN ECE), at least 20% of GDP of developed states originate from the land market (and inalienable from it real estate market). See: Legal and institutional aspects of agricultural land markets in Ukraine: German-Ukrainian Agricultural Policy Dialogue – Institute for Economic Research and Policy Consulting (IER), Bundesministerium für Ernährung, Landwirtschaft Verbraucherschutz, Kyiv, 2007, p.3. – IER website, http://www.ier.com.ua. 2 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE 1. STATE LAND CADASTRE AND STATE SYSTEM OF REGISTRATION OF OWNERSHIP RIGHTS TO IMMOVABLE PROPERTY IN UKRAINE: INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT 1.1. The institutional basis for any social relations, including land and/or property relations, is made up: first, of the regulatory-legal framework that by definition should be stable, integral, consistent, sufficient for regulation of the concerned relations, clear for the public, and rule out controversial interpretation of provisions of regulatory-legal acts; second, of a balanced, functionally sufficient system of organisations (institutions) that on the basis of regulatory-legal acts immediately secure and defend rights of individuals and legal entities (and control performance of their duties) in the field of those relations. 1.2. Currently, in Ukraine, the institutional basis for the creation and keeping of the state land cadastre and the system of registration of rights to immovable property (both regulatory-legal and organisational) notably lags behind the needs and practice of the land reform and regulation of ownership relations. It still remains insufficient, too transient, controversial and, as a result, inefficient, enabling manipulations with land and title to land parcels and other immovable property.1 At parliamentary hearings on March 23, 2011, the Verkhovna Rada Chairman Volodymyr Lytvyn said that the land relations in Ukraine were currently regulated by 37 laws (amended 86 times, including the Land Code – 48, the Law on Land Lease – 22), 64 Parliamentary Resolutions, 178 Presidential Decrees, 84 Governmental Resolutions and 758 bylaws,2 all in all – over 1,100 regulatory-legal acts. At that: (1) the Land Code (2001), designed to lay down the main principles of the land market operation, has not been used for regulation of farming land circulation so far, since simultaneously with its adoption, a moratorium on its alienation was imposed, still in force;3 (2) for full-scale implementation (effectiveness), the Land Code provided for the development and adoption of another 38 laws that were supposed to regiment land relations and create the basis for introduction of a transparent market of immovable property, purchase and sale of farming land, protection of ownership rights to immovable property. Currently, only 17 of them have been adopted, some issues are regimented by the Civil (2003), Business (2003) and Tax (2011) Codes and some other legislative acts.4 However, even now (10 years after the Land Code adoption), there are no laws in absence of which, legislative support for land relations cannot be deemed full enough, e.g., “On Land Zoning”, “On State Land Inventory”, “On Management of State-Owned Lands”, “On Land Market” (“On Farming Land Market”), “On State Land (Mortgage) Bank”, etc. The Law “On State Land Cadastre” was passed by the Verkhovna Rada only in July, 2011;5 (3) legal definitions of the notions present in legislative acts are not always exhaustive, consistent and correspond to the world practice. For instance, after the Land Code entered into effect, the only legal definition of the State Land Cadastre (SLC) was not correct and did not meet the world analogues, since the Code terms cadastre (corpus of data) as a “system of works”6 (Insert “Legal definitions of SLC: effective legislative acts and bills”, p.6). Similarly incorrect is the Code’s definition of land relations as “social relations concerning possession, use and disposal of land”.7 Experts encounter problems with definition EXPLANATION OF SPECIAL TERMS USED IN THE TEXT Mortgage – pledge of immovable property (land) for getting a credit (loan), whereby the pledged property stays with the borrower (or a third party – property guarantor) but the creditor may have its monetary claims met at the expense of the pledged property in case the borrower fails to meet obligations provided by the mortgage agreement; Emphyteusis – the right to use a land parcel that belongs to another owner for farming (as a rule, long-term); Encumbrance of ownership rights – a ban to dispose of and/or use immovable property, either established by the law or authorised state bodies (easement), or arising on the basis of agreements (e.g., agreements of mortgage, lease); Property right – a kind of ownership rights that formalises and establishes belonging of things (material items) to actors of civil law relations by means of appropriate registration of said right; Easement – the right to limited use of a land parcel (or its part) that belongs to another person (for instance, the right to pass, transit, lay communication lines, etc. across a neighbouring land parcel); Superficies – the right to development of a land parcel that belongs to another owner. 1 It is worth notice that Razumkov Centre experts wrote about the lag of regulatory-legal support behind the needs of the land reform and regulation of property relations (and gaps in that support) as one of the key factors of the chaos, irregularity and actually asocial nature of the second stage of the land reform (sharing of land and especially of collective farm property) and a precondition for grey and criminal economic activity in agriculture yet in 2001. See: Agrarian reform in Ukraine: achievements and miscalculations. UCEPS Analytical Report. – National Security & Defence, 2001, No.5, p.32-36; for proposals aimed at promotion of civilised land relations and introduction of a transparent land market see: Ibid., p.52-55. 2 Parliamentary hearings on March 23, 2011: “Land in Ukraine’s fate: situation in the land sector, legislative support for land relations and practice of its implementation”. Records, p.1. – Official website of the Verkhovna Rada Ukraine, http:www.rada.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). 3 At first, the moratorium was imposed for a transitional period – till January 1, 2005; later (in 2004), Parliament, overruled the veto imposed by President Leonid Kuchma and extended the moratorium till January 1, 2007. The Moratorium was not effective from December 31, 2006, till January 13, 2007, since President Viktor Yushchenko vetoed down the Law on amendment of the Land Code (of December 19, 2006) that made the moratorium expiry term dependent on the readiness of the relevant regulatory-legal framework. However, on January 9, 2007, Parliament overruled the veto, and on January 11, the President signed the Law. 4 At that, one should note the arisen and still present collisions between the provisions of, e.g., the Land and Civil Codes. 5 At the time of preparation of this journal, it was only known that the Verkhovna Rada adopted Bill No.8077. The Verkhovna Rada website hosts the text of the Bill prepared for the second reading. The final text of the Law is absent. It reads that the Law was sent for the President’s signing on July 18, 2011. 6 For instance, commenting on the Bill “On State Land Cadastre” (reg. No.8077 of February 4, 2011), the above-mentioned World Bank’s project manager Serhiy Kubakh noted that so far, the bills on SLC contained “miscomprehension of the cadastre – saying that it meant “state measures”, “a state policy” or “a system of cadastral works”… Now, the cadastre definition meets the European and world perception as an information system. The title and the subject of the law finally met”. See: Nahorna О. What kind of a cadastre are we “building”? – Information website “Land reform in Ukraine”, Rural Land Titling & Cadastre Development project, May 19, 2011; http://zemreforma.info (in Ukrainian). 7 Therefore, the definition ignores such important elements of land relations as rational land use, land resources management, etc. For more detail see: Siryachernko І. Proposals for perfection of codification of the land legislation of Ukraine. – Website “Environmental law of Ukraine”, http://ecopravo.hostua.org. ua (in Ukrainian). RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 3 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM: REFERENCE The term “cadastre” was introduced to the French legal system the deed). In such case, losses inflicted on one of the parties to an agreement are reimbursed by an insurance company.3 to denominate a body (corpus, register) of some data of taxable items. Initially, the land cadastre had a fiscal nature (fiscal cadastre) Title registers provide for registration of ownership rights (titles). and was confined to accounting, description and valuation of land The right is proven with a register record and a document issued and other immovable property for taxation needs. With time, there by a registrar. Title registration envisages mandatory verification appeared special cadastres recording and describing other items of purity of the title and transfer of ownership rights. Authenticity of (water, forest, farming lands, etc.) mainly with the purpose of the register data is guaranteed by the state. In case of a registration getting trustworthy data of those items as the basis for their efficient system error, the damaged party shall be reimbursed for all damages. administrative and/or business management. At present, the so-called Torrens system is considered the classic In parallel with the land cadastre system, there was (in one or title system. Registration rests on a cadastral file that contains three another form) a system of recording (registration) of ownership rights elements: (1) technical, business and legal properties of immovable to land and other immovable property, whose data were used not property (identification number of an item, its cadastral survey and a only for taxation but also for legal protection of those rights (juridical certificate of the site history are obligatory); (2) required data of the cadastre). owner (land user); (3) encumbrances and/or limitations (warnings). It should be particularly noted that as a rule, the legal notions of “land” and “real estate” are used as synonyms, since they THE MAIN PRINCIPLES OF A REGISTRATION SYSTEM INCLUDE: denominate “immovable property”: a land parcel and immovable • indisputability (the ownership right may be nullified, property inalienably connected with it (for instance, buildings). There is a difference between a cadastre and a system of registration of ownership rights. The land cadastre focuses on land (a land parcel) and its physical properties. That is why it should contain sufficient data describing the item (its size, boundaries, geospatial location, soil quality, category of land by the target purpose (economic and pecuniary valuation), as well as the data of the owner/user and immovable property inseparably connected with the land parcel. A cadastre, by definition, is to cover the entire territory of a country. The system of registration of ownership rights to immovable property focuses on ownership/use rights (i.e., legal properties), so, that Register is to contain first of all data of ownership rights to land parcels and immovable property inseparably connected with them, of subjects of those rights, as well as data of immovable property, including land parcels – their volume may be much smaller than of those contained in the land cadastre (the minimum required volumes sufficient for identification). By contrast to the Cadastre, the Register rights may deal only with the items that are or may be involved in market circulation.1 By and large, the European rule of determining the volume of data in cadastre registration systems envisages that information there should be confined to the data necessary for registration of rights, valuation of land and immovable property for taxation purposes, encouragement of the market of immovable property (including land), efficient management of land resources and promotion of sustainable development. REGISTRATION OF OWNERSHIP RIGHTS By and large, there are two kinds of registers of ownership rights – of deeds, and titles.2 Deed registers (in fact, registration of title documents of legal deeds, transactions). The right is certified with a deed as such and/ or a document certifying ownership rights. The registrar’s (notary’s) function is confined to the establishment of identities of the parties to an agreement and exact recording of its time. At that, a register of deeds may be used for a retroactive check of the title purity. I.e., the function of guarantee of rights in fact rests with notaries; the state provides no guarantees to parties to the deal. Hence, to minimise risks associated with transactions involving immovable property (especially with a system of registration of deeds), a title insurance system is introduced (if a purchase and sale agreement is disputed by one of the parties or a third party). In countries with deed registration, as a rule, no agreement of purchase and sale of immovable property can be effected without simultaneous conclusion of an agreement of insurance of the financial risk for a definite term (but not more than the term of limitation of action with respect to cancelled or invalidated solely through court); • absolute nature of registration (the register is the place of data storage and access; ownership rights are transferred solely by a register entry; if a transaction is not registered, it has no legal effect; there are no unregistered rights); • limitations of information (every person may get information only about the registered rights that influence his or her ownership rights; the system protects only a bona fide buyer – if he or she gets the title in the result of unlawful actions of the seller but there was no his fault in the transaction, his or her ownership right is recognised); noteworthy, in Ukraine, this principle does not work: Article 388 of the Civil Code of Ukraine allows taking property from a bona fide acquirer, not providing any compensation whatsoever; • compensation – any damage inflicted on a registration system user is to be reimbursed in full, for which, a fund for obligatory insurance of responsibility of registrars or another special fund is created. In most developed countries, losses inflicted on immovable property owners in cases clearly provided by the law are covered by the state at the expense of either the budget or special funds. TRENDS OF DEVELOPMENT OF CADASTRES AND REGISTERS OF RIGHTS, “CADASTRAL” REFORMS AND CREATION OF LAND INFORMATION SYSTEMS Since, as we noted above, a cadastre and a register of rights, dealing with the same items (immovable property), describe their different properties, those systems (cadastral and registration) can operate separately of each other and be subordinated to different state bodies (two-component cadastre registration systems), as the case is now in Austria, Greece, Denmark, Finland, Germany, France, Croatia and some other countries of the world. Meanwhile, information technologies’ development (including geo-information systems), on one hand, and globalisation processes that reanimate immovable property markets (including transnational), toughening requirements to promptness, reliability and scope of information on immovable property, on the other, give rise to a number of new trends in the cadastre registration system development. Among them, the following should be mentioned: (1) creation of multipurpose cadastres and registers of ownership rights. Such cadastres store information about land parcels and other immovable property that can be used not only for fiscal and accounting purposes but also for a wider range of functions, including introduction of good governance of land resources in line with the principles of sustainable development. Multipurpose registers of rights, in particular, give wider opportunities for protection of ownership rights, lead to a decrease in the number of court actions concerning such rights and generally improve the 1 In this context, the words by Jo Henssen are often mentioned, saying that that a cadastre answers the questions “where” and “how much” property is found, and a register – “who” and “on what basis” owns it. See: Kaufmann J., Steudler D. Cadastre 2014. A Vision for a Future Cadastre system, p.19. – International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) website, http://www.fig.net. 2 The world practice also distinguishes unofficial transfer of rights to land, or transfer of rights to immovable property in private, where documents of title are transferred by the seller to the buyer in presence of a lawyer. However, this method is deemed inefficient (since it has no positive influence on land planning) and potentially dangerous for transaction participants. 3 For more detail see: Martyn A., Koshel А. Title insurance of land parcels as a way to protect property rights of land owners. – January 28, 2011, http://osipov.kiev.ua (in Ukrainian). 4 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE investment climate in a country. At that, introduction of multipurpose cadastres (registers) is achieved through allocation of dedicated (common) channels of access to their databases for users making the relevant requests; (2) integration of data of the land cadastre (including its cartographic support) and the register of rights to land and other immovable property in united (centralised on the national level) automated cadastre registration systems. This trend is observed from early 1980s and got the name of a “cadastral reform”, for its currently universal character.4 In it, “fiscal” and “legal” registers (cadastres) are united in a universal cadastre registration system (multipurpose cadastre) combining functions of recording immovable property (cadastral) and registration of rights to it (legal) and whose data have multiple purposes and uses (in particular, an automated cadastre makes the basis for creation of the national infrastructure of geospatial data). In its accomplished form, it is manifested in the merger of functions of cadastre keeping, registration of rights and cartographic activity in one institution (like the Dutch Agency of Cadastre, Land Registration and Cartography). Single (united, unitary) systems now operate in Italy, Canada, the Netherlands, Finland, the Czech Republic, Sweden and other countries, are being created in Iceland and Norway. The path of creation of a single system was also chosen by the transitional countries (Belarus,5 Armenia, Georgia, Lithuania, Russia,6 Romania, etc.). Up until recently it seemed that Ukraine would go the same way. A united system means the emergence of an entirely new thing – the land information system (LIS). The International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) defines such system as “a tool for legal, administrative and economic decision making, and an aid for planning and development which consists of a database containing spatially referenced land related data for a defined area and of procedures and techniques for the systematic collection, updating, processing and distribution of that data”. Additionally, it enables informational interaction (unification) of national systems, turning them into transnational networks. For instance, in 2006, the EU began the creation of the European Land Information Service (EULIS), uniting real-time cadastre information systems of Austria, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Finland, Sweden and other EU countries. MAIN PRINCIPLES OF SINGLE SYSTEM BUILDING: • maintenance of the system of registration of rights to immovable property on the basis of records of land parcels (a land parcel and real estate are viewed as a single item of immovable property); • rights to land parcels and immovable property are registered in one Register of rights; • rights are registered and cadastral maps are kept by the same institution; • registration of rights is an administrative function (state registration of rights should be separated from judicial and/ or notary bodies); • the state bears responsibility for the authenticity of registration data and defends registered ownership rights; • the system services mainly target the user; • the system of registration of rights is self-repaying. In such conditions, the state concentrates financial, technical and other resources in one institution, removes duplication of the registrar’s functions, names one point of contact responsible for the authenticity of information entered into registers. Such system is convenient for citizens, legal entities, state authorities and local selfgovernment bodies. CADASTRE 2014 The general trend of reformation of the European cadastre registration systems was set by the Cadastre 2014 initiative put forward in 1994 by the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG). The Initiative studied the systems of over 30 countries, identified their weak and strong points. On the basis of the study results, they came to the conclusion of the expediency of prompt unification of cadastral and registration systems through their merger and outlined the main lines of the cadastre system development for the next 20 years: • automation of systems and procedures of transactions and description of items, cadastral recording and registration (digitisation of all data); • completeness of description of the legal status of land, with all public rights, encumbrances and limitations; • full coincidence of the legal and documentary description of an item and its spatial description on cadastral maps; • shift from the use of maps only as an illustration to the information model of a real item (territory) using the capabilities provided by cartographic information systems; • employment of the private sector for formation and description of cadastral record objects (encouragement of market land planning works); • self-repayment of cadastre systems. The document suggests the following definition: “Cadastre 2014 is a methodically arranged public inventory of data concerning all legal land objects in a certain country or district, based on a survey of their boundaries. Such legal land objects are systematically identified by means of some separate designation. They are defined either by private or by public law. The outlines of the property, the identifier together with descriptive data, may show for each separate land object the nature, size, value and legal rights or restrictions associated with the land object. In addition to this descriptive information defining the land objects, Cadastre 2014 contains the official records of rights on the legal land objects. Cadastre 2014 can give the answers to the questions of where and how much and who and how. Cadastre 2014 can replace the traditional institutions of “Cadastre” and “Land Registration”. It represents a comprehensive land recording system.”7 The document pays particular attention to the need of support for sustainable development. For that, the following aspects are deemed important: • • • • • • • • • • guarantee and protection of ownership rights to land security of lending guarantees monitoring of land resources and their development assistance with collection of taxes on land and immovable property protection of state-owned lands a decrease in the number of land disputes (amendments, corrections) facilitation of the land reform perfection of the land use planning assistance with land resources management provision of statistical data Only if those aspects are taken into account in the cadastre registration system creation and keeping, one can hope for political stability in the country, an end to conflicts o9f public and private interests, promotion of the national economy growth on the principles of sustainable development.8 4 This trend is also noted in the Land Administration Guidelines, issued by the UN in 1996: “The ownership, value and use of land, although independent in concept, are interdependent in practice”. 5 For more detail see: Shavrov S.А. Access to the single state register of immovable property, rights to it and deals with it. – http://belisa.org.by/pdf/PTS2005/6671.pdf (in Russian). 6 See, e.g.: Radionova Т.А. Experience of creating systems for real estate recording and registration in European countries. – www.dataplus.ru (in Russian). 7 Kaufmann J., Steudler D. Cadastre 2014. A Vision for a Future Cadastre system… , p.21. 8 Ibid., p.38-40. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 5 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE of the “immovable property”, alongside with which, the legislation uses such terms as “immovables”, “real estate”, and “other terms also meaning immovable items”.8 There are numerous proposals of elaboration of formulations of the Land Code and effective legislative acts, in view of their insufficient notional clarity and abidance by the requirements of the law science.9 The vagueness of definitions and formulations in many effective laws and other regulatory-legal acts leaves room for their arbitrary interpretation. For instance, in one interview given in 2009, then Deputy Head of the State Committee for Land Resources Oleh Kulinich admitted: “Interpretation of the legislative framework, now existent and not bad, primarily depends on… the person applying one or another law or resolution or directive.”10 This enables not only a variety of interpretations but also the practice of courts passing entirely opposing rulings in the same case; LEGAL DEFINITIONS OF SLC IN UKRAINE: EFFECTIVE LEGISLATIVE ACTS AND BILLS use, as well as data of quantitative and qualitative description of lands, their valuation, land distribution among owners and users The State Land Cadastre is a single state system land cadastral (Bill No.8077, prepared for the second reading on July 5, 2011). operations that specifies the procedure of recognition of the fact of For comparison emergence or termination of ownership rights and the right to use land parcels and contains the totality of data and documents of the Currently, the international community commonly uses the land location and legal procedures of those parcels, their valuation, land cadastre definition approved by the UN jointly with the International classification, quantitative and qualitative description, distribution Federation of Surveyors (FIG) in the Bogor Declaration of the UN among land owners and land users. Interregional Meeting of Experts on the Cadastre (March 1996), PROPOSITIONS OF THE BILLS whereby “A Cadastre is normally a parcel based, and up-to-date land information system containing a record of interests in land (e.g. rights, STATE LAND CADASTRE restrictions and responsibilities). It usually includes a geometric • a single state system of land cadastral operations and a procedescription of land parcels linked to other records describing the dure of recognition of the fact of emergence or termination of nature of the interests, the ownership or control of those interests, existence of land parcels as objects of ownership rights and the and often the value of the parcel and its improvements. It may be right of use containing the totality of data and documents on the established for fiscal purposes (e.g. valuation and equitable taxation), legal procedures of those parcels, their value, quantitative and legal purposes (conveyancing), to assist in the management qualitative description, distribution among land owners and land of land and land use (e.g. for planning and other administrative users, including tenants, by land category (1999 Bill); purposes), and enables sustainable development and environmental • a single state system of data and documents containing data of protection.”2 land parcels and other immovable property, property rights to them and their limitations, on subjects of those rights and docuThis definition, in a more elaborate form, was first formulated in ments of title, as well as data of land valuation, quantitative and the FIG Statement “On the Cadastre”. In particular, the Statement said qualitative description, distribution among land owners and land that “the Cadastre provides…: users (2006 Bill); • information identifying those people who have interests in • a single automated state system of data and documents conparcels of land; taining data of land parcels and other immovable property • information about those interests (e.g. nature and duration of located on those land parcels, property rights to them and their rights, restrictions, and responsibilities); limitations, on subjects of those rights and title documents, as well as data of pecuniary valuation of lands, their quantitative • information about the parcels (e.g. their location, size, and qualitative description, distribution among land owners and improvements, value). land users (2007 Bill); The Cadastre is… managed by one or more government • a single state system of data and documents containing data of agencies. The Cadastre helps to avoid duplication and assists in the land parcels, their legal procedures, as well as data of quantitaefficient exchange of information. tive and qualitative description of lands and their valuation, of Registration of land means officially recognised recording of land distribution among owners and users, including land parcel rights to immovable property and, as a rule, is an element of the tenants (2008 Bill); cadastre system. • a single state system of data and documents containing data of land parcels, their legal procedures, as well as data of quantitaCadastre is a state land information system and should be tive and qualitative description of lands and their valuation, of managed by the government. Joint bodies may be established, to land distribution among owners and users, including land parcel which, those duties are delegated. tenants, and land cadastral operations (2009 Bill); Cadastral information should be accessible for the broad public • a single state system of data and documents containing data and at the same time have reliable personal data protection.”3 of those land parcels, their legal procedures, as well as data of quantitative and qualitative description of lands and their valu1 Noteworthy, the Law “On State Land Cadastre” envisaged amendment of ation, of land distribution among owners and users, including Article 193 to define the State Land Cadastre in the wording proposed by Bill land parcel tenants (2010 Bill); No.8077, prepared for the second reading. See: Law “On State Land Cadastre”, • an information system of data of land and land parcels lying Section VII. Final and Transitional Provisions, Item 5, Para 2), Article 126, Item 8). within Ukraine’s borders, their target purpose, kinds of functional 2 The Bogor Declaration of the United Nations Interregional Meeting use, limitations in land parcel use, as well as data of quantitative of Experts on the Cadastre, 2.7. Bogor, Indonesia, 18-22 March, 1996. – and qualitative description of lands, their valuation, land http://www.channelingreality.com/China/Bogor_Declaration.pdf. distribution among owners and users (2011 Bill, reg. No.8077 of 3 4 February 2011; prepared for the first reading); International Federation of Surveyors, FIG Bureau, PO Box 2, Belconnen ACT 2616, 1995. – http://www.fig.net/commission7/reports/cadastre/statement_on_ • a single state geo-information system of data of land lying within cadastre.html (reverse translation). Ukraine’s state borders, their target purpose, limitations in their LAND CODE OF UKRAINE (2001), ARTICLE 1931 8 Methodological recommendations of definition of immovable property located on land parcels, the title to which is subject to state registration. Approved by the Ministry of Justice Order No.660/5 of April 14, 2009. 9 E.g., it is proposed to change the name of the Law “On State Registration of Property rights…”, since the Law regiments the right to lease, being not proprietary but obligatory. See: Busuyok D. Legal aspects of state registration of rights to land and their encumbrance. – Koretsky Institute of State and Law of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, http://www.nbuv.gov.ua/portal/soc_gum/nvnau_pravo/2010_156/10bdv.pdf. See also: Potapenko V. Land Code needs change. – Yurydychnyi Zhurnal, 2003, No.5, http://www.justinian.com.ua (in Ukrainian). 10 See: “Volodymyr Kulinich, Deputy Head of the State Committee of Ukraine for Land Resources, on the state of affairs in land relations and land auctions”. – Radio Era, May 28, 2009, http://www.radioera.com.ua (in Ukrainian). Emphasis added – Ed. 6 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE (4) the effective laws (including Codes), as a rule, lack regulative completeness, i.e., contain too many references: they either refer to an abstract “law” to regiment specific actions (including yet inexistent “laws”), or expressly require adoption of a few other laws that should supplement or elaborate the applicable one, or refer fundamental issues and procedures to the competence of executive bodies. REGULATION OF SLC AND REGISTRATION SYSTEM KEEPING PROCEDURES (as of July 1, 2011) • State Land Cadastre – the keeping procedure was approved by • As a result, first, currently effective procedures are regulated by mainly provisional agency regulations – while fundamental procedures of the cadastre and registration system creation and keeping are to be established exactly on the legislative level (Insert “Regulation of SLC and registration system keeping procedures”). • Say, even the recently adopted Law “On State Land Cadastre” leaves to the Government such issues as the cadastre keeping procedure and the procedure of access to information (including for notaries, banks, other land market actors), while the Land Code expressly provided that “the procedure of the State Land Cadastre keeping shall be established by the law” (Item 2, Article 204).11 • Second, documents of title executed and issued under procedures established not by a law but by departmental documents and instructions have doubtful legal power. For instance, the State Land Register kept by the State Committee for Land Resources and not mentioned in the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Its Encumbrances” may be termed as an agency internal database, an extract (abstract) from which may be neglected by a court in case of a dispute about a land parcel. Third, legislative reference of regimentation of fundamental issues to the executive branch (the Government) in fact enables “manual management” of land and/or ownership relations and compromises protection of ownership rights of individuals and legal entities in Ukraine. 1.3. Improper organisational support for cadastral and registration activity, on one hand, derives from the incompleteness, inconsistency and controversy of the applicable regulatory-legal framework, on the other – seriously influences the process of its formation. For • • • • • CMU Resolution No.15 of January 12, 1993 (in the wording of January 13, 2010); State Land Register – the Temporary Procedures of the State Land Register Keeping were approved by the State Committee for Land Resources Order No.174 of July 2, 2003 (in the wording of June 27, 2007); The Land Book and the Register of state deeds of the right of ownership and permanent use of land parcels, land lease agreements – the procedure of keeping was approved by CMU Resolution No.1021 of September 9, 2009 (as amended by CMU Resolution No.1404 of December 23, 2009);* State registration of ownership rights to immovable property – the Temporary Regulations of the procedure of registration of ownership rights to immovable property was approved by the Ministry of Justice Order No.7/5 of February 7, 2002 (as amended);** Register of ownership rights to immovable property – the keeping procedure was approved by the Ministry of Justice Order No.7/5 of January 28, 2003 (as amended)**; State register of mortgages – the Temporary Procedures of state registration of mortgages were approved by CMU Resolution No.410 of March 31, 2004;** Single register of bans on alienation of immovable property – the keeping procedure was approved by the Ministry of Justice Order No.315 of June 9, 1999 (in the wording of Order No.85/5 of August 18, 2004); State register of legal deeds – the Temporary Procedures of state registration of legal deeds were approved by the CMU Resolution No.671 of May 26, 2004; the Instructions of keeping the State Register of legal deeds was approved by the Ministry of Justice Order No.86/5 of August 18, 2004 (in the wording of January 8, 2007); Assignment of cadastral numbers to land plots – the Temporary Procedures of assignment of a cadastral number to a land plot were approved by the CMU Resolution No.749 of August 18, 2010. * Also worth notice, the Land Book is deemed the main document for the ownership rights registration system and is available for public access (with some limitations). However, the Law “On State Land Cadastre” leaves determination of the Land Book keeping procedure to CMU (Article 25, Item 6). ** The Law “On state registration of ownership rights to immovable property and their encumbrance” in the wording of February 11, 2011, provides that “The procedure of keeping the State Register of Rights is specified by the Cabinet of Ministers Ukraine” (Article 11, Item 3); “The list of documents for state registration of rights is specified by the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine in accordance with the Procedure of state registration of rights to immovable property and their encumbrances” (Article 15, Item 2); judging by provisions of Article 4 (“Rights and Encumbrances Subject to State Registration”) and Article 11 (“Structure of the State Register of Rights”), mortgage data will be an element of the single State Register of Rights. Meanwhile, the final provisos of the Law provide that state registration of rights specified by that Law will be introduced from January 1, 2012. This means that until then, the mentioned departmental documents will be effective. instance, first, introduction of a single state cadastre registration system was opposed by local bodies of state power (administrations) and local self-government bodies that, under the effective legislation, manage lands (respectively, beyond and within boundaries of populated localities) and also have a strong lobby in Parliament. It is deemed to stand behind Parliament’s rejection of the first (governmental) bill of state registration of rights to immovable property in 1999 that provided for creation of the Agency for Registration of Rights to Immovable Property subordinate to the Ministry of Justice.12 Second, several ministries and agencies fought for powers at formation and keeping of the single cadastre registration system (first of all – the Ministry of Justice and the State Committee for Land Resources). Each of those agencies, on one hand, prepared and pushed its 11 However, the Law “On State Land Cadastre” envisaged amendment of said Article of the Land Code and its formulation in the following wording: “The State Land Cadastre is kept pursuant to the law”. See: Law “On State Land Cadastre”, Section VII. Final and Transitional Provisions, Item 5, Para 2), Article 204. 12 Due to the Bill rejection, Presidential Decree No.666 of June 16, 1999, bearing the same name did not enter into effect either. It also dealt with said Agency, although the Decree “On Sale of Non-Farming Land Parcels” No.32 of January 19, 1999, vested the right to register ownership rights to the State Committee for Land Resources (for instance, Item 11 of the Decree spoke about issue and registration of state deeds of land ownership by local bodies in charge of land resources on the basis of notarised agreements of purchase and sale of land parcels; it provided that “the ownership right to an acquired land parcel shall arise after the receipt of a state deed”). It should be added that local self-government bodies already had powers of registration of title to immovable property, pursuant to the 1997 Law “On Local Self-Government in Ukraine”. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 7 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE own drafts of regulatory-legal acts and/or established bylaws on whose basis different registers and databases were created and kept, on the other – obstructed execution of regulatory-legal (including legislative) acts disadvantageous for it.13 At that, inter-agency disputes were accompanied with actually permanent changes in the status and subordination of the State Committee for Land Resources itself and the state bodies engaged in cadastral activity (e.g., the Main Department for Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre). Third, the instability and inadequate organisational (as well as regulatory-legal) support for land relations in general and cadastral and registration activity in particular caused by excessive politicisation of economic and business aspects of state governance, introduction of continuous and uncompromising struggle of political forces for voters (in fact, for power and access to state resources) to the domain of state administrative governance. 1.4. The above factors conditioned inconsistencies and changes in the conceptual vision of the cadastre registration system nature by the authorities in terms of unitary (single, united) / dual (two-component, whereby cadastral functions and functions of registration of ownership rights are divided between two or more agencies). For instance, it may be said that in late 1990s – early 2000s, the authorities followed the strategy of creation of a two-component cadastre registration system, as witnessed, in particular, by the almost simultaneous adoption of the Programme of creation of an automated system of state land cadastre keeping vesting the relevant functions in the State Committee for Land Resources (and the specialised state enterprise “State Land Cadastre Centre” established under its auspices) and issue of the CMU Resolution “On measures at creation of a system of registration of rights to immovable and movable property” (1998) vesting the functions of state registration of ownership rights in the Ministry of Justice.14 However, as soon as at the beginning of 2003, the direction changed – the President’s Decree “On Measures at Creation of a Single System of State Registration of Land Parcels, Immovable Property and Rights to Them in the State Land Cadastre” No.134 of February 17, 2003, was issued (in fact, due to that Decree and the CMU Resolution issued in its pursuance, the World Bank agreed to credit the Rural Land Titling & Cadastre Development Project.)15 A single cadastre registration system was also envisaged by the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Its Limitations” (2004) and the Verkhovna Rada Resolution on recommendations of parliamentary hearings (2005).16 The next, third change of the direction was started in 2006 – in particular, with the CMU Resolution assigning powers of state registration of rights to immovable property (including land) from the State Committee for Land Resources to the Ministry of Justice17 – and in fact finished in 2010-2011 with the adoption: in February, 2010 – of the Law “On Introduction of Amendments to the Law of Ukraine “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Limitations” and other Legislative Acts of Ukraine” that, in particular, vested the powers of registration of ownership rights to the Ministry of Justice; in July, 2011 – of the Law “On State Land Cadastre” that left to the State Agency for Land Resources the functions of SLC creation and keeping, as well as “performance of state registration of land parcels, limitations in their use and keeping Land Books and issue of extracts from the State Land Cadastre on land parcel” (Article 6, Item 3). Both Laws are to fully enter into effect from January 1, 2012. 1.5. Due to the above developments, Ukraine now has neither single system of institutions forming the databank of immovable property (including land parcels), nor single system of institutions that register title to immovable property. The present cadastre registration network in Ukraine is fragmentary in one or another way, different aspects of the current registration activity involve local councils and their executive committees, bodies of the State Committee for Land Resources (e.g., the State Land Register administrator – state enterprise “SLC Centre”), regional, intercity, city and district bureaus of technical inventory (BTI), offices and regional branches of the State Property Fund, bodies of the Ministry of Justice (in particular, the registers’ administrator – state enterprise “Information Centre of the Ministry of Justice of Ukraine” and state notary offices), and private notaries.18 On one hand, those structures duplicate each other’s functions, on the other, they use different methods and procedures, which effectively bars combination of different data in a single database. So, now, there are several registers in Ukraine, mainly closed, recording data of immovable property (including land parcels), ownership rights and their encumbrances (Table “Registers of immovable property…”). As we mentioned above, the legal status of those registers and the procedures of their keeping are not legislatively regimented, which lets them use different recording and/or registration methods, different requirements 13 E.g., when the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Limitations” was passed (2004), providing for creation of a single cadastre registration system to be kept by the State Committee for Land Resources, the Ministry of Justice simply did not follow the Law, keeping on its own registers and not transferring databases to institutions of the State Committee for Land Resources. On the other hand, when the CMU Directive providing for the transfer of powers of registration of title to immovable property from the State Committee for Land Resources to the Ministry of Justice was issued (No.295 of May 26, 2006), the State Committee for Land Resources did not follow that Directive either. 14 The Programme was approved by CMU Resolution No.1355 of December 2, 1997; The Programme was intended for 1998-2005 (and not implemented); the second mentioned Resolution is No.192 of February 18, 1998. 15 Presidential Decree No.134 of February 17, 2003, and CMU Resolution: “On Measures at Creation of a Single System of Registration of Land Parcels, Immovable Property and Rights to Them within the State Land Cadastre” No.689 of May 15, 2003; “On Creation of a Single System of Registration of Land Parcels, Immovable Property and Rights to Them within the State Land Cadastre” No.1088 of July 17, 2003. 16 Verkhovna Rada Resolution No.2897 of September 22, 2005. Parliamentary hearings “Present state and prospects of development of land relations in Ukraine” were held on September 13, 2005. 17 CMU Directive “On Transfer of the Integral Property Complex of the State Enterprise “State Land Cadastre Centre under the State Committee of Ukraine for Land Resources” to the Area of Responsibility of the Ministry of Justice” No.295 of May 26, 2006. 18 E.g., pursuant to the Land Code (2001), the title to land, rights of land use and land lease agreements are registered by village, settlement, city councils; pursuant to Para 2 of Article 227 of the Civil Code (2003), an agreement of purchase and sale of a residential building is subject to registration with the executive committee of the local council; pursuant to the Law “On Local Self-Government in Ukraine” (1997), powers of registration of rights to immovable property are vested in executive committees of local councils. 8 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 Official definition Object of registration RAZUMKOV CENTRE Automated Introduced in July 2003 by the State Committee for Land Resources Order No.174 of July 2, 2003 Register of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property (Register of Rights) … – a single computerised database providing The ownership right and other property rights to the following for indefinite storage of information about immovable property: ownership rights to immovable property, 1) residential buildings; its issue and protection from unauthorised 2) apartments; access. 3) buildings hosting premises intended for accommodation of … – a single state information system humans, placement of movable containing data of registered rights, subjects of rights, immovable property and construction property, storage of material values, production, etc.; projects in progress, documents of title and 4) structures (engineering, hydraulic, documents on whose basis state registration of ownership rights to construction projects in etc.) of land improvement that do not belong to buildings and apartments, progress was performed. Constituent elements of the Register of Rights designed for special technical functions; include an electronic database, registration 5) Premises of interior space of files, logs of records of applications for residential buildings, structures, state registration of rights and records of applications and requests for information from apartments, limited by structural elements the Register of Rights (Temporary regulations, Item 1.5) (Temporary Regulations, Item 1.8) Land parcels and rights to their …a single state information system for ownership/use provision of bodies of state power and local self-government bodies, individuals, Still not formed as a enterprises, institutions and organisations with “single state information reliable information about land system” (CMU Resolution No.1355 of December 2, 1997, II) State Land Register (as part of SLC) The State Land Cadastre includes data of registration of ownership rights, rights to land Still operates mainly use and land lease agreements, recording of with paper documents land size and quality, classification of soil, zoning of populated locality territory, economic and pecuniary valuation of land (Regulations of Procedures of keeping..., Item 2) Register name/ Date of institution State Land Cadastre (SLC) Ministry of Justice/State Enterprise “Information Centre of the Ministry of Justice”/BTI (Temporary regulations, Items 1.101.12) Keeper/administrator/ registrars State Committee for Land Resources/ SLC Centre State Enterprise/registration offices of SLC Centre/ BTI (CMU Resolution No.1088 of July 17, 2003; in the wording of August 15, 2009) Non-public Public character/accessibility The right to get an extract from the Land Book belongs to the land parcel owner (user), persons holding the right to land easement, emphyteusis and superficies, their heirs, assigns or authorised Procedures of Land Book keeping; persons and lawyers. Information certificates from the Land Book may Procedures of keeping logs of be issued to bodies of state power (officials), if a state registration of state deeds request is made in connection with the exercise of of land parcel ownership and powers vested in them pursuant to the law. permanent use of land parcels, Information certificates from the Land Book are land lease agreements issued to bodies of state power on a written (CMU Resolution No.1021 request executed in accordance with the procedure of September 9, 2009) established by the law, signed by the head of that body or a person replacing him, specifying Temporary Procedures of assignment of a cadastral number legitimate grounds for such request and relevant requisites of the case in connection with which the to a land parcel need of getting said reference arose. (CMU Resolution No.74 A territorial body of the State Committee for Land of August 18, 2010) Resources within 10 days from registration of an application (request) shall examine it and give Procedures of Production and Approval of Index Cadastral Maps to the applicant a written extract or information certificate from the Land Book or refusal to provide (Plans) and Cadastral Plans of Land Parcels, requirements to their such data (Procedures of Land Book Keeping, Items 3233, execution 3738). (CMU Resolution No.1117 of December 8, 2010) Non-public Temporary Regulations of Procedures of State Registration Information from the Register of Rights is provided of Ownership Rights and Other in the form of an extract and an information Property Rights to Immovable certificate. Property The right to get an extract from the Register of (Ministry of Justice Order No.7/5 Rights belongs to: of February 7, 2002; The owner (owners) of the property the rights to in the wording of July 28, 2010) which are subject to state registration, or his (their) authorized representatives; Procedures of Keeping the the user (users) of rights to immovable property or Register of Ownership Rights to his (their) authorized representatives; Immovable Property heirs (legal successors, for legal entities) or their (Ministry of Justice Order No.7/5 authorized representatives. of 28 January 2003; in the wording of 12 October 2010) Information certificates from the Register of Rights on the relevant BTI form may be obtained by courts, local self-government bodies, bodies of internal affairs, public prosecutor’s offices, bodies of the state tax service, state executive officers, bodies of the Security Service of Ukraine and other bodies of state power (officials), if a request is made in connection with the discharge of their powers established by the law. (Temporary Regulations, Item 7) Specification of Register keeping procedures Regulations of Procedures of State Land Cadastre keeping (CMU Resolution No.15 of January 12, 1993; in the wording of 13 January 2010) Registers of immovable property (including land parcels), rights to immovable property and their encumbrances (as of June 1, 2011) CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 9 10 Introduced in 2004 pursuant to the Civil Code of Ukraine (Article 220) and CMU Resolution “On Approval of Temporary Procedures of Keeping State Registration of Legal Deeds” No.671 of May 26, 2004 State Register of Legal Deeds Automated ...– a single computerised database that contains information of legal deeds subject to state registration, ensures its storage, issue and protection from unauthorised access. (Temporary Procedures, Item 2) Legal deeds: an agreement of purchase, sale or exchange of a land parcel, integrated property complex, residential building (apartment) or other immovable property; an agreement of transfer of immovable property against payment of rent; an agreement of indefinite maintenance (care), whereby immovable property is transferred to the acquirer in ownership; an agreement of hire of a building or other capital structure (their separate part) made for a term of not less than a year; an agreement of immovable property management; other legal deeds, state registration of which is envisaged by the law. (Temporary Procedures, Item 5) Ministry of Justice/ State Enterprise “Information Centre of the Ministry of Justice”/ state notary offices, private notaries that in pursuance of agreements made with the Register administrator perform state registration of legal deeds, amendments made to them, data of termination of their effect, accept inquiries, issue certified extracts from the Register and discharge other functions envisaged by the Procedures. (Temporary Procedures, Item 2) Ministry of Justice/ State Enterprise “Information Centre of the Ministry of Justice”/ state notary offices, private notaries that in pursuance of agreements made with the Register administrator perform state registration of mortgages, data of encumbrances or amendment of conditions of encumbrance of immovable property with mortgage, assignment of rights under a mortgage agreement, transfer, nullification, issue of a duplicate of a mortgage deed and issue of a new mortgage deed on the basis of a notice from the mortgagee or his authorised representative of a court ruling, accept inquiries, issue certified extracts from the Register and discharge other functions envisaged by the Procedures. (Temporary Procedures, Item 2) Data of encumbrances or amendment of conditions of encumbrance of immovable property with mortgage, assignment of rights under a mortgage agreement and transfer, nullification, issue of a duplicate of a mortgage deed and issue of a new mortgage deed. (Temporary Procedures, Item 2) …– a single computerised database of encumbrances or amendment of conditions of encumbrance of immovable property Introduced in April 2004 with mortgage, assignment of rights under a mortgage agreement and transfer, nullification, pursuant to the Law of issue of a duplicate of a mortgage deed and Ukraine issue of a new mortgage deed “On Mortgage” (2003) and CMU Resolution “On (Temporary Procedures, Item 2) Approval of Temporary Procedures of Keeping State Registration of Mortgages” No.410 of 31.03.2004 State Register of Mortgages Ministry of Justice/ State Enterprise “Information Centre of the Ministry of Justice”/ state notary offices, state notary archives, private notaries that made relevant agreements with the Administrator and have full access to the Register of Prohibitions via a computer network, State Enterprise “Information Centre of the Ministry of Justice”. Immovable property (real estate) – land parcels and facilities located on land parcels, including construction projects in progress inseparably connected with them that cannot be removed without their depreciation and change of their purpose (Regulations, Item 1.2.) … – an electronic database containing data of: 1.1.1. Encumbrances of immovable property: imposed prohibitions of alienation and detachments of immovable property; removal of records of prohibitions of alienation and detachments of immovable property. 1.1.2. Temporary reservations concerning Introduced by the immovable property: Ministry of Justice Order temporary reservations concerning immovable No.31/5 of 9 June 1999 property made in the Register of Prohibitions; removal of records of temporary reservations. 1.1.3. Issued extracts from the Register of Automated Prohibitions. (Regulations, Item 1.1.) Single Register of Prohibitions of Alienation of Immovable Property (Register of Prohibitions) • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 Instructions of Keeping the State Register of Legal Deeds (Ministry of Justice Order No.86/5 of August 18, 2004) Temporary Procedures of Keeping the State Register of Legal Deeds (CMU Resolution No.671 of May 26, 2004) Temporary Procedures of State Registration of Mortgages (CMU Resolution No.410 of March 31, 2004) Instructions of the Procedure of Filling In Applications and Keeping the Single Register of Prohibitions of Alienation of Immovable Property (Ministry of Justice Order No.85/5 of August 18, 2004; in the wording of July 3, 2009) Regulations of the Single Register of Alienation of Immovable Property (Ministry of Justice Order No.31/5 of September 9, 1999; in the wording of July 3, 2009) Extracts from the Register may be issued in two forms: on a request from parties to a legal deed or their authorised representatives; on a written request from a court, public prosecutor’s offices, bodies of internal affairs, the state tax service and other bodies of state power in connection with the discharge of their powers established by the law, specifying the numbers of the file with respect to which, information is needed. (Instructions, Item 5.1) Non-public Any individual or legal entity may get an extract. For that, an inquiry is filed about the presence or absence of a Register record of encumbrances or amendment of conditions of encumbrance of immovable property with mortgage, assignment of rights under a mortgage agreement, transfer, issue of a duplicate of a mortgage deed and issue of a new mortgage deed, issue of an extract of state registration of encumbrance of immovable property with mortgage. (Temporary Procedures, Item 29) Public Information from the Register of Prohibitions is provided in the form of extracts on requests of any individuals and legal entities made on paper on in an electronic format. (Regulations, Item 1.) Public Registers of immovable property (including land parcels), rights to immovable property and their encumbrances (as of June 1, 2011) Continued CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE to the quantity and completeness of documents necessary for registration, etc. Such situation (duplication of functions, use of different recording and registration methods, existence of registers of different levels, their non-public nature and inaccessibility, etc.) inevitably leads to different collisions. For instance, land may be registered in the name of one owner, immovable property on it – of another one; as a rule, so-called “unrequested” or “abandoned” land shares are not registered, great many buildings and structures are registered for phantoms or not registered at all; state and municipal lands are not subject to registration (moreover that they are still not delimited). Limited access to the main databases of those institutions, on one hand, enables their officials to get administrative rent (corruption), on the other – facilitates the employment of those institutions for influence (pressure) on certain persons (groups of persons), including political (political corruption). 1.6. What is also worth notice is that the adoption of the basic laws designed to regiment the progress of the land reform, regulate land and property relations and market circulation of farming land, in other words – to ensure transparency and publicity of land relations and protection of ownership rights, has been delayed for years. As one may see from Table “Regulatory-legal framework of land relations and cadastre registration systems in Ukraine”,19 say, bills on state registration of rights to immovable property have been submitted to Parliament since 1998, on the State Land Cadastre – since 1999. However, the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Limitations” was adopted only in 2004, and on SLC, as we mentioned, passed by Parliament only in July, 2011. In fact, the first Law on SLC was endorsed by the Verkhovna Rada on March 20, 2007, but vetoed down by the President. It took Parliament over two years to finalise the Law with account of the President’s proposals.20 At the beginning of 2011, the Verkhovna Rada rejected the bill on land market considered by it for three years.21 Parliament may start consideration of a new bill only at the next, ninth session (i.e., in the fall of 2011.)22 Protraction of the development and adoption of fundamental legislative acts on the single cadastre registration system, the practice of nonimplementation of the above-mentioned Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Limitations”, continuous interagency struggle for powers at formation and keeping of actually non-public databases and registers had, among other things, two effects. First, the World Bank in 2006-2009 had to reconsider the number of elements and, respectively, the volume of credit funds extended for implementation of a project whose main tasks included creation of a single cadastre registration system in Ukraine (Insert “Rural Land Titling & Cadastre Development Project,23 p.12). This brought Ukraine neither respect of international financial institutions nor attractiveness in the eyes of investors, since it brought to light Ukraine’s practice of neglect not only of the national legislation but also of its international obligations. Second, this gave grounds to assume that, on one hand, the bodies of power and/or political forces exercising it (and business groups behind those forces) were not interested in creation of conditions for transparent land relations and relations of immovable property ownership, including land parcels.24 On the other hand, agencies struggle not only for budget funds allocated to cadastre registration system formation/keeping and the ability to get administrative rent but also for possession of proprietary information that to a large extent gives, first, control over distribution of land – a resource not ultimately divided among the interested financial-political groups yet; second, opportunities to exert pressure on political opponents.25 19 For the Table, see Annex to this journal, and Razumkov Centre website – http://www.razumkov.org.ua. From June 27, 2007, when the Verkhovna Rada Resolution of the Law finalisation was passed, till November 17, 2009, when the finalised Law was considered at a plenary sitting of the Verkhovna Rada but the Presidential veto was not overruled. 21 The Bill “On Land Market” (reg. No.2143-1 of April 3, 2008). Authors: Sulkovskyi, Bevzenko, Sihal, Tereshchuk, Tkach. The bill was basically approved yet on June 20, 2008, but on March 17, 2011, it was rejected and removed from the agenda. For reference: in addition to it, in 2008, the Verkhovna Rada registered two more bills on the land market: governmental (reg. No.2143 of February 28) and submitted by MP Ivan Zayets (reg. No.2143-2 of April 21). Both bills were rejected by the Verkhovna Rada Committee for Agricultural Policy and Land Relations on June 17, 2008. In 2010, the Verkhovna Rada registered a bill drafted by the State Committee for Land Resources (reg. No.1-1/3069 of December 22). 22 According to the Verkhovna Rada Procedures, in case of a bill rejection (as the case was with above-mentioned Bill No.2143), a similar bill may be considered only at the next session. Currently, two bills on land market are under discussion: governmental, and drafted by an MP from the NUNS faction Ivan Zayets. 23 Sources: Martyn A. Problems of the State Land Cadastre in Ukraine. – Land Union of Ukraine, http://www.zsu.org.ua/index.php?option=com_ content&view=article&id=95:-2&catid=62:2011-01-12-14-57-08&Itemid=87; Rural Land Titling & Cadastre Development Project. – World Bank website, http:// siteresources.worldbank.org; Rural Land Titling & Cadastre Development Project: 2004-2012: Objectives. On the project. Project in figures. What was made and planned. – State Committee for Land Resources, IBRD, Kyiv, 2011; Land reform: a strategy, or movement on the touch. – Accounting Chamber website, December 6, 2010, http://www.ac-rada.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). 24 In particular, commenting on the recent adoption of the Law on SLC, Ivan Zayets said: “The problem is that up till now, we have had no law on the state land cadastre, because those who stole that land, who bypassed the law and acquired it illegally, were disinterested in it”. See: Ivan Zayets, National Deputy of Ukraine, NUNS faction: “Land market is a long way ahead”. – Radio Era, July 11, 2011. 25 Those assumptions are also proven with the practice of hostile takeover of land, spread exactly from mid-2000s. See, e.g., materials of the website http://zahvat.ua. The scale of that phenomenon let the President of the Association of Farmers and Private Land Owners of Ukraine Ivan Tomych state in 2009: “Hostile takeovers of land and harvest are of a systemic character in Ukraine”. – Dilova Ukrayina, business news, March 16, 2009; http://project.ukrinform.ua (in Ukrainian). 20 RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 11 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE RURAL LAND TITLING & CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT PROJECT The Project included seven components: A – Institutional nearly 24% and 18% of household owners, respectively, are familiar Development and Legal Reform, B – Public Awareness, C – with them); three training seminars were held for representatives Training, D – Land Surveys, E – Cadastre System Development, of territorial structures of the State Committee for Land Resources F – Farm Restructuring Services, G – Project Implementation. responsible for public relations, three press tours were organised for mass media; 75 information products on land subjects were In 2005, the Bank several times notified the State Committee developed and released for free use by national and regional media, for Land Resources of unsatisfactory implementation of the support is provided for the Project web page www.zemreforma. Project, especially the components dealing with introduction info; seven issues of a monthly information bulletin were published of a single registration system and agricultural enterprise (circulation – 150 500 copies); four round-tables were held; an allrestructuring. However, till November 30, 2005, no improvement in introduction of a single registration system, agricultural Ukrainian journalist contest “My land – my property” was arranged enterprise restructuring, training and public awareness had been to increase the number of educational and popular publications about observed. So, on February 21, 2006, the Bank partially suspended the right to private property, use of land parcels and duties vested in the component funding to the amount of $75.7 million, and on owners after the provision of said rights, etc. July 24, 2006, withdrew $74 million. In a letter of May 4, 2006, In 2010 and 2011, two comprehensive representative the Bank noted minimal progress with implementation of the sociological surveys for assessment of the land reform were held, Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable covering four groups of respondents: residents of rural areas who Property and Their Limitations”. acquired land parcels (shares); village/settlement heads/mayors; Respectively, due to the lack of progress with implementation managers of farms and agricultural enterprises. Following the of component E – Cadastre System Development, the Project was survey, a conference was held where an analytical report was in a state of restructuring from 2006 till April 2009. Components presented. The data were published on the Project website. E and F were cancelled, component D – expanded (“Land surveys and cadastre system development”). According to the Project manager Serhiy Kubakh: “The need of adjustment was primarily caused by non-implementation of component E - “Cadastre System Development”. Such situation arose because on the state level, there is no common view of the mechanism of organisational, functional and legislative support for introduction of a single state system of registration of rights to land and immovable property. The fact that solution of that issue was further protracted, barred the Project implementation, in particular, creation of a single state automated system of the state land cadastre keeping”. So, currently, the Project is implemented with five components. By now, the following has been made as part of their implementation: Component A – Institutional development and legal reform. The goal of sub-component А.1 “Institutional development” has been achieved, namely, the inventory of the State Committee for Land Resources and its territorial bodies improved: it took delivery of 11,483 units of furniture (desks, cabinets, chairs, boxed, etc.) and office machinery (729 fax devices and 1,465 telephone sets), 5,227 hardware units (multifunctional devices, copiers, computers, server units, workstations, monitors, printers, scanners, notebooks, etc.). Implementation of sub-component А.2 “Legal reform” concentrated on the legislative framework development and other issues dealing with perfection of land relations in pursuance of the Land Code of Ukraine, as well as development of legal capabilities and the database of the State Committee for Land Resources. The following results were achieved: • 10 regulatory-legal acts were drafted; • legislation of the EU countries was selected for creation of a legal library of the State Committee for Land Resources; • international expert examination of regulatory-legal acts in the field of registration of rights to immovable property and land cadastre was held. In two years, implementation of the sub-component was suspended. Following a monitoring mission, a list of regulatorylegal acts was drawn up and coordinated with the World Bank and the Ministry for Agricultural Policy. Component В “Public Awareness”. People get information about the land reform. On the national air, TV and radio programmes “My land – my property” are broadcasted (weekly, 10 minutes each; 12 Component С “Training”. The national training base for specialist training and retraining in the field of land planning and cadastre was renewed, experts employed in territorial bodies of land resources undergo professional development. The following results were achieved: • training aids were developed, over 700 state registrars were trained; • modern training programmes were developed for 20 leading Ukrainian higher educational establishments that turn out experts in the speciality “geodesy, cartography and land planning”, 525 their lecturers underwent professional development; • professional development courses are arranged for experts of state bodies in charge of land resources (total of 2,535 employees improved their skills); • nine leading Ukrainian higher educational establishments that turn out experts in the speciality “land planning and cadastre” took delivery of specialised software, hardware and office equipment (total, 585 units of equipment) and nine sets of geodetic equipment (a photogrammetric station, a pathfinder, a laser ruler for distance measurement, an electronic imprintfree tachymeter, a set of two-frequency GPS receivers, an electronic tachymeter with an integrated satellite receiver); • seven study guides were developed and are maintained in an actual state for training modules “Legislation on the Issues of Land Relations Regulation”, “Human Resources and Personnel • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE Management Issues”, “Public administration in the area of land relations”, “Information Technologies in the System of Land Resources Bodies”, “State Land Cadastre”, “Land Market and Land Appraisal”, “Environmental Protection and Rational Use of Land Resources”. The main measure to be implemented before the Project completion is to create a specialised training and methodological centre for support, assistance and coordination of expert training and retraining in the speciality “geodesy, cartography and land planning”. By now, the concept of its creation has been drawn up, to be reviewed by the Project management group. Component D “Land surveys and cadastre system development”. Under sub-component D.1, scope of land planning works for free allotment of land shares in situ and issuance of state deeds of land parcel ownership was completed; aerial photography and production of basic and index cadastral maps for the whole territory of Ukraine goes on. At present: • aerial photography was performed in 20 regions and the Autonomous Republic of Crimea on the area of 468.8 thousand km2 making 78% of the contracted scope of work; • orthophotomaps were produced: to scale 1:10,000 – on the area of 433 thousand km2 (72%); to scale 1:5,000 – on 45.7 thousand km2 (79%); to scale 1:2,000 – on 9.4 thousand km2 (47.2%); • on the basis of produced orthophotoplans and orthophotomaps, index cadastral maps were made on the area of 344.9 thousand km2 (47.2%). Currently, field control of the quality of land planning and cartographic works is on in 20 regions of Ukraine, the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol. Field control of land planning quality is over in Volyn, Transcarpathian, Kyiv, Lviv, Cherkasy and Chernihiv regions, field control of the cartographic work quality in those regions is nearing completion. Field control of the quality of land planning started in Zhytomyr, Rivne, Khmelnytskyi, Sumy, Poltava and Vinnytsya regions, and field control of the quality of cartographic work – in Poltava and Sumy regions. Preparatory work is on for performance of a contract for field control of the quality of land planning and cartographic works in Ivano-Frankivsk, Ternopil and Chernivtsi regions. Under sub-component D.2, an automated system for the national state land cadastre keeping to scale is being created. At present: • equipment (a network data storage matrix and 800 sets of computer and copying equipment) for the cadastre were delivered to the SLC Centre and 725 sets – to 27 territorial bodies State Agency for Land Resources (24 regions, the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, the cities of Kyiv and Sevastopol); • server and networking equipment was delivered for the main and all 27 regional centres for operation of the database of the results of cartographic works; • 10 engineers of the main centre and 54 engineers of regional centres underwent training in operation and architecture of the system of infrastructure of the database of the results of cartographic works on the central and regional levels; • a pilot version of the cadastre system was installed and tested in the main centre and three districts of Vinnytsya region (Haisyn, Tulchyn and Nemyriv); • the Plan of introduction of the cadastre software system submitted to the World Bank was approved; • the module of import of data of the results of land planning operations in the cadastre system and business analysis for creation of the cadastre system was accepted; RAZUMKOV CENTRE • a contractor prepared and transferred to the State Agency for Land Resources a conceptual plan for quality maintenance and a conceptual plan of training under a contract for the cadastre system creation; • for proper operation of the cadastre system, tenders are held to buy the required equipment (e.g., server, computer, copying and telecommunications) and communication channels, and services for creation of an integral information protection system will be procured. Progress of separate measures of the Rural Land Titling & Cadastre Development Project Initially planned Done as of 1 July 2011 Plan as of 1 July 2012 468.8 602.4 Land cadastre Aerial photography, thousand km2 602.4 2 Creation of orthophotomaps,thousand km , including 1:10,000 (for the whole territory of Ukraine) 602.4 433.0 602.4 1:5,000 (for villages) 45.7 57.9 1:2,000 (for settlements and cities with the population up to 200 thousand) 9.4 19.6 Production of index cadastral map, thousand km2 602.1 344.9 602.1 Creation of a developed national single cadastre system regions covered 25** 25* 25** Ownership rights State deeds executed in exchange for certificates, thousand 4 million*** 510.1 To complete exchange State deeds issued in exchange for certificates, thousand 4 million*** 441.9 To complete issuance Logistic support for bodies of land resources State Committee for Land Resources, including its departments and territorial bodies, is better provided with equipment for land resources management 692 692 692 10 33 Regulatory-legal support Development of regulatory-legal documents in the field of land relations, number of drafts 25 Personnel training/retraining Professional development of officers of bodies in charge of land resources, persons 2,850 2,535 2,850 Professional development of lecturers of higher educational establishments, persons 525 525 525 Provision of universities**** with specialised licensed software, hardware and geodetic equipment for training experts in the field of land planning and cadastre, universities 9 9 9 * archives of land planning and cartographic work data are created, computers for the cadastre system delivered. ** cadastre system software installed. *** out of 4 million certificates, 3.28 million were replaced using other sources;15 thousand were replaced under pilot projects and 823.5 certificates – at different stages within the Project framework. **** Kyiv National University of Building and Architecture, Donetsk National Technical University, National University “Lviv Polytechnics”, National University of Water Facilities and Use of Nature, Kharkiv National Agrarian University named after Dokuchayev, Lviv National Agrarian University, Odesa State Agrarian University, National University of Bio Resources and Use of Nature of Ukraine and its southern branch, Crimean Agronomical University. • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 13 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE 1.7. The authorities’ choice in favour of a twocomponent (dual) cadastre registration system is neither indisputable nor the best for Ukraine. The present practice shows that different countries have different systems and, generally speaking, there is no big difference between unitary or dual cadastre registration systems – if close interaction between cadastral and registration institutions and their electronic databases is provided, and “one stop” is arranged for users to submit/obtain information.26 However: 1. Parallel existence of the cadastre and register gives rise to many problems, the main of them being: • almost inevitable duplication of some functions, performance of information exchange procedures – which leads, among other things, to an increase in the value and time of servicing; • formation and development of the two systems can take place on different technical platforms, with different speed, which, in case of poor standardisation, complicates regulation of information flows among them and undermines promptness of actualisation of information in their databases (even if such exchange is formalised and not done “on request”); • restriction of opportunities to achieve self-repayment of the cadastre system, since it cannot be directly subsidised at the expense of payment for the registration system services, and therefore, requires strong support and/or high value of services for users; • in the Ukrainian situation, those problems are further aggravated by the poor executive discipline, coordination and interaction of state agencies, their rivalry for control of financial flows and administrative rent, which can affect the value of services and duration of procedures both for users and the budget (all taxpayers.)27 2. A unitary (integrated) cadastre registration system is cheaper, more flexible and dynamic, and in the end result, more convenient for users, since it: • puts an end to duplication of functions and procedures of inter-agency information exchange, which reduces the cost of services and duration of procedures for users and enhances the promptness of actualisation of information in the database of a single system; • enables subsidising of its loss-making portion (cadastre) at the expense of the profitable one – the title registration system, which facilitates achievement of the system selfrepayment at a later point; • introduces the principles of “one stop” by definition, not through institution and formalisation of inter-agency information exchange procedures. 1.8. It may be argued that Ukraine’s declared EU aspirations in general and the European practice of the “cadastral” reform in particular would be best met by introduction of a unitary (single) cadastre registration system.28 It should be noted that it would also meet EXPERT OPINIONS The majority (67%) of experts polled by the Razumkov Centre Sociological Service expressed confidence that for Ukraine, more expedient is a unitary (single) cadastre registration system where the SLC and the Register of ownership rights to immovable property (including land parcels) are united in a single database kept and managed by one state institution. A two-component system is deemed more optimal by only 28% of experts; nearly 2% reported that organisational principles of the cadastre registration system were unimportant. Almost 4% could not give a definite answer. At that, among the adherents of the single system, a relative majority (42%) suggests that it should be formed and kept by the State Agency for Land Resources (the successor to the State Committee for Land Resources); 20% opted for the State Registration Service under the Ministry of Justice of Ukraine. A third of experts is sure that it would make sense to establish a special executive body (in that, 15% considers that such body should be independent, like the State Property Fund.)* * The expert poll was conducted by the Razumkov Centre Sociological Service on May 18-24, 2011, 111 experts were polled (representing land planning scientific research and design institutes, regional departments of justice, the State Committee for Land Resources, regional branches of the SLC Centre. For more detailed poll results summed up in Tables and Diagrams see Annex 1 to this Report “What should the cadastre registration system in Ukraine look like: expert poll”. the perceptions and expectations of the majority of domestic experts, including practicing ones. However, the authorities took the heading towards the creation of a two-component system, which does not remove the risks of preservation of all the drawbacks of the present one (including inter-agency rivalry for control of financial flows and administrative rent, opportunities for “manual management” of land resources, etc.) and does not guarantee the enhancement of its efficiency, now being very low. 2. FACTORS THAT HINDERED CREATION OF A SINGLE CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE AND IN THE END RESULT LED TO ITS REJECTION 2.1. Currently, Ukraine has a multi-element inefficient cadastral and registration systems not meeting interests of users, including the state, since it in fact cannot be used for proper management of land resources, calculation and collection of the economically reasonable payment for the land (land lease) and/or immovable property tax. At that, references of official sources to the current situation are mainly incorrect. 2.2. Lack of funds – the most common argument of the authorities to explain any problems in the country, including the long absence of an adequate cadastre registration system. However, first, it may be argued that Ukraine had enough own funds to create a modern single cadastre registration system in the years 26 I.e., the institution should be named for a person to apply to, and then, his or her request (e.g., application for registration of ownership rights) should be processed by cadastral and registration institutions contacting each other under the established procedure. 27 Experts mention among the advantages of the two-component system that the presence of two parallel independent systems makes it possible “to introduce kind of “competition” and mutual control”, and to diminish the conflict of interests. It is stressed that “this aspect is especially important for transitional economies, where the risk of corruption is especially high”. See: Legal and institutional aspects of the farming land market in Ukraine…, p.11. However, it may be said that in Ukraine, this advantage is offset by the fact that corruption has acquired a systemic character there. For more detail see: Political corruption in Ukraine: actors, manifestations, problems of countering. Razumkov Centre analytical report. – National Security & Defence, 2009, No.7, p.266. 28 Noteworthy, the goal and essence of the “cadastral” reform lie in combination of multifunctional cadastral and registration systems in a single cadastre registration or land information system – Cadastre 2014 (Insert “Cadastre registration system: reference”, p.45). 14 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE EFFICIENCY OF THE EXISTING CADASTRE AND REGISTRATION SYSTEMS: ACCESSIBILITY AND QUALITY OF SERVICES, RELIABILITY AND PUBLIC CHARACTER OF DATA1 Cadastre registration systems’ efficiency is mainly conditioned by PROJECT IN SUPPORT FOR LAND PRIVATISATION IN UKRAINE: their accessibility and convenience of their services for the user, PROBLEM ASPECTS CAUSED BY ACTIONS OF EMPLOYEES ON reliability and public character of information in their databases. THE UKRAINIAN SIDE 1. Accessibility of services of the cadastre and registration Free issue of 1.8 million state deeds of land share ownership systems in Ukraine is limited, complicated, and extremely was one of the main elements of said Project, since the cost of unsparing for users (in terms of both money and time). Specific their execution was entirely covered by the US side. In 2003, the of those systems are too many too long procedures and the wide functions of state deed registration were assigned to the SLC practice of extortion, unlawful collections from individuals and Centre that imposed a registration fee (in fact, for getting state deeds, including those supposed to be issued for free under the legal entities, overstatement of the cost (rates) of works and Project). In May, 2004, the State Committee for Land Resources services. was forced to issue an Order confirming free registration of state (1) As noted above, land parcels and immovable property on them deeds executed under the Project. are registered separately and by different institutions – bodies However, according to the Project officers, the SLC Centre continued to collect registration fees from all villagers. Only of the State Agency for Land Resources and BTI, respectively. in March, 2006, a new Order of the State Committee for Land This complicates both the procedure of registration of immovable Resources settled the situation – fees for registration of state property and conclusion of civil law agreements (purchase and deeds executed within the Project framework were no longer sale): their duration, the mechanism of certification of ownership collected. rights of the new owner and issue of title documents to him. In addition, using its actually monopoly standing on the land planning market, the SLC Centre set high prices of those works, (2) The effective legislation sets no terms of all operations and for which, villagers simply could not pay. So, the Project lawyers procedures related with land parcel registration and receipt of drafted the Bill “On Protection of Constitutional Rights of Citizens state deeds of their ownership, so, individuals (or legal entities) to Land” (adopted in January 2005) that imposed limitations on cannot appeal in courts against protraction of such operations the value of land planning operations for citizens who obtained or procedures. Execution of documents for getting a state deed land shares and introduced registration of state deeds for free, for (land planning operations, allocation of parcels in situ, etc.) may those persons.4 last for years, the process of issue of state deeds is “suspended” indefinitely, for instance, because of “shortage of forms”.2 payment for those services over the legislatively provided rates is witnessed by the results of a public opinion poll held (3) Cadastre registration bodies widely practice by Razumkov Centre. In particular, at the time of the poll (March • Unlawful collection of money from individuals, overstatement 2011), almost 39% of those who had their documents executed of the cost of services (works), using their actually monopoly (obtained them) in the State Committee for Land Resources’ status. Such practice of the SLC Centre was evident, for bodies reported that they had to pay for that in excess of the instance, in the process of implementation of the Project in legislatively established value of services (in that, 6% – over UAH support for land privatisation in Ukraine by the US Agency 1,000). 35% of citizens overpaid for registration of ownership for International Development (USAID; 2001-2006) (insert rights to immovable property in BTI (in that, 3% – over UAH “Project in support for land privatisation…”). 1,000); in bodies of justice – 33% (in that, almost 2% – over Overstated rates, collection of fees not envisaged by the law, UAH 1,000). violation of document execution terms, etc. are also typical for BTI because of their monopoly standing in their jurisdictions;3 At that, almost 12% of those who had their documents for land • actually barefaced solicitation of bribes for provision of services parcels executed in bodies of the State Committee for Land envisaged by the law. The methods of such solicitation include Resources reported that this procedure lasted over a year; such the above-mentioned protraction of execution or provision of terms of ownership rights execution in BTI were reported by over 5 services, so that the user has to pay for their “acceleration”, 4% of those who passed that procedure, and almost 5% of those and intentional creation of a deficit of document forms, e.g., who executed (obtained) the relevant documents in the bodies state deeds of ownership, leading to “suspension” of their issue of justice.7 for a long time and, accordingly, queues which prompts users to look for alternative routes to get deeds.6 2. Due to the above-mentioned complexity, long time and high value, the current practice of ownership rights’ registration does The scale of the practice of delay at provision of cadastre not suit not only individual citizens but also businessmen, farmers, registration services by official institutions and demand of 1 See also the articles by Kubach “A system of cadastre, or a register of title? What we are building, and for whom” and Yurchenko “Results of the land relations reform and prospects of the land market introduction in Ukraine” published in this journal. 2 Only in June, 2011, Parliament passed in the first reading the Bill limiting the term of execution of land planning documents to six months (Bill on Amendment of Article 28 of the Law “On Land Planning” Reg. No. 8387 of April 14, 2011); in July, the Law “On Amendment of Some Legislative Acts of Ukraine Concerning Perfection of the Procedure of Certification of the Right of Land Ownership” was passed, that, in particular, imposed responsibility for violation of the terms of issue of state deeds of land ownership; violation of the set terms involves a fine from 340 to 850 UAH, and for officers who already had administrative punishment – from 850 to 3400. 3 In particular, concerned branches of the Antimonopoly Committee fined for abuse of monopoly standing (overstatement of rates and non-observance of execution terms) “Rivne City BTI” Communal Enterprise; proceedings were instituted against Chortkiv Regional Communal Inter-District BTI (Ternopil region). See: “Rivne BTI” “earned” by overstating rates. – March 29, 2011, http://www.ogo.ua; Chortkiv BTI set overstated cost of its services. – Ternopilska Pravda, May 25, 2011, http://t-pravda.te.ua (in Ukrainian). 4 It should be added that within the Project framework, the Bills “On Procedure of Allotment in Situ (on Ground) of Land Parcels to Land Share Owners” and “On Farmsteads” were drafted (both Bills were adopted in 2003). For more detail see: Project in support for land privatisation in Ukraine: Final report. – www.ulti.kiev.ua, September 20, 2006, p.1-17 (in Ukrainian). 5 There were reports of numerous cases of solicitation of bribes by the State Committee for Land Resources’ officials “for acceleration of the process of coordination of technical documentation”, “for assistance with obtaining state deeds of land parcel ownership”, “for assistance with execution and signing of a state deed of ownership”, etc. See, e.g.: Public prosecutor’s office initiated a criminal case for solicitation of a bribe by a department head from the State Committee for Land Resources in Lviv region. – March 9, 2009, http://vgolos.com.ua; SBU officers detained with a bribe an official of the State Committee for Land Resources in Transcarpathian region. – September 3, 2010, http://zsp.org.ua; In Kyiv region, an official of the State Committee for Land Resources was caught red-handed with a bribe of $19,500. – June 10, 2011, http://novynar.com.ua (in Ukrainian). 6 The current head of the State Agency for Land Resources Serhiy Tymchenko officially reported that currently, “there are 20 million forms available”. As regards queues for land deeds, according to his words, they are “intentionally formed by officers of the State Committee for Land Resources” (in the process of liquidation). See: Tymchenko: Authorised fund of the Land Bank may total UAH 5 billion. – RBC News, July 6, 2011, http://www.rbc.ua (in Ukrainian). 7 For the detailed summary results of the survey see the article “Public opinion about the land market and cadastre registration system as its element” published in this journal. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 15 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE investors using cadastral and registration services. This is witnessed, first, by the relevant public opinion polls. For instance, according to the survey “Assessment of land reform in Ukraine in 2010”, at the time of the poll (May, 2011), 58% of farmers and 66% of agricultural enterprise managers reported that they were not satisfied with the present system of registration of ownership rights. In that, 36% of farmers and 38% of agricultural enterprise managers suggested that registration of title to land and property should be concentrated in one institution, 22% of farmers and 28% of enterprise managers spoke out in favour of creation of a new registration system.8 Second, assessments of international experts summed up in the relevant indices and ratings. For instance, in the Doing Business international index (that, in particular, includes the component “Registering property”) released in 2011, Ukraine ranked 145th out of 183 countries of the world (between Syria – 144th, and Gambia – 146th). This is the worst position among all European countries. By “Registering property”, Ukraine ranked 164th (retreating, compared to 2010, by 23 lines). At that, the number of procedures necessary for registration stayed the same as last year – 10, but their duration increased from 93 to 117 days, and cost – from 2.6%, to 4.1% of the registered property value (Table “Country ratings in the Doing Business index”9). For comparison: the smallest number of property registration procedures was one (e.g., Georgia, Norway, Portugal, Sweden), the largest – 14 (Brazil); the shortest period was 1 day (Portugal), 2 days (e.g., Georgia, New Zealand, Thailand), the longest – 513 days (Kiribati); the lowest value – 0% (Bhutan, Saudi Arabia), Georgia – 0.1%, Russia – 0.14%; the highest – 27.9% (Syria). 3. Reliability of the cadastral data may be reasonably questioned, in particular, due to the improper quality of the land cadastre operations. For instance, the above-mentioned World Bank Project performs independent control of the quality of land planning and topographic-cartographic operations. Selective control in a few regions showed that “the quality of such works leaves space for improvement”.10 In particular, mass media reported the following facts: in 2009, during then current campaign of “completion of issue of state deeds before the year end”, in the Crimea, 9,142 technical documentation sets were produced but only 540 state deeds were registered, due to bad mistakes in other documents; in Kirovohrad region, almost 1,700 document sets were rejected.11 According to statistical data, nearly 45% of technical documentation sets and exchangeable files prepared by land planning institutions is sent back for rework. And this does not mean that the data accepted by the SLC Centre are correct – not only because verification of the land cadastre data is formal but also due to great many other problems (use of different systems of spatial coordinates, unregulated procedural aspects of land cadastral works, absence of independent control of the SLC Centre’s activity, etc.)12 4. Reliability of the data entered into the Register of ownership rights to immovable property is also doubtful, since, first, there is a wide practice of registration of ownership rights (if any) in the name of phantoms – individuals or legal entities.13 Second, the Register of Ownership Rights is non-public and uncontrolled.14 5. Bribery in cadastre registration bodies discussed above combined with the non-public nature of the Cadastre and the Register of Ownership of Rights deprives the cadastral and registration systems in Ukraine of the main element of their efficiency – trust of both citizens and investors. Except maybe investors from Cyprus who do not need public registers. That is why the authorities legalise the non-public character of the cadastre registration system, referring to the constitutional principle of inviolability of private life and making no difference between private persons and persons exercising state power in the name and at the expense of society, so, they should be open to it and controlled by it.15 Country ratings in the Doing Business index Overall rank 2011 2010 145 142 Georgia Poland Russia 12 70 123 Rank by registering property Registering property components Number of Time Cost procedures (days) (% of property value) 164 10 117 4.1 141 10 93 2.6 For comparison: 2011 rating 2 1 2 0.1 86 6 152 0.4 51 6 43 0.1 8 The comprehensive sociological survey was conducted by the Institute of Sociology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine to the order of the State Committee for Land Resources in May, 2011, under the World Bank “Rural Land Titling & Cadastre Development” Project. It polled 1,600 land share owners, 1,200 farmers, 800 agricultural enterprise managers, arranged seven focus group discussions with village council heads in 11 regions of Ukraine and the Autonomous Republic of Crimea. See: Land privatisation in Ukraine: results, effects, prospects: Results of the comprehensive sociological survey by the Centre of Social Expertise of the Institute of Sociology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (presentation materials), Kyiv, June 2011 (emphasis added – Ed.) (in Ukrainian). 9 Source: Doing Business. – http://www.doingbusiness.org/. Every year, 183 countries were examined. 10 According to Serhiy Kubakh, an obligatory system of internal and external quality control should be introduced on the national scale. “Licensed organisations should have their own system to control conduct of topographic and geodetic works, and state bodies – perform external control, because there are known cases where one land parcel overlaps with another one and goes beyond the limits of a populated locality. With such quality of land planning works, we already have court disputes. With introduction of the farming land market, this may bring unpredictable consequences”. See: Nahorna О. What kind of a cadastre are we “building”?... (in Ukrainian) (emphasis added – Ed.). 11 See: Chopenko V. Landed land 2. – Dzerkalo Tyzhnya, May 29, 2010, http://zn.ua (in Ukrainian). 12 For more detail see: Martyn A. Problems of the State Land Cadastre in Ukraine. – “My Land” website, http://www.myland.org.ua/userfiles/file/AGMartyn_cadastre. pdf (in Ukrainian). 13 See, e.g.: Typologies of legalisation (laundering) of proceeds of crime through the immovable property market: State Committee for Financial Monitoring of Ukraine. Approved by the State Committee for Financial Monitoring Order No. 265 of December 19, 2008. – http://uazakon.com/documents/date_3w/pg_gnnowo.htm; journalist investigations published in Ukrayinska Pravda Internet publication under the header “From the life of the state elite” (e.g.: Leshchenko S. From the life of the state elite: Yanukovych’s Principality. – March 30, 2010, http://www.pravda.com.ua (in Ukrainian)). 14 “Information certificates from the State Register of Rights on a written request may be obtained by courts, local self-government bodies, bodies of internal affairs, public prosecutor’s offices, bodies of the state tax service, bodies of the Security Service of Ukraine and other bodies of state power (officials), if a request is made in connection with the discharge of their powers established by the law” – Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Encumbrances”, Article 28, Item 3. 15 However, in a corrupt environment, neither the law nor official position can secure “inviolability of private life”. According to the former Minister of Economy Vasyl Tsushko: “Great many corrupt deals are effected only because information of property rights is non-public. So what is the sense of such non-publicity, if it is no problem to get for a small bribe the required information about anybody’s property via corrupt officers of land resources departments and BTI?”. See: Tsushko V. Operation “Formalisation”. – Ukrayinska Pravda, March 22, 2010 (in Ukrainian) (emphasis added – Ed.). 16 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE of independence. However, funds (both budget and obtained from the registration activity) that could be used for that (а) drained offshore using corrupt schemes, like the one used by the Information Centre of the Ministry of Justice (Insert “Drain of funds from Ukraine by State Registration Institutions”29); (b) were used inefficiently and/or divided via “friendly” structures. For instance, former Deputy Head of the State Committee for Land Resources Serhiy Belchyk said: “In course of 10-15 years, budget funds were used stupidly, inefficiently. Analysis proves that many million worth of investments brought no benefit and were scattered. Via state enterprises, huge investments, including budget, went to subcontractor companies associated with former officials of the State Committee for Land Resources”.30 Second, as we noted above, in 2003, the World Bank gave to Ukraine a sufficient credit, including for creation of a single automated cadastre registration system (E component – “Cadastre system development”). However, solely through the fault of the Ukrainian side, the World Bank Project was restructured, and the Е component cancelled. It may only be added that in 2004-2009, the State Committee for Land Resources managed to use only 12.1% of the funds earmarked by the Project. Commenting in due time on official references to the lack of funds for cadastre creation, on one hand, and slow application of the Project funds, on the other, UNDP expert Mykola Kobets said: “In my opinion, the so-called “political dimension” played a key role here. After all, the existence of a cadastre, its normal operation rule out many machinations. That is why in some cases, it is more convenient for many concerned persons that the cadastre does not exist. Or that it is imperfect…”31 A similar opinion about the discussion of the bill on SLC has recently been expressed by the NBU Board Chairman Petro Poroshenko: “There are no discussions, there are no difficulties whatsoever – for 10 years now, the state has been getting assistance from all foreign funds and creating nothing new. The thing is that today, there is not enough political will to create the land cadastre… If there is a land cadastre, and within seconds one can find in an electronic system who owns a land parcel, how it is cultivated, what harvest it gives, its market value, how income was obtained and what the state got in the form of taxes from that particular land parcel, this means one thing: market transparency. Where transparency exists, there is no corruption”.32 2.3. Lack of technical capabilities. According to experts, advanced geo-information technologies enable creation of efficient distributed automated cadastre registration systems.33 There are many certified companies (including domestic) active on the information technologies market that can on a competitive basis build a cadastre registration system of any complexity and configuration. For that, only interest of business and the authorities in such systems is needed. However, analysis of the Ukrainian situation proves the absence of such interest – not due to technical or technological difficulties but due to the authorities’ and business’ reluctance to have a public, transparent market of immovable property, including land.34 For instance, ECOMM СО (Kyiv) CEO Seredinin noted the low interest of state bodies in introduction of DRAIN OF FUNDS FROM UKRAINE BY STATE REGISTRATION INSTITUTIONS In 2010, mass media published a memorandum by Vice Prime Minister Serhiy Tihipko to Ukraine’s Prime Minister Mykola Azarov “concerning regimentation of the issue of operation of state enterprises and removal of mediators in discharge of administrative functions”. The Memorandum spoke, in particular, about the activity of the Ministry of Justice Information Centre. It appeared that the Information Centre held only three registers (out of 16), while the rest belonged to two commercial structures, with which the Information Centre made agreements (without a tender) of use of their software and, respectively, paid fees (royalty) to them. According to the Control and Audit Department, those fees totalled: in 2007 – UAH 85.1 million; in 2008 – UAH 90.7 million; over 5 months of 2009 (by the time of the audit) – UAH 28.4 million. That is, for less than 2.5 years – UAH 205.2 million. The Memorandum also read that, according to expert estimates, software for one register costs UAH 11.5 million, and the Information Centre’s automated system – UAH 1,624 million. So, “development and acquisition of software of all United and State Registers in state ownership cost four times cheaper than the expenses made in course of a year by the Information Centre to the benefit of commercial structures for software use alone”. A journalist investigation also revealed that the commercial structures with which the Ministry of Justice Information Centre made the above-mentioned agreements were registered on Cyprus, where the Information Centre transferred the fees. A similar situation occurred with the State Judicial Administration that keeps the Single State Register of Court Rulings. It appeared that that register also did not belong to the state structure, the latter only used services of one of the same companies as the Ministry of Justice Information Centre. In 2007-2009, the State Judicial Administration paid to that company via a mediator, state enterprise “Judicial Information Systems” – UAH 54.5 million. Therefore, those publicised facts alone prove that in course of three years, state registration institutions connected with judicial bodies drained from the country almost UAH 260 million, or $37.8 million* – half of the sum provided by the World Bank for creation of the single cadastre registration system in Ukraine ($75.7 million; it had to be abrogated due to inaction of the Ukrainian side). Converted on the basis of: Official hryvnia exchange rate against foreign currencies (period-average). – NBU website, http:/www.bank.gov.ua/. * 29 Source: Shcherbyna S. Sinecure for the authorities: under Azarov, they present millions to “offshore” authors. – Ukrayinska Pravda, November 9, 2010 (in Ukrainian). 30 Does corruption prevent creation of an electronic land cadastre in Ukraine? – After Radio Liberty materials, Verkhovenstvo Prava news agency, http://verhovenstvo.com/12/1211/1536/ 31 Mykola Kobets: The right to land is guaranteed. But it remains unknown, by whom and how. – February 17, 2009, http://news.kh.ua (in Russian), 32 Poroshenko: Cadastre is needed to be not deprived of land. – Kyiv Post, 5 April 2011, http://www.kyivpost.ua (reverse translation – Ed.). 33 In Ukraine, there are companies that can provide quality services in this sector – e.g., ILS (International Land Systems) Ukraine. That company, in particular, performed a pilot project of creation of a cadastre registration system in Haisyn district, Vinnytsya region, under the World Bank project. For more detail see the company website – http://uk.landsystem.com. 34 See, e.g.: Havrylenko D.Yu. Analysis of web-mapping technologies for cadastre data presentation on the Internet. – Scientific Bulletin of National Mining University, 2011, No.2, p.75, http://www.nbuv.gov.ua. The author explains the absence of a system similar to EULIS in Ukraine, in particular, by “the authorities’ and business’ disinterest in the land market transparency…” (emphasis added – Ed.). RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 17 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE advanced technologies and argued: “That situation, in my opinion, witnesses two things. First, a deep crisis in state (and equivalent) administrative and economic bodies. Second, the wide flourishing field of corruption that cannot but appear in such situation. At that, such corrupt environment, biologically protecting itself, is interested in non-transparency of business processes and complexity of procedures of taxpayer servicing. Inmates of such environment certainly neglect information, including geoinformation technologies – as well as other informationanalytical systems intended to do away with chaos and support full transparency of procedures (at least for investors)”.35 fundamentally reshuffled both the central staff of the State Committee for Land Resources and its main local departments. As a result, only nine out of 27 regional departments of land resources were led by experts. Mass media directly associated such HR policy with the possibility of getting administrative rent, saying that it had led to the spread of corruption in bodies in charge of land resources. In particular, according to the Millenium Challenge programme, in 2009, corruption in the process of getting licensing documents for transactions with land almost doubled, compared to 2007, and the number of land disputes considered in courts increased 2.5 times.39 2.4. Lack of experts. Ukraine indeed encounters some problems with expert training for formation and keeping of a modern single cadastre registration system. However, those problems deal not with the number of specialists (also trained under state orders)36 but mainly with updating and adjustment of the substance of training.37 Furthermore, one should keep in mind that in 2004-2011, many experts underwent training and retraining (professional development) under the World Bank Project (that contained the relevant component C – “Training”); what is especially important is that professional development was arranged for lecturers, and nine Ukrainian universities got special licensed software, computer and geodetic equipment for expert training in the field of land planning and cadastre. Formulation of the HR policy in the bodies of land resources was considered at a meeting of the Commission for study and comprehensive solution of issues of implementation of the state policy in the field of rational use and protection of land (chaired by the NSDC Secretary.)40 Having reviewed information of the State Committee for Land Resources, the Commission came to the conclusion of its unsatisfactory operation, in particular, in the field of HR policy formulation – which, in the Commission’s opinion, was the main reason, in particular, for the “collapse of the SLC system”, failed attempts of creation of the SLC AS and spread of corruption in land relations (Insert “Commission for rational use and protection of land”41). The main HR problem is presented by politicisation of land relations, and therefore – introduction of the principle of “political expediency” to the domain of selection and placement of executives in bodies of state power. The domestic practical HR policy witnesses that the change of a leader involves (to a smaller or lesser extent) the change of an agency staff, sometimes – even of the lowest levels. Exactly such practice has recently been observed in the State Committee for Land Resources and the SLC Centre: frequent changes of their heads, appointment of leaders by “quotas” of political parties or for political loyalty and/or personal devotion led to impairment of professional qualities of the top officials, and with that – to lower requirements to the quality of work and skills of doers.38 Instead, corruption in the agency went up. First, officials of all ranks, national deputies, representatives of local self-government bodies permanently study the best foreign experience, spending on that millions of hryvnias of budget funds and huge funds of international organisations, foreign governments, foundations, etc. However, referring to the unique situation in Ukraine and absence of “two hundred years of democracy”, they insistently do not introduce the “best practices” of land relations, land recording and ownership rights. For instance, the ninth in a row head of the State Committee for Land Resources (Oleh Kulinich, December 2008 – September 2010) was appointed under the quota of Lytvyn’s Bloc in connection with its joining the majority coalition. Respectively, the head 2.5. Lack of state-building experience, in particular – miscomprehension by some officials and lawmakers of the importance of an efficient cadastre registration system. Second, as we noted above, the concept of a single cadastre registration system had actually dominated till 2004. Third, it is worth reminding that the Government of Ukraine Programme “For the People” approved by Parliament in January, 2005, announced fighting corruption, with “creation of a single system of 35 Interview with Yevheniy Seredinin, ECOMM СО President, about the role of geo information systems for economy and society development, cadastre systems, open code and many other things. – http://www.ht.com.ua/index.php?page=content&content_id=124 (in Russian). ECOMM СО for over 15 years offers on the Ukrainian market software of the world leader in information systems (GIS) Esri Inc. (USA), performs geodetic and cartographic works, provides and processes remote earth probing data, etc. For more detail see: company website – http://www.ecomm.kiev.ua/. 36 Every year, the state orders training of quite many specialists in “geodesy and land management” (in 2006-2008 – on the average, 700 persons; in 2011 – 499 persons). 37 See, e.g.: Martyn А., Dorosh Y., Flekei Z. Problems of content of higher education in the field of land planning. – Land Union of Ukraine website, http://www.zsu.org.ua; Lozovyi Т.О., Tyshkovets V.V. On bachelor training in land planning and cadastre. – http://www.nbuv.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). The attention is also paid to the fact that training of experts in the field of land cadastre (geodesists, land planners, mappers, etc.) does not envisage at least fundamentals of legal knowledge about land ownership rights, and vice versa – future lawyers majoring in the land law do not get sufficient training in land cadastre issues. 38 See, e.g.: Skybchyk S. War on windmills, or war on land mafia? – September 17, 2009, http://h.ua/story/225202/; Does corruption prevent creation of an electronic land cadastre in Ukraine? – After Radio Liberty materials, Verkhovenstvo Prava news agency, http://verhovenstvo.com/12/1211/1536/. 39 For more detail see: Chopenko V. Landed land. – Dzerkalo Tyzhnya, May 22, 2010; Chopenko V. Landed land 2. – Dzerkalo Tyzhnya, May 29, 2010, http://zn.ua (in Ukrainian). 40 The Commission was dissolved by the President of Ukraine Decree No.484 of April 2, 2010. 41 Source: Commission for Rational Use and Protection of Land met under chairmanship of Ukraine’s NSDC Secretary. – December 22, 2009, http://www.rainbow.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). 18 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE COMMISSION FOR RATIONAL USE AND PROTECTION OF LAND (extract from NSDC press service report) The Commission noted that in land relations, issues of social protection of land owner and land user rights, protection of natural resources, conservation of the natural environment were neglected, due to target-minded ruination of the system of professional staff in state bodies of land resources, facilitating uncontrolled land deals. … The system of the Land Planning Institute that until recently was considered the lead scientific research and design institution not only in Ukraine but in the whole post-Soviet space is being destroyed… Growing politicisation of personnel in charge of state regulation of land relations, in particular, appointment of executives by party quotas, affects public trust in the authorities, their ability to enforce the procedure in land relations. The Commission noted that the central executive body in charge of issues land resources and its state enterprise “State Land Cadastre Centre” acting on the principle of self-financing and task to provide services of registration and formation of the land cadastre had not introduced an automated system for keeping the State Land Cadastre and a system for keeping the State Register of Rights to Immovable Property and Their Limitations. The system of the state cadastre that successfully operated in the Soviet times on paper media and ensured clear and perfect accounting of all land parcels without exception and their quality was actually destroyed. Attempts of introducing an automated system of the state land cadastre keeping neglecting the good practice gained before 1990 were doomed to failure with such land service personnel. …The noted problems weaken the system of state regulation and control in the field of land relations, facilitate spread of corruption, bribery, slow down the pace of economic recovery… registration of ownership rights to all kinds of immovable property” being one of its measures. On June 16, 2006, the Government approved the Ministry of Justice’ draft Concept of countering corruption in Ukraine “On the Road to Decency”. The Concept’s ideology mainly rested on creation of safeguards against corruption and mentioned among the priority measures at creation of such “safeguards” “creation of a single system of registration of ownership rights to all types of immovable property”. Hence, the authorities are well aware of the role and importance of unified registers, in particular, for countering corruption. Another thing is that the Concept, just as many other similar documents, has not been implemented. Neither was implemented the package of anti-corruption laws whose entry info force was first delayed, and then, it was decided to draw up another package, still being developed. 2.6. In fact, the question about the factors hindering creation of a single cadastre registration system should be formulated as follows: “who benefits from the delay?”42 In the conditions of merger of business and the authorities, systemic corruption, this is good both for the authorities and for business associated with them.43 That is why the main reason for the protraction of regulation of land relations, in particular, creation of a single cadastre registration system and in the end result, its rejection lies in total corruption in the country and absence of the political will for its limitations, let alone eradication. This gives rise, first, to resistance of the authorities and related business circles to creation of any public and transparent accounting systems, including a single cadastre registration system.44 In absence of complete, reliable and public information, any data may be questioned, and in such case it is easier to manipulate land and immovable property, the tax on immovable property cannot be imposed,45 one finds it easier to evade taxes, perform hostile takeover, etc.46 This conclusion coincides with the expert poll results. The same conclusion is also prompted by expert opinions. Second, room for unpunished neglect of laws and other regulatory-legal acts in inter-agency struggle for possession and management of secure data of ownership, possibilities to determine the boundaries (and hence, the size) of land parcels, registration/ non-registration of their true target purpose or status (change of the purpose from farming, or status – from protected) and other opportunities that can give administrative rent. Third, refusal from a more modern, optimal and cheap for the state single automated cadastre registration system and the heading to actual creation EXPERT OPINIONS Among the reasons for the delay of creation of a single cadastre registration system in Ukraine, experts first of all mentioned “lack of political will, reluctance of some persons in and around the government to establish order in state land records and registration of rights to land parcels and immovable property, since creation of a single, transparent and open cadastre registration system will limit opportunities for tax evasion (or minimisation), grey deals involving immovable property, and vice versa – enable calculation of realistic rates of land fees and introduction of the tax on immovable property” (almost 50% of those polled). The second were “inter-agency contradictions…” (almost 47%); third – “inconsistency of the state policy in this domain” (almost 40%). Only 21% of experts referred to the “lack of funds” as the reason, 19% – “incomprehension of the importance of creation of such system by state officials and politicians”, and only 13% – “lack of experts”. 42 A.Tretyak views the situation similarly: “If it were not of benefit for someone, we might have a different situation, because when I analyse the Bill on the State Land Cadastre, where nothing changed in those years by 80 per cent, I realise that its adoption is hindered only by political obstacles”. See: Land reform without an end in sight… – Silski Vist, June 17, 2011 (in Ukrainian). 43 “Assets worth 50 to 150 billion dollars still stay beyond the legal market circulation, in that way reducing funding and investments for development of the agricultural sector and rural areas of Ukraine. Only a few powerful business groups closely related with the authorities win from such state of affairs” (emphasis added – Ed.). See: Legal and institutional aspects of the farming land market in Ukraine, p.2 (in Ukrainian). 44 For instance, the State Committee for Land Resources Head Ihor Lysenko admitted that the key reasons that hindered creation of the state cadastre system included “first of all… absence of the legislative framework” and “opposition of certain groups interested in conservation of the “grey land market”. – Exclusive interview of the State Committee for Land Resources Head. – August 13, 2010, “My Land” website, http://myland.org.ua (in Ukrainian). 45 Noteworthy, in comments on the situation, draft documents, etc., creation of SLC is rarely related with imposition of the tax on immovable property, although the two have a direct connection. 46 According to the former Minister of Economy Vasyl Tsushko (when in office): “Apparently, formalisation of ownership rights and public information of those rights bear a strong anticorruption effect. The existence of complete and reliable public registers and cadastres actually rules out carve-up. That is why persons who acquired land, as well as “plants, newspapers, steamers”, [after a verse by Vladimir Mayakovsky – Ed.] on doubtful grounds are conscious and committed opponents of the idea of open registers and cadastres. That is, in reality… it is quite easy to solve the problems, technically and legislatively – in presence of the political will”. See: Tsushko V. Operation “Formalisation”. – Ukrayinska Pravda, March 22, 2010 (in Ukrainian). RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 19 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE of a two-component, complex system for separate keeping of the land cadastre and registration of ownership rights to immovable property. Such system, judging by the quality of its legislative regimentation (in particular, the number of reference norms in the laws on state registration of ownership rights to immovable property and their encumbrances and on the state land cadastre and the powers left by those laws to the discretion of the executive branch), will utmost preserve the possibilities for “manual management” of land and property relations. 3. UKRAINE’S READINESS FOR A FREE MARKET OF FARMING LAND 3.1. Institutional principles of the land market (as well as any market) are usually defined as “the totality of well balanced entities (institutions) and adequate and stable legal procedures”.47 As shown above, today, Ukraine does not have those elements, although the land reform was announced yet in 1990. In course of 20 years the state not did not manage to provide proper institutional support for the reform itself and operation of a civilised, transparent market not only in the land sector (or immovable property sector) but also a civilised, transparent market as a whole. 3.2. One of the main elements of the market is presented by the institute of ownership, and protection of ownership rights is the main precondition for market relations. In Ukraine, ownership rights remain not properly protected. Despite the provision of guarantees of land ownership rights, their exercise and protection in Ukraine’s Constitution (Article 3, 14, 41) and in the Land Code (Article 1, Item 2),48 it remains unclear, who secures those guarantees, and how. More than that, the practice of forcible takeover of land and the level of corruption in cadastre registration bodies and the judicial system witness that today, an ordinary citizen and/ or legal entity not associated with the current authorities actually cannot protect ownership rights. 3.3. The practice of enforcement and observance of the national legislation in the field of ownership rights is far from international standards. This is witnessed, inter alia, by the results of the survey “Human Rights in Ukraine 2009-2010” performed by the Kharkiv Human Rights Group (Insert “Human Rights in Ukraine 2009-2010…”).49 HUMAN RIGHTS IN UKRAINE 2009-2010. SUMMARY REPORT. SECTION XIV. PROPERTY RIGHTS (extract) The right to peaceful possession of one’s own property is …As in previous years it is needed to mention serious defined in the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights problems in state guarantees for proper property rights protection and Fundamental Freedoms is of extreme importance creating both for physical bodies and juridical persons, producing direct backgrounds for authentic economic freedom of every person and is influence on competitive strength of the entire nation. In particular, also important for the development of the nation aiming at building a international economic organizations define this serious problem democratic state.* in Ukraine every year. As an example it is possible to cite data of Global Competitiveness Report… for 2010–2011 again providing The right is of vital importance for the state protection of rights Ukraine with the worst positions among 139 countries included in a period, when every accession to power of a new political force to the document. Thus Ukraine occupied 135th place in the rating is accompanied with a redistribution of property... Under deficient of protection of property rights, 134th place concerning courts system of property rights registration and weak legal protection independence and 138th in legislation effectiveness. for property rights it results in legal ambiguity and uncertainty …Non-enforcement of rulings by national courts in part of concerning the state capability to ensure stable property rights. property levy protecting the property remains one of the most Consequently it may lead to social tension in the state and undermine acute problems in providing the right for peaceful possession of the system of state management. one’s property. According to the Minister of Justice of Ukraine O. Unfortunately again it is needed to stress that the condition of Lavrynovych, for the years of independence there formed the arrears respecting these rights in Ukraine remains on a low level... Also need of Ukraine on court rulings implementation concerning human rights mentioning problems caused by the absence of unique and effective violations in the dimension of 130 billion of UAH and, as he says, system of proprietary right registration in Ukraine. In fact today none the arrears grow every day and will continue growing if there is no of owners may be sure of stability of his rights. mechanism for solution of the problem will be found. The reliable system of property rights protection is not created …[The European Court on Human Rights] came to conclusion as well. Court rulings concerning property collection are not fulfilled that facts of non-enforcement of national court rulings are not related to separate cases or particular events of the case, but result to be in many cases and the problem of long-lasting court rulings nonconsequence of defects in regulatory and administrative practice of fulfillment and lacking the means of legal protection from its non state power bodies concerning fulfillment of national court rulings fulfillment is widely spread and complex. To date certain reforms in they are responsible for. Respectively, the situation in the field is legislation and administrative practice to solve the problem remain defined by the Court as resulting from practice non-compliant with not carried out. regulations of the Convention on Human Rights Protection and …in real estate an absurd situation is observed. In Ukraine Fundamental Freedoms”. multiple bodies are involved in real estate registration. Acts on land property rights are issued by the Center of the State Land Register * Note. The mentioned right is established by Protocol No.1 to said Convention and formulated in its Article 1 “Protection of possessions” as follows: (DZK), subject to the State Committee of Land Resources. And the registration of property rights for houses and flats located on that “Every natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public land is issued by Technical Inventory Bureaus (BTI), – municipal interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by the general enterprises subject to local powers. An important part of the principles of international law. The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any information is possessed also by the Ministry of Justice holding the way impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems necessary to control register of real estate property rights (part of the BTI contribute to the the use of property in accordance with the general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other contributions or penalties”. registry) and the mortgage register. Access to information regarding to property owners is limited and the information itself may be The Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and Protocol No.1 to it were ratified by the Law of Ukraine on July 17, 1997. incomplete and non precise. 47 48 49 See, e.g.: Legal and institutional aspects of the farming land market in Ukraine…, p.3. Property rights and relations in Ukraine are primarily regimented by the Civil and Business Codes. Source: Human Rights in Ukraine 2009-2010. Summary report. – Information portal of the Kharkiv Human Rights Group, http://khpg.org (emphasis added – Ed.). 20 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE 3.4. Another factor of poor protection of land ownership rights is presented by the insufficient efficiency of the effective cadastral and registration systems that in no way guarantee absence of mistakes and/or security of information stored in their databases. There were repeated cases where several state deeds were issued for the same parcel to different people. At a recent meeting of the Verkhovna Rada Committee for Agricultural Policy and Land Relations that reviewed the Bill on SLC, examples were cited where for the same land parcel, sometimes up to eight state deeds had been issued in the name of different persons.50 It was also reported that the same parcel might have several cadastral numbers, and therefore, several times be sold to different persons.51 Furthermore, information, databases, documentation dealing with cadastre registration (both on paper and electronic media) are actually not protected from unauthorised access, theft and other loss, accidental or malicious. Respectively, that information can be used for any unlawful actions, including attempts to seize property of bona fide users (Insert “Protection of databases of cadastral and registration systems”). In such conditions, it is difficult not only to protect the title to a land parcel but also to identify who holds it.52 3.5. Given all the above circumstances, the state’s responsibility for losses inflicted through an error in cadastral or registration systems remains not specified. For instance, there is still no fund for reimbursement of losses (guarantee fund), although it was envisaged yet PROTECTION OF DATABASES OF CADASTRAL AND REGISTRATION SYSTEMS There are repeated instances of officials destroying or stealing information about land parcels: • leak of confidential information that belongs to the state, as well • in 2007, the office of the Obukhiv district SLC branch (Kyiv • violation of integrity (distortion, destruction, unauthorised region) was robbed twice;1 • in January, 2008, 13.5 thousand files (including dealing with land) were stolen from the Brovary District State Administration archives; • in August, 2008, Mr. Haydenko, a member of PereyaslavKhmelnytskyi City Council, said that “total criminality of land relations goes on in Kyiv region. Hired thugs… continuously steal archives of local administrations of Kyiv region in order to bring chaos into land relations, to take land from legitimate owners. A crisis situation arose, where manipulations with land archives lead to mass hostile takeover of land parcels of ordinary residents of Kyiv region”;2 • in 2010, a car was hijacked in Kyiv with all documents on land privatisation in Kyiv in 2006-2010. Not only archival documents are stolen but also forms of state deeds of land parcel ownership – strictly accountable documents: • in 2009, 500 forms of state deeds disappeared in Volyn region and later reappeared in Kyiv region, 204 were already registered, in that, over 100 – in Kyiv-Svyatoshyn district, considered to lead land machinations in Kyiv region. According to media reports, a deed form costs $500 on the grey market there3; • the State Committee for Land Resources monitoring of use of forms of state deeds of ownership of land parcels “with the purpose of detection of facts of abuses in the process of their circulation” revealed that “29 land planning organisations of Kyiv region, as of November 2009, did not return, fully or partially, to bodies of the State Committee for Land Resources 7,808 sets of forms of state deeds out of 11,037 unlawfully obtained in April-August this year”; • according to the former Deputy Head of the State Committee for Land Resources Volodymyr Kulinich, “some offices of the land cadastre have no means to promptly transmit and receive secure information.”4 In experts’ opinion, the state of information protection in the SLC Centre and in the whole system of the State Committee for Land Resources gives rise to a number of risks and threats: as personal information of the owners; modification) of information stored in the SLC AS databases; • violation of accessibility (possibility of timely and proper access to resources); • failures and unauthorised changes in the algorithm of information processing in the SLC AS itself.5 Regarding data protection in automated registers of the Ministry of Justice administered by its Information Centre, the testimony by the former Minister of Justice Roman Zvarych deserves attention. According to his words, when in the ministerial office, he was trying to find out “how protected the system was from hacker attacks and other outside interference”, and got an answer from the State Committee of Special Communications “that that enterprise [Information Centre]… had no proper licences to install secure software systems!”. More than that, Mr. Zvarych said that when he raised the question of audit of the Information Centre’s operation by controlling bodies, he heard rumours that in such case, the director would destroy all registers or take them with him”.6 1 In the first case, nearly 8,000 second copies of state deeds of land parcel ownership were stolen; in the second – 49 registration logs (out of the total of 100) that registered individual titles and land parcel lease agreements. The robberies led to a long break in deed issuance. By the way, in the process of diminution of the aftermath of the theft it appeared that the first and second copies of state deeds (the second one was kept in the SLC service) were absolutely identical, so that the person holding the second copy of a deed might use it to sell the parcel. See: Ivanchuk L. The Obukhiv epic. Part two. – Agent.ua news agency, http://agent.ua/review/articles/12889.html (in Ukrainian). 2 See: Local council members of Kyiv region went on a hunger strike by the door of Kyiv Region State Administration. – August 18, 2008, http:// prawda.org.ua (in Ukrainian). 3 For more detail see: Chopenko V. Landed land 2. – Dzerkalo Tyzhnya, May 29, 2010, http://zn.ua (in Ukrainian). 4 See: Ivanchuk L. The Obukhiv epic... 5 Sokhnych S. The state and problems of creation of the automated system for the state land cadastre keeping. – http://www.nbuv.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). 6 Kovalenko І. Our secrets are in God-knows-whose hands. – Ekspres, November 18, 2010, http://e2.expres.ua (in Ukrainian). 50 See: The Cadastre flower: better late then never. – http://www.agrobusiness.com.ua/component/content/article/358.html?ed=37 (in Ukrainian). According to the Deputy General Director of SLC Centre Oleksandr Horobets: “It is difficult to say, how many such problem-hit parcels there are in the country. Where land is expensive, such cases will occur. First, sometimes, village councils allocate the same parcel to several persons acting by the principle “who comes first”. Second, there were cases where deeds were forged, different numbers were inscribed, the same parcel was sold several times”. See: The State Committee for Land Resources fights with the Ministry of Justice for the land cadastre, http://smallbusiness.net.ua/news/60derzhkomzemvoyuyezminyustomzazemelnijkadastr.html (in Ukrainian). 52 Commenting on such market situation, UNPD expert Mykola Kobets said: “If at least one of those components (cadastre or register of rights – Ed.) is absent, this cannot be termed market. That is why it happens here that one parcel is sometimes claimed by 34 owners, and everyone has a deed. Nothing can be proven in court. Land documents are lost in a fire, stolen, the database was erased by mistake. All this leads to colossal chaos”. See: Mykola Kobets: The right to land is guaranteed. But it remains unknown, by whom and how. – February 17, 2009, http://news.kh.ua (in Russian). 51 RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 21 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE by the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Limitations” (in the wording of 2004). In 2005, the Bill “On Guarantee Fund of the State Register of Rights to Immovable Property and Their Limitations” (reg. No.8541) was submitted to Parliament.53 The respective articles of the new wording of the Law “On State Registration of Rights…” and the Law “On State Land Cadastre” contain only reference norms.54 No compensation is provided also if property is taken from a bona fide acquirer (i.e., the one who formalised his title), as allowed by Article 388 of the Civil Code of Ukraine. Ukraine’s assessments in the rating of economic freedom Rank Country 1. Hong Kong 2. Singapore … 29. Georgia … 68. Poland … 143. Russia … 163. Uzbekistan 164. Ukraine Ukraine-2010 165. Chad … 179. North Korea 3.6. In the context of the above drawbacks, Ukraine’s rankings in the relevant international ratings are showy. What strikes the eye in the data below is the deterioration of the country’s ranking, compared to 2010, as well as its lag behind comparable countries, such as Poland and Georgia, and at the same time, actual coincidence of indices with Russia. (1) Protection of ownership rights by the International Property Rights Index (IPRI).55 In 2011, Ukraine ranked 117th out of 129 countries of the world in that rating with 4 points out of 10 (the highest level of protection). Paraguay and the Republic of Chad had similar scores. In 2010, Ukraine scored 4.1 points; in 2009 – 4.3 points. General score 89.7 87.2 Protection of rights 90.0 90.0 Freedom from corruption 82.0 92.0 70.4 40.0 41.0 64.1 60.0 50.0 50.5 25.0 22.0 45.8 45.8 46.4 45.3 15.0 30.0 30.0 20.0 17.0 22.0 25.0 16.0 1.0 5.0 5.0 3.7. A transparent land market and proper management of land resources by the state and communities require reliable information not only of ownership rights but also of the key attributes of land parcels (from their administrative-territorial affiliation to quality of land, especially farming). However, in Ukraine, for the time being: For comparison: the rating is topped by Sweden, Finland (score – 8.5 points) and Singapore (8.3 points). Poland ranked 43rd (6.2 points), Russia – 93rd (4.6 points). (2) Property rights and freedom from corruption in Ukraine by the Index of Economic Freedom. By that Index, based on indicators that describe the institutional environment quality, Ukraine in 2011 ranked 164th (in 2010 – 162nd, in both cases being the worst among all European countries) (Table “Ukraine’s assessments in the Index of Economic Freedom”).56 • full land inventory was not conducted. In fact, the inventory touched only the land beyond populated localities (in populated localities, inventory was made by 50%), but over the past 10 years the data of that inventory were not updated, and it may be assumed that by now, they have largely lost their relevance; • there is no real land value; the latest standard pecuniary valuation of land was conducted in 1993, later, it was only adjusted (although the Law “On Land Valuation” provides for its conduct not less than once every 7 years), so, today, it cannot be considered reliable, along with the inventory data;57 • state and municipals lands are not delimited, boundaries of populated localities and other administrative-territorial units are not fully delineated; on one hand, this causes numerous disputes about the territorial possessions between local self-government bodies of different levels, on At that, property rights were assessed at 30 points (out of 100), freedom from corruption – 22 (against 25 in 2010). For comparison: the best index of ownership rights protection is 90 points (Hong Kong, Singapore), the worst – 5 (North Korea). Poland scored 60 points, Georgia – 40, Russia – 25. The best index of freedom from corruption is 92 points (Singapore), the worst – 5 (North Korea). Poland scored 50 points, Georgia – 41, Russia – 22. Ukraine’s assessments in IPRI 2011 2010 Total score Legal and political environment Protection of physical property Protection of intellectual property 4.0 4.1 3.5 3.7 4.4 4.8 4.2 3.9 53 In January, 2006, the Bill was transferred for “the Government’s conclusion” and has not been considered by Parliament. Like: “Damaged caused by the state cadastral registrar to individuals or legal entities in discharge of his duties should be reimbursed at the expense of the state in accordance with the procedure established by the law”. 55 Source: International Property Rights Index. 2011 Report. – http://www.internationalpropertyrightsindex.org/. The index is drawn up by the Property rights Alliance, USA. 56 Source: 2011 Index of Economic Freedom. – http://www.heritage.org/index/. 57 Recently, pecuniary valuation was performed only for lands of populated localities. It was reported that the State Committee for Land Resources planned to complete that work by the end of 2011, such works were to be conducted in 4,722 populated localities, and revaluation – in 13,734 populated localities. For that, UAH 193.07 million were needed – while by November, 2011, only 53.7 million were allocated (or 27.8% of the need). With those funds it was planned to perform initial valuation of lands of only 1,487 populated localities and repeated – of 2,867. See: With reference to Deputy Head of Department of Organisation of Land Market and Valuation Activity of State Committee for Land Resources Serhiy Prokopenko. See: State Committee for Land Resources plans to complete standard land valuation by 2012. – November 8, 2010, http://analitica.kiev.ua 54 22 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE the other – enables their uncontrolled disposal of land parcels and, vice versa, hinders the creation of the State Land Stock of Ukraine; • zoning of the country territory is unaccomplished, which enables the wide practice of change of the target purpose of farming land, as well as of lands of other special purposes – conservation, recreational, protected, etc. areas. Forests are cut, shore areas are developed, banks are unlawfully and dangerously silted on a large scale, to expand parcels. All this is done in fact with impunity.58 At that, experts believe that within “a year – year and half, zoning projects may cover 15-20% of the country territory, in that way terminating the embezzlement of the most tasty parcels”.59 However, exactly those whom society gave the powers to do that are not interested in stopping the embezzlement. As noted above, they obstructed creation of an efficient cadastre registration system, including adoption of the Law on State Land Cadastre, for years. For instance, the present Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine Serhiy Tihipko, commenting on the failed voting for the Bill on SLC in Parliament on November 17, 2009, expressly named the reasons for that. “The absence of the land cadastre lets officials and dishonest businessmen easily profit by land machinations, and MPs serve their interests, – he said. – Whole cottage settlements grow in preserves and water protection areas. At that, both the authorities and the opposition took part in embezzlement of land. And when the President vetoed down the Law on the cadastre, the ruling coalition waited for two years to submit a new wording of the Bill, and the opposition did not support the Bill during the final voting. The motives of politicians are clear – land machinations feed too many of them”.60 3.8. The farming land market efficiency greatly depends on the support/non-support of its introduction by society, first of all – citizens immediately dealing with it: owners of land shares, farmers, agricultural enterprise workers, etc. At present, such support is rather low. At that, it may be assumed that it is conditioned not as much by the low awareness of citizens (as a rule, mentioned by officials) as by the present state of the land relations, non-protection of ownership rights, total distrust in the authorities and confidence of the majority of citizens that the latter act in their interests and the interests of the business circles associated with them. For instance, first, monitoring of the public opinion about introduction of free purchase and sale of land in Ukraine conducted by Razumkov Centre proves that the number of adherents of trade in land “without limitations” in 2001-2011 fell two-fold – from almost 16% in 2001 to 7% in 2011 (Table “Should free land purchase and sale be introduced in Ukraine?”. Instead, the number of adherents of trade only in non-farming land almost doubled – from 4% to 8%, respectively. The number of adherents of introduction of trade only in farming land remains steadily small – 9-10%. Similarly, the number of those who support trade “only in small land parcels” does not change much. A relative majority of those polled – 37% in 2001 and 35% in 2011 – believes that trade in land should not be introduced. The increase in the share of those who found it difficult to answer from 9% to 17% also strikes the eye. Second, according to the results of the abovementioned survey “Assessment of land reform in Ukraine in 2010”: • over 51% of land share owners and almost 44% of farmers is sure that farming land should not be bought and sold; almost 19% of owners and 28% of farmers believe that the land market may be introduced only “when proper conditions are created”. At that, 12.5% of the polled land share owners and 12% of farmers believe that free purchase and sale of land should be allowed only for Ukraine’s citizens, 13.2% of owners and 12.3% of farmers – for members of the community where the land is situated; 3% of land share owners and almost 5% of farmers spoke out for free purchase and sale, irrespective of citizenship. Among representatives of local self-government bodies, opponents of the land market make nearly two-thirds; • 59% of land share owners reported their negative attitude to cancellation of the moratorium on purchase and sale of farming land, a positive attitude was reported by only 20%. A negative attitude to cancellation of moratorium also prevails among representatives of local self-government – two-thirds. Instead, among farmers and agricultural enterprise managers, a positive attitude to cancellation was expressed by 49% of those polled, negative – by 30%.61 3.9. Among the problems and circumstances that witness Ukraine’s unreadiness for cancellation Should land purchase and sale be introduced in Ukraine? % of those polled There should be unlimited trade in land Only farming land should be traded Only non-farming land should be traded Only large land parcels should be traded There should be no trade in land Hard to say 2001 2009 2011 15.7 10.2 3.7 24.8 37.0 8.6 8.6 8.8 8.8 29.1 28.5 16.2 7.0 9.1 7.7 24.0 35.2 16.9 58 See, e.g.: How the precious lands of Kyiv region were stolen. State Land Inspection Head Oleksandr Nechyporenko: “… Unfortunately, courts pass decisions in favour of those who unlawfully seize parcels. The judicial system is problem No.1”. – May 13, 2009, http://www.dom2000.com (in Ukrainian). 59 See: Potashnyi Yu. Who will get Ukrainian black soil? – Viche, 2009, No.12, http://www.viche.info/journal/1277/ (in Ukrainian). 60 Quoted after: Come, but not overcome. Cadastre remains outlaw. – “My Land” website, http://new1.myland.org.ua/index.php?id=1529&lang=uk (emphasis added – Ed.) (in Ukrainian). 61 See: Land privatisation in Ukraine: results, effects, prospects… RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 23 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE of the moratorium and liberalisation of the farming land market, one should mention maybe the most important – unaccomplished “grey” distribution (redistribution) of those lands among the persons who have the opportunity (powers, connection with the authorities, etc.) to get those lands for free or not for their true price. This fact was witnessed by the Minister of Justice Oleksandr Lavrynovych who in June, 2010, said that as long as grey privatisation of land was not over, the moratorium on market circulation of farming land would not be cancelled, and the laws necessary for its cancellation – on the state land cadastre and the land market – would not be adopted. At the same time, he reported that in Ukraine, a huge grey market of farming land had been formed, operating “with a large criminal input”. Many lands already appeared in private ownership.62 So, summing up, it may be noted that so far, no sufficient institutional basis for introduction of a civilised, transparent market of farming land has been created in Ukraine (Table “Elements of immovable property market and their state in Ukraine”). mentioned by the Minister of Justice, with another political force and business structures affiliated with it coming to power, their redistribution will be started. The practice of change of three ruling teams in Ukraine showily demonstrated this. So, one may hardly agree with the abovementioned presidential proposal of the “launch of a fully-fledged land market in the forthcoming years and simultaneous provision of reliable legal guarantees of land use according to its direct purpose”. When business and power merge together, they need no legal guarantees. Power is their guarantee, including the ability to change the legislation, create or liquidate state structures in their interests. 4. CONCLUSIONS 4.1. The situation in land and property relations in Ukraine is an element and a derivative of the general situation in the country: • However, the main reason that gives rise to doubts about the expediency of market opening as soon as in 2012 is different. close connection (merger) of business and the authorities, use of power in the interests of separate persons, families and FIGs, systemic corruption, extreme politicisation of economic, business, personnel issues); • In a corrupt and politically unstable environment there can be no civilised, transparent market by definition. After the “grey” distribution of assets, absence of a consistent strategy and established priorities of the country development (which leads to dispersal and continuous lack of funds); • wide practice of drain of funds using corrupt schemes outside Ukraine to offshore areas; Elements of the immovable property market and their state in Ukraine Element State in Ukraine Means of identification and description of immovable property, including land (cadastre) According to different estimates, the level of SLC AS readiness makes from 35% to 50%.63 The pilot project of the electronic land cadastre was tested within the framework of the World Bank Project in three districts of Vinnytsya region. In fact, it may be argued that the SLC readiness is conditioned by the implementation of that Project, under which, in particular, the cartographic basis for the Ukrainian land cadastre was created. However, no single SLC system has been built; 6 million state deeds of land parcel ownership (out of 7.2 million) were issued without the main attribute of identification – the cadastral number, so today, the cadastre cannot be used for land parcel identification on the national scale Means of formalisation (extension and/or confirmation) of rights to immovable property (register of ownership rights) The register of ownership rights to immovable property was created in 2002; the state land register within the SLC – in 2003. At present, the registers of rights to immovable property and of rights to land parcels are kept separately. At that, the State Land Register in fact has no legal status, since it is not mentioned in the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Encumbrances”. According to estimates, the level of formalisation of ownership in Ukraine does not exceed 10%64 62 A big grey market of farming land has been formed in Ukraine. – O.Lavrynovych. – June 18, 2010, http://www.utsb.kiev.ua (in Ukrainian). At that, according to experts, the problem is not confined to that “underground trade in public (national) property in Ukraine goes on at full pelt”, – “Analysis of the trends of grey purchase and sale of land in Ukraine proves that that operation is 95% performed not for organisation of agricultural production but solely to get profit from the change of the target purpose of lands and their resale”. See: Osypchuk S. Land divorcement. – Dzerkalo Tyzhnya, February 11, 2011 (in Ukrainian). 63 See: Land reform without an end in sight… – Silski Vist, June 17, 2011; Will land cadastre count Ukrainian lands? – Radio Liberty, July 7, 2011, http://www. radiosvoboda.org (in Ukrainian). 24 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE Element Means of circulation of rights (on the market of immovable property, including land) State in Ukraine The immovable property market currently does not officially cover farming land (because of the moratorium); but it is admitted, including by officials, that from 2007, a grey market of land began to grow;65 at the beginning of 2009 it was estimated at UAH 800 billion;66 according to some expert estimates, presently, the grey market accounts for nearly 10% of all lands (or approximately 3 million hectares)67 Financial institutes and other tools (banks; credit unions; mortgage and mortgage bonds; insurance companies and title insurance, etc) No state land bank has been created. Mortgage bonds are actually not circulated. The Law “On Mortgage Bonds” was adopted in 2005, but since then, only three small bond issues have been emitted, “the latest of them held by a state mortgage institution will be repaid next August, after which, those securities will ultimately disappear from the Ukrainian market”;68 The insurance coverage is low: Ukraine accounts for 0.5% of insurance services provided in Europe – while the country population makes 7% of the European.69 The practice of title insurance was started on bank demands in 2006-2007 but at the end of 2010 remained, according to insurers, “exotic” for the country; with the beginning of the crisis of 2008 “insurers were selling the “title” with great reservation”, since it appeared that in the domestic practice, insurance companies were not protected against fraud on the part of the insured70 Bodies for protection of ownership rights and dispute resolution (judicial system) The judicial branch is strongly dependent on the executive one and corrupt; the judicial reform implemented by the new ruling team did not change the situation.71 There is no specialised land court. Only in 2010 a provision was introduced to the Code of Business Procedure whereby land despites “are reviewed by the business court at the location of the object of land relations or its main part.”72 According to expert conclusions, hostile takeover (including of land) is actually impossible without the involvement of (corrupt) courts.73 According to the results of a public opinion poll held by Razumkov Centre in June, 2011, only less than 15% of Ukraine’s citizens is sure that courts are guided by the law in their activity. Almost 66% is sure that the court motives are different: personal interests of their officers and executives (38.1%) and political orders from the authorities (27.8%). The indicators that describe the public opinion about the motives of public prosecutor’s offices are very much the same.74 64 According to the former Minister of Economy Vasyl Tsushko, the relevant surveys show that at the beginning of 2010, “only meagre 5-8-10% of property in Ukraine (dependent on calculation methods) had proper title documents”. See: Tsushko V. Operation “Formalisation”. – Ukrayinska Pravda, March 22, 2010, http://world.pravda.com.ua (in Ukrainian). Estimates made by some experts are even more pessimistic. According to freelance advisor to Ukraine’s President Dmytro Vydrin: “in Ukraine, 96% of ownership is anonymous”. See: Yaroslavskyi M. Sacred private property. The work for Bonaparte. – May 12, 2011, http://ric.ua (in Russian). 65 Ministry of Agricultural Policy noticed growth of grey land market. – December 12, 2007, http://vkurse.ua (in Ukrainian). 66 Grey economy in Ukraine returned to the 2004 level. – Ministry of Economy. – February 16, 2009, http://vkurse.ua (in Ukrainian). 67 Land reform. – International Centre for Policy Studies, Kyiv, 2011, p.6. 68 See: Prospects of mortgage bond development in Ukraine. – June 10, 2010, Savings Bank of Ukraine website, http://www.oshadnybank.com.ua (in Ukrainian). 69 How the insurance market is developing in Ukraine (as of 1.01.2011). – Allfinanz Ukraine website, http:/uallfinanz.com (in Russian). 70 Pavlyuchenko Т. Secrets and “reefs” of insurance of ownership rights to immovable property. – December 7, 2010, http://ua.prostobank.ua (in Ukrainian). 71 For more detail see, e.g.: Pastukhova А. Hostile takeover through reforms. – Ukrayinskyi Tyzhden, April 3, 2011, http://tyzhden.ua/ (in Ukrainian). 72 Law “On Introduction of Amendments to the Code of Business Procedure of Ukraine Concerning Determination of Jurisdiction of Cases Dealing with Land Relations” of February 18, 2010, Article 16. 73 See, e.g.: Venhrynyak Kh. Law provokes hostile takeover. – Yurydychna Hazeta, May 13, 2008, http://www.yurgazeta.com. The authors asserts: “Courts have a lead role in unlawful actions… Our state knows such nonsense as passage of two opposite court rulings in the same case. Many judicial instances and absence of clear legislative provision of signs for reference of a case to a specific court provoked a situation where proceedings in the same case may be held in business, administrative and common courts”; Velychnyi А. Does the Kyiv Business Court Chairman help raiders? – April 16, 2010, http://narodna.pravda.com. ua/ (“total corruption, including in the judicial branch, has reached the level of real threats to Ukraine’s national security. The scope of seizure or destruction of other people’s property in this country shocks foreign investors”); Burdak V. Reasons for emergence and development of hostile takeover in Ukraine. – Pravovyi Tyzhden, 8 July 2088, http://www.legalweekly.com.ua (in Ukrainian). 74 The poll was conducted to the order of Freedom House international public organisation on June 5-9, 2011. 1,210 respondents aged above 18 years were polled in all regions of Ukraine. The sample theoretical error does not exceed 3%. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 25 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE • legal nihilism that originates primarily from the state itself (the institute of inviolability, the practice of non-observance, “suspension” and direct violation of laws, selective justice, involvement of many top officials in grey schemes and deals, striking inconsistency of official incomes of the persons obliged to submit such declarations with their expenses, limitations on access to data about public figures, etc.); • the common practice of the authorities’ neglect of the rights and interests of ordinary citizens (hired workers, small owners, minority shareholders, consumers, etc.); • poor legislative regulation of many issues, processes and procedures (the imperfect notional system that leaves space for arbitrary interpretation of provisions of regulatory-legal acts, too many reference norms in laws enabling “manual management” of the mentioned processes by executive authorities); • poor executive discipline, combined with similarly poor control and total absence of any personal responsibility of executives for their political decisions, of officials – for discharge of official duties; • poor judicial protection of violated rights because of corruption in courts and their effective control by the executive branch. 4.2. In such conditions, the authorities and big business related with them are not interested in the establishment of fair and transparent “rules of the game” in the domain of social relations, first of all, those dealing with ownership, distribution and redistribution of the national income through the budget and tax system. Transparency in those sectors rests primarily on the accounting of property objects (first of all, immovable property) and formalisation of ownership rights, i.e., creation of the cadastre registration system. Neither business nor the authorities are interested in its creation, since the existence of a single, automated, public cadastre registration system is closely related with control of incomes/expenditures of officials and/or state servants, imposition of the tax on immovable property, proper collection of the land tax, etc. Instead, its endless “formation” using temporary procedures of keeping enables any machinations with immovable property (tax evasion, grey distribution and redistribution of property, etc.) and use of budget funds for personal purposes, along with the administrative rent. 4.3. The cadastral and registration systems effective in Ukraine are inefficient, do not ensure the required accessibility and quality of services for users, reliability of the data stored in their databases is questionable, and the data themselves are closed for public access. The situation is aggravated by the high level of corruption in cadastre registration institutions, which leads, in particular, to overstatement of the value of services for users and registers’ formation and keeping for the state (in fact, for taxpayers). At that, the judicial system is dependent on the executive branch and similarly corrupt, which does not allow bona fide owners to protect their violated rights but enables hostile takeover of land, grey distribution and redistribution of immovable property, including, despite the moratorium, farming land. 4.4. It ensues from all that that the main factor of protraction of the creation of and ultimate refusal from a single, transparent and public cadastre registration system is presented by the lack of political will, in other words – reluctance of the authorities (persons who exercise power) to create an institute that can put actions of state structures under public control, create the basis for introduction of the immovable property tax, limit the employment of corrupt schemes. 4.5. Meanwhile, the inefficiency, non-publicity and corruption of the cadastre registration system have already brought about a number of negative effects for the country, in particular: (1) use of land without legal grounds resulting in budget losses. According to the data cited at the Parliamentary hearings on March 23, 2011, at present, 1.64 million hectares of land are used without sufficient legal grounds;1 (2) criminality in land relations. According to the data released at a briefing in the Ministry of Internal Affairs, in 2010: • over 2.7 thousand crimes associated with unlawful land transactions were detected, including 1.6 thousand – in the field of land privatisation; • in the detected crime structure, 1.6 thousand crimes were committed at discharge of official duties, 259 of them were bribes; half of the rating of 100 top bribes dealt with land relations; • unlawful actions in the detected crimes involved over 31 thousand hectares of land, including 24.4 thousand – of farming land, 1.7 thousand hectares of the curative, recreational, nature conservation, historic and cultural and forest stocks; • losses in the initiated criminal cases total UAH 675 million; • the most common crimes included: abuse of power at allocation of land parcels; allotment of parcels to legal entities with phantoms entered into the lists; transfer of farming land to other categories and their allocation in private ownership; unauthorised seizure of land parcels;2 (3) low investment attractiveness of the national agricultural sector. According to the Chairman of the Council of Entrepreneurs under the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine Leonid Kozachenko, in the past 20 years, Ukraine’s agricultural sector raised only $1 billion of investments, against the needed $60 billion.3 4.6. In such condition, the authorities tried to step up the process of introduction of the farming land market in Ukraine, as witnessed by the adoption of the Law “On State Land Cadastre” by Parliament. That step should be welcomed. However, first, in the domestic practice, adoption of a law in no way means its implementation (one should just recall non-observance of the 2004 Law “On 1 Parliamentary hearings on March 23, 2011: “Land in Ukraine’s fate: situation in the land sector, legislative support for land relations and practice of its implementation”. Records (in Ukrainian). 2 Ministry of Internal Affairs: over 31 thousand hectares land were stolen. – Public Relations Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, February 3, 2011, http://tema.in.ua (in Ukrainian). 3 Investment attractiveness of Ukraine’s agricultural sector. – June 19, 2011, http://zsu.org.ua (in Russian). 26 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS State Registration of Proprietary Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Its Limitations” by the Ministry of Justice). Second, even brief comparative analysis of the mentioned laws (the second one – in the wording of 2010) proves that their provisions do not envisage a “one-stop” approach in provision of services and public access to the land cadastre information and the register of rights in the proper volume, and the number of reference norms lets us assume that the laws leave possibilities for “manual management” of land relations by the executive authorities at the present level – with all ensuing consequences. Third, the heading towards accelerated introduction of the market of farming land has not met sufficient support of citizens (including village residents, farmers, land share owners), which may be attributed, first of all, to the strong mistrust in the authorities and, respectively, their actions, none of which has had a positive effect on the living standard of the overwhelming majority of society members. 5. RECOMMENDATIONS4 Given the situation in Ukraine described above, the level of corruption and legal nihilism, the general thrust of the state policy and agency operation, it may be said that without changing the situation, limitation of corruption and restoration of public trust in the authorities, no cadastre registration system – unitary or two-component – will be efficient. 5.1. Formation of the state cadastre registration system should be imbedded: first, in a general, realistic and practical, not declarative, programme of reducing corruption in the country; second, in a similarly realistic and practical Programme of socio-economic development of Ukraine specifying the goals, priorities and objectives, including the land reform, of the state land policy, and most of all – the actors possessing interests and rights, for whose sake the Ukrainian state operates. 5.2. On the other hand, creation of the cadastre registration system could be used as the first step to minimisation of corruption and refocusing of the state (the authorities) from protection of interests of a narrow circle of persons to protection of rights of the overwhelming majority of citizens. However, judging by the content of the above-mentioned laws, this will not happen. First of all, because the Register of ownership rights will, as before, stay non-public, and obligations to register ownership – formal. So, it seems reasonable to introduce to the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights…” and/or to the Civil Code a norm expressly formulating the principle that “an unregistered right does not exist”. Given that the national legislation on personal data protection and guarantee of inviolability of private life does not take into account the difference between private persons and persons exercising state power in the name and at the expense of society, is also seems reasonable to start wide public discussion of that problem. Society should decide, which persons to whom it delegated the right to exercise power should be categorised “public”, not subject to strict norms of privacy protection during their discharge of administrative powers (or powers of local self-government), in particular, with respect to 4 incomes and expenditures, possession of property and correspondence of its value to officially declared incomes and paid taxes. This problem is sensitive in many countries, including much more democratic than present-day Ukraine. However, there is the experience of its solution, too, that should be presented for discussion to the public and the expert community. Legal regulation of that problem has long been on the agenda for Ukraine, since without it, it is impossible to deprive corruption of a systemic nature, let alone its curbing. 5.3. In any case, liberalisation of the farming land market (cancellation of the moratorium) should be preceded by: (1) promotion of true independence of the judicial branch and true responsibility of judges for passage of doubtful, ordered, unlawful rulings; (2) introduction of a package of anticorruption laws; (3) refusal from the practice of excessive use of reference norms in legislative acts and regimentation of critical procedures (e.g., of the State Land Cadastre keeping) by acts of executive bodies; (4) creation of a guarantee fund for reimbursement of losses that can be inflicted to users by cadastral and/or registration systems; (5) encouragement of the cadastre system development towards standardisation and compatibility of all cadastre types. As well as: • full inventory of lands and immovable property, creation of a complete, accurate and reliable database; • completion of issue of state deeds of land ownership, delimitation of land parcels in kind (in situ); • completion of zoning of the country territory with delimitation in kind (in situ) of all exclusive areas natural preserves, conservation areas, protected areas of cultural monuments, etc.; • market valuation of lands of all categories and support for proper administration of the immovable property tax; • encouragement of mortgage lending against land; • analysis of the available land cadastre documentation for authenticity of allocation and delimitation of land parcels in kind (in situ) and their correlation with the relevant cadastral maps. Deemed as the term of cancellation of the moratorium on farming land purchase and sale and introduction of a free land market should be not an arbitrarily set date but the time of full achievement the above preconditions. That is why Razumkov Centre’s experts see it necessary to continue and step up public discussion of the problems of the state land policy exactly in the context of the current situation in the country and with account of the priority of changes in the field of fighting systemic corruption, legal nihilism of the authorities and dependence of the judicial system. Those changes should precede all other reforms. See also the article by Malcolm Childress “An Idealized Model Land Administration System: a Thought Experiment”, published in this journal. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 27 CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE WHAT SHOULD THE CADASTRE REGISTRATION Which cadastre registration system, by the organisational principles, is more expedient for Ukraine? % of those polled experts How should land parcels and buildings and constructions on them be registered? % of those who consider the dualist system more expedient Unitary (single, or complex), where the State Land Cadastre and the Register of Rights to Immovable Property (including land parcels) are united in one database kept and managed by one institution 66.7 Dualistic (twocomponent), where the State Land Cadastre and the Register of Rights to Immovable Property (including land parcels) are kept separately from each other 27.9 Land parcels and buildings and structures on them should be registered together by the State Agency for Land Resources Separately (by the State Agency for Land Resources and the Bureau of Technical Inventory) 12.9% 80.6% 6.5% Organisational principles are unimportant 1.8 Hard to say 3.6 Which institution (organisation) should keep the cadastre registration system? % of those who consider the unitary system more expedient State Agency for Land Resources (legal successor to the State Committee for Land Resources) 41.9% State Registration Service of Ukraine under the Ministry of Justice of Ukraine How important is the creation of the cadastre registration system for each of the following sectors?* average score Protection of ownership rights, removal of opportunities for hostile takeover of land parcels and/or real estate 4.4 Management of land resources by the state and local selfgovernment bodies 4.4 Land planning 4.3 20.3% A special central executive body that should be created for unification of the Land Cadastre and the System of Registration of Rights to Immovable Property A special independent executive body (like the State Property Fund) that should be created for unification of the Land Cadastre and the System of Registration of Rights to Immovable Property Main Department of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre Hard to say 17.6% 14.9% 1.4% Enhancement of state bodies’ responsibility for official information they give about land parcels, immovable property and rights to them Cancellation of the moratorium on alienation of farming land 4.1 Rational use and protection of land 4.0 Formation of other cadastres, including of urban planning 4.0 State Property Fund of Ukraine 0.0% Other 1.4% Realistic valuation of land, setting realistic rates of land fees and their collection 3.9 Hard to say 2.5% Imposition of a tax on immovable property 3.9 Minimisation of corruption in land relations Where should proceeds from registration of land parcels, buildings and constructions, rights to them, and issue of certificates (extracts, other records) obtained by legal entities and individuals from the cadastre registration institutions (institutions) be directed? % of those polled experts On what media should the cadastre registration system be kept (no matter, unitary or multicomponent)? % of those polled experts 43.2% Simultaneously on paper and electronic media Come to the account of the institutions (institutions) keeping the cadastre registration system 30.6% On electronic medium Be accumulated on a special CMU account 9.9% Other 9.9% 6.4% 3.8 * On a fivepoint scale from 1 to 5, where “1” means “unimportant”, “5” – “decisively important”. Be transferred to the state budget Hard to say 28 4.3 79.3% 16.2% On paper 0.9% It does not matter 2.7% Hard to say 0.9% • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 ANNEX 1 SYSTEM IN UKRAINE LOOK LIKE: EXPERT POLL Which institution should assign individual cadastral numbers to land parcels? % of those who consider the dualist system more expedient State Agency for Land Resources of Ukraine State Registration Service of Ukraine under the Ministry of Justice 0.0% 96.8% Bureau of Technical Inventory 3.2% Should a land parcel be assigned, in addition to the cadastral number, a registration number during its registration in the State Register of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property? % of those who consider the dualist system more expedient Yes, every institution (BTI, the State Registration Service of Ukraine) assigns its registration number, independent of the land cadastre No 35.5% 48.4% Hard to say 0.0% Hard to say 16.1% If the electronic cadastre system is kept simultaneously on paper and electronic media, which form shall have precedence in case of discrepancies in records? % of those polled experts In case of discrepancies one should find out which record corresponds to the true state of affairs and correct the erroneous record accordingly On paper On electronic medium Hard to say Should a cadastre registration record of farming land (land plots) differ from a record of nonfarming land plots? % of those polled experts 48.6 43.2 6.3 1.9 Is it necessary to establish at the cadastre registration institution (institutions) an insurance fund in case of a mistake in cadastre registration records, to indemnify losses, if any, sustained through such mistake? % of those polled experts Yes, records of farming land plots must contain data of the plot purpose, land quality, etc. 59.5 No, records of farming and nonfarming land plots should be under the same form 36.0 Other 0.9 Hard to say 3.6 Why is the creation of a single cadastre registration system delayed in Ukraine?* % of those polled experts No Yes 15.3% 74.8% Hard to say 9.9% If so, at whose expense should such fund be created? % of those who consider it necessary to establish at the cadastre registration institution (institutions) an insurance fund in case of a mistake in cadastre registration records to indemnify losses sustained through such mistake Of the institution (institutions) discharging cadastre registration functions 43.4% 41.0% Of the state budget Of entities involved in land relations 3.6% Other 3.6% Hard to say 8.4% Due to lack of political will, reluctance of some persons in and around the government to establish order in state land records and registration of rights to land parcels and immovable property, since creation of a single, transparent and open cadastre registration system will limit opportunities for tax evasion (of minimisation), grey deals involving immovable property, and vice versa – enable calculation of realistic rates of land fees and introduction of the tax on immovable property 49.5 Due to interagency contradictions, desire of some agencies to keep for themselves creation and keeping of some registers as a guarantee of employment of their officers and enhancement of their role within the system of state governance bodies 46.8 Due to inconsistency of the state policy in this domain 39.6 Due to lack of funds 20.7 Due to incomprehension of the importance of creation of such system by state officials and politicians 18.9 Due to lack of experts 12.6 Other 7.2 Hard to say 6.3 * Experts were supposed to mark all possible answers. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 29 ЗАОЧНИЙ КРУГЛИЙ СТІЛ PUBLIC OPINION ABOUT THE LAND MARKET AND CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM AS ITS ELEMENT T ransparency is a condition indispensible for efficient functioning of the land market, and the cadastre registration system is one of the mechanisms designed to ensure it. During its creation it is important to take into account the opinions of the land market actors and the problems they encounter in course of registration of land and immovable property ownership rights. Those problems and citizens’ attitude to the land market formation in general were covered by the sociological survey conducted by the Razumkov Centre Sociological Service.1 Attitude to private land ownership. Ukrainian citizens in general have no dominant opinion about private land ownership: while 41% gave an affirmative answer to the question “Should there be private land ownership?” and only 13.2% – negative, another 32.4% believes that such ownership should exist only with respect to small plots. It should also be noted that compared to 2001, the number of those who strongly support the idea of private land ownership decreased from 47% to 41% at the expense of growth of the share of those undecided.2 The number of opponents of private land ownership also decreased, but not so strongly (from 15.8% to 13.2%). The share of adherents of private ownership of small plots did not statistically change. City and village residents demonstrate diverse trends: while in cities, the number of adherents of private land ownership goes down (46.6% in 2001, 40.4% in 2009 and 37.1% in 2011), among village residents, a decrease in their share was observed in 2009, compared to 2001 (from 47.9% to 39.5%), and in 2011, their the number returned to the 2001 level (49.6%). While, compared to 2009, in cities the number of adherents of ownership of small plots increased (28.1% to 34.4%), in villages – decreased (from 33.8% to 28%). Therefore, for the time being, village residents more than citizens support private land ownership, and in rural areas adherents of private land ownership outbalance the aggregate of opponents and those who admit private ownership of only small plots. In cities, among respondents owning land plots, the number of adherents of private ownership is greater than among those who own no land (43.4% and 33.3%, respectively). Instead, support for private land ownership among village residents little depends on land plot ownership. Compared to 2001, the number of adherents of private land ownership most of all decreased in the West3 (from 60.5% in 2001 to 42.1% in 2009), although in 2011, some growth was observed (49.2%). Despite the described changes in public spirits in the West, the number of adherents of private land ownership in that area remains higher than in the other regions. In the eldest age group the share of adherents of private land ownership is lower (34.2%) than in younger and medium age groups (41-46%). The share of opponents grows with age (from 8.3% among respondents of 18-29 years to 19.7% - of 60+ years). Therefore, the attitude to that question depends on in what historic period the people’s consciousness was formed. Attitude to private ownership of farming land. Here, few people share the extreme opinions: “private land ownership is inadmissible” – 12.5%, and “private 1 Cited are the results of public opinion polls conducted by the Razumkov Centre Sociological Service in March, 2011 (2,011 respondents polled), March 2009 (2,012), February 2002 (2,012), May 2001 (2,000 respondents). All polls were conducted using multistage sample with quota selection of respondents at the final stage, representative of the adult population of Ukraine in terms of the key socio-demographic indicators (area of residence, settlement type and size, age, gender). The sample theoretical error for all polls does not exceed 2.3%. 2 Those changes took place between 2001 and 2009, the 2011 poll results do not statistically differ from the results of 2009. 3 The regional division is as follows: the West: Volyn, Transcarpathian, Ivano-Frankivsk, Lviv, Rivne, Ternopil, Chernivtsi regions, the South: the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, Odesa, Kherson, Mykolayiv regions, the East: Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Zaporizhya, Luhansk, Kharkiv regions, the Centre: city of Kyiv, Vinnytsya, Zhytomyr, Kyiv, Kirovohrad, Poltava, Sumy, Khmelnytskyi, Cherkasy, Chernihiv regions. 30 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 PUBLIC OPINION ownership should exist without any limitations” – 7.8%. At that, compared to 2002, the share of those who sticks to the latter opinion somewhat decreased (from 10.2% to 7.8%) (Diagram “What is your attitude to private ownership of farming land?”). Also decreased the share of those who believes that private ownership is admissible only for Ukrainian citizens (from 34.2% to 25.7%), at the expense of growth in the shares of those who believes that “private ownership is admissible only on a small scale for those who personally cultivate land” (from 35.1% and 39.1%), and those undecided (from 6% to 14.2%). Among all citizens, adherents of introduction of some limitations of private ownership of farming land prevail – either only small-size, those who personally cultivate land, or only for Ukrainian citizens. The opinion of farming land plot owners differs from that of other respondents only by stronger support for allowing private ownership of farming land only for Ukrainian citizens (34%, among all those polled - 25.7%). The number of adherents of extreme opinions in all regions, compared to 2002, remained almost the same. In all regions, except the South, the share of adherents of private ownership only for Ukrainian citizens decreased (although in the South their share was and remains one of the lowest). In the East, the share of respondents who believe that private ownership is admissible only on a small scale for those who personally cultivate land increased from 38.7% to 45.8%. Representatives of the eldest age group more often (18.7%), than representatives of other age groups (from 9% to 12%) consider private ownership of farming land inadmissible. Attitude to introduction of free purchase and sale of land. A relative majority (35.2%) of citizens believes that trade in land should not be introduced, 24% supports trade in only small plots. Roughly as many people shared those opinions in 2001 (Diagram “Should free land purchase and sale be introduced in Ukraine?”). The share of adherents of introduction of trade in only farming land also did not statistically change. Compared to 2001, from 15.7% to 7% decreased the number of adherents of trade in land without limitations, and somewhat increased (from 3.7% to 7.7%) the share of adherents of introduction of trade only in non-farming land. Quite expectedly, the attitude to land purchase and sale depends on the attitude to private land ownership. Adherents of private land ownership are more than among all those polled on the average support trade in land without limitations (15.4%), and introduction of trade only in farming land (14.2%). Meanwhile, representatives of that group more frequently give the answer “Only small land parcels should be traded” (27%), and 19.7% of them flatly opposes trade in land. RAZUMKOV CENTRE The two latter stands are even more frequently (34.4% and 37.9%, respectively) supported by adherents of small land plot ownership. Among opponents of private land ownership, 82.1% also stands against its purchase and sale. Therefore, even adherents of private land ownership mainly stand for limitations on land purchase and sale. The share of adherents of introduction of trade in land without limitations decreased among both city and village residents, compared to 2001. Meanwhile, in the country, the share of opponents of introduction of trade in land also decreased (from 43.1% in 2001 to 34.5%). In cities, the share of opponents remained the same (34.4% and 35.5%, respectively). At that, the number of adherents of trade in non-farming land increased among both city and village residents. Village residents show a somewhat higher than citizens share of adherents of trade in land without limitations (9.9% and 5.7%, respectively), and trade in non-farming land (10.2% and 6.7%, respectively). Changes in the public opinion, compared to 2001, seriously differ by region. In the West, the most “marketminded” in 2001, the share of opponents of trade in land substantially increased, and the number of adherents of trade in it without limitations, trade only in farming land and in small plots decreased. In the South, the opposite trend was observed: the number of opponents of trade in land decreased, while the share of adherents of trade in small plots and non-farming land increased. In the Centre and East, the number of opponents of trade in land did not change (while the number of adherents of unlimited trade in land decreased). At that, in the East, the share of adherents of trade in small plots also decreased, as increased the share of adherents of trade in non-farming land (the same also refers to the Centre). The South demonstrates higher, compared to other regions, support for trade in land, but this refers only to trade in small plots and non-farming land. The younger respondents are, the less they oppose trade in land. The eldest age group has a smaller, compared to all those polled, share of adherents of trade in small land plots. Experience of registration of land ownership rights. 22.6% of all citizens (among those who have a land plot 40.2%) over the past 10 years had to personally go through the procedure of getting a deed of private land ownership from bodies of land resources or their divisions, to have lease rights registered, to take a certificate of a land plot value, other documents or certificates (Diagram “Did you have over the past 10 years…?”). In most cases, that procedure took 2-3 months (as reported by 26.4% of those who passed it) or from a few months to a year (22.5%), 11.9% – more than a year, 14.4% – from 16 days to a month, 17.3% – 15 days or less. • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 31 LAND MARKET AND CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM The terms of execution of documents in rural areas proved much longer than in cities. While among city residents, 25.6% reported that they had their documents processed over three months, among village residents – 44.4%. 44.9% of those who had their documents executed reported that they did not have to pay more than envisaged by the law; another 16% did not remember whether they had to overpay (Diagram “What sum of money did you have to spend…?). 38.5% reported that they had to overpay: 11.4% overpaid less than UAH 200, another 11.4% – from UAH 200 to UAH 1,000, 6% – over UAH 1,000 (9.7% reported overpayment but did not remember how much). Comparison of the terms of getting documents by representatives of two groups – those who overpaid for the execution and those who did not – revealed that among the former, more respondents than among the latter had their documents executed for more than a year (15.5% and 6.9%, respectively). So, it may be assumed that exactly the delay of document execution made them to overpay. Experience of registration of immovable property ownership rights. 27.7% of citizens had to personally obtain documents or certificates that acknowledge their right to immovable property from the Bureau of Technical Inventory (BTI) over the past 10 years. Usually, that procedure lasted from 2 to 3 months (26% of those who passed it) or from 16 days to a month (21.7%). 11.8% reported that it lasted from a few months to a year, 4.4% – more than a year, 12.6% – 8 to 15 days, 12.3% – 1 to 7 days. Document execution terms for village residents proved much longer than for citizens. While among city residents, 33.7% reported that they waited for their documents more than two months, among village residents – 57.7%. 50.9% of those who had their documents executed reported that they did not have to pay to BTI officers more than envisaged by the law (another 13.6% reported that they could not remember whether they had to overpay). 35.1% overpaid: 12.2% – up to 200 UAH, 7.3% – from UAH 200 to UAH 1,000, 3.4% – over UAH 1,000 (12.2% could not recall the exact sum). Among those who overpaid for document execution, more people than among those who did not do that had to wait for their documents over three months (20.5% and 12.3%, respectively). 17.5% of respondents over the past 10 years had to get from bodies of justice or their divisions documents or certificates proving their right to ownership of immovable property. Usually, that procedure lasted from 3 to 15 days 32 (so long it took for 26.5% of those who passed it), from 16 days to a month (18.1%) or 2-3 months (18%). 8% reported that it lasted from a few months to a year, 4.9% – more than a year, 12% – 1-2 days. As well as in the previous cases, document execution terms for village residents proved much longer than for citizens. While among village residents, 43.5% reported that they had their documents executed for more than two months, among city residents - 23.9%. 54% of those who had their documents executed reported that they did not have to pay more than envisaged by the law (another 12.1% reported that they could not remember whether they had to overpay: 11.2% – up to 200 UAH, 8.2% – from UAH 200 to UAH 1,000, 1.8% – over UAH 1,000 (11.9% reported that they overpaid but did not remember exactly how much). Among those who overpaid for document execution, more people than among those who did not do that had to wait for their documents over 15 days (61.8% and 46.3%, respectively). People’s opinions about a better place to organise registration of land plots and immovable property ownership rights. The majority of those polled could not answer that question (32% found it hard to say, 24.8% did not care about that). 17% of all those polled (or 22.9% of those who had documents of land or immovable property ownership executed) believes that registration should be conducted by the State Committee for Land Resources and its divisions; 6.8% and 10.1%, respectively – by the Ministry of Justice and its divisions, but most of all (19.4% and 25.6%, respectively) – that it should be conducted by “another state institution, combining those registers”. Proceeding from the above, the following may be said. Ukrainian citizens have no dominant opinion about private land ownership, which may be conditioned by the controversy of the processes taking place in that sector. A “cautious” attitude of Ukrainians to big land ownership is most probably caused by fears that big land owners will acquire strong influence and dictate terms to residents of the region where their estate is situated and to local authorities. This is manifested, in particular, in the strong support for introduction of some limitations on farming land ownership – either only small-size, for those who personally cultivate land, or only for Ukrainian citizens. Similarly, a relative majority of those polled supports introduction of limitations on purchase and sale of land (such as permission of trade in either • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 PUBLIC OPINION small plots, or non-farming plots, or, on the contrary, only farming plots). Even adherents of private land ownership mainly stand for limitations on land purchase and sale. or registration of lease rights usually (nearly half of all cases) lasts from two months to a year. The procedure of obtaining documents or certificates that acknowledge people’s right to immovable property from BTI usually (nearly half of all cases) lasts from 2 weeks to 3 months, and getting from bodies of justice or their divisions documents or certificates proving the right of immovable property ownership, including by inheritance – from 3 days to 3 months (almost two-thirds of all cases). It may be assumed that shortcomings in the land policy led to a decrease of support for market reforms in the land sector in the recent years. City and village residents show different trends: while in cities, the number of adherents of private land ownership has been going down since 2001, among village residents, a decrease in their share was observed in 2009, compared to 2001, and in 2011, the number of adherents returned to the 2001 level. Now, village residents more than citizens support private land ownership. Over a third of those who had their documents executed reported that they had to pay for the documents more than envisaged by the law. They may be prompted to do that, among other things, by the protracted process of document execution. Document execution terms in rural areas are much longer than in cities. The attitude to the land policy is largely shaped by ideological stereotypes. This is proven by differences in the stand of the younger and elder generations whose consciousness was formed in different social conditions. Bureaucratisation of the process of documentation of ownership rights prompts many people to believe that it is better to organise registration of land plot and immovable property ownership in a state institution combining registers of land plots and immovable property. The procedure of getting a deed of private land ownership from bodies of land resources or their divisions Should there be private land ownership in Ukraine? % of those polled Centre UKRAINE 2001 47.0% 2009 15.8 6.6 30.6% 40.2% 46.1% 2001р. 15.0 29.8% 2009р. 42.2% 29.5% 40.5% 2011р. 15.0 26.2% 28.2% 18.2 9.5 15.5 12.8 17.3 14.0 West 2011 41.0% 13.2 13.4 32.4% 2001 2009 Yes 2011 There should be private ownership of only small land plots No 5.3% 30.4% 60.5% 42.1% 30.1% 49.2% 12.0 15.8 26.3% 2001 Hard to say AGE 3039 4049 5059 60 and over 41.3% 33.5% 46.4% 30.1% 45.3% 41.3% 34.2% 31.2% 2009 37.7% 2011 37.4% 5.0% 18.4 33.6% 43.0% 17.8 15.3 29.2% 35.7% 14.1 12.8 8.3 16.9 9.0 14.5 34.5% 33.0% East 9.5 15.0 2011 1829 3.8% South 12.0 8.2 15.4 19.7 10.3 2001 40.9% 2009 39.4% 2011 14.9 33.9% 31.1% 39.3% 42.3% 17.6 7.6 11.6 17.9 6.9 11.5 2011 % of those who have a land plot in private ownership TYPE OF SETTLEMENT City 46.6% 40.4% 37.1% Village 31.2% 28.1% 34.4% 16.0 6.2 2001 16.4 15.1 2009 14.7 2011 13.8 Yes 47.9% 39.5% 49.6% 15.3 29.0% 33.8% 11.9 28.0% There should be private ownership of only small land plots RAZUMKOV CENTRE 7.8 14.8 11.7 10.7 No 46.5% 34.9% 10.2 8.4 % of those who have no land plot 35.4% 29.5% 16.4 18.7 Hard to say • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 33 LAND MARKET AND CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM What is your attitude to private ownership of farming land? % of those polled 2002 2009 2011 Private ownership is acceptable only for Ukraine’s citizens Private ownership is acceptable only on a small scale for those who themselves cultivate land Private land ownership is totally unacceptable 44.0% 25.1% 35.5% 30.5% 35.5% 35.2% Private ownership should be free of any limitations 12.9% 8.3% 8.0% Private ownership is acceptable only on a small scale for those who themselves cultivate land Private ownership is acceptable only for Ukraine’s citizens Private land ownership is totally unacceptable Private ownership should be free of any limitations Other Hard to say 38.2% 25.6 9.1% 8.7% 0.4% 18.0% 3039 37.3% 27.7 9.0% 9.2% 0.3% 16.5% 4049 43.9% 23.6 11.9% 7.8% 0.9% 11.9% 6.0% 14.1% 14.3% 0.4% 1.4% 0.6% 15.2% 18.6% 16.0% 6.3% 6.5 3.8% Private ownership should be free of any limitations 0.3% 4.0% 0.0% 0.4% 1.2 1.2% Other 6.4% 13.6% 16.0% Hard to say 5.9% 14.1% 12.0% TYPE OF SETTLEMENT AGE 1829 33.5% 25.3% 21.2% Private land ownership is totally unacceptable 11.3% 7.0% 8.5% 6.8% 13.6% 15.5% Hard to say 38.7% 34.3% 45.8% Private ownership is acceptable only for Ukraine’s citizens 16.9% 7.6% 5.6% 0.5% 0.9% 0.3% Other 5.6% 15.1% 14.3% 24.9% 22.8% 22.5% 16.1% 16.7% 15.1% Private land ownership is totally unacceptable 0.3% 0.5% 0.8% 34 2002 2009 2011 Private ownership is acceptable only on a small scale for those who themselves cultivate land 40.2% 45.0% 47.4% 33.2% 25.0% 25.9% Private ownership is acceptable only for Ukraine’s citizens 11.5% 9.9% 13.4% Hard to say East South Private ownership is acceptable only on a small scale for those who themselves cultivate land 6.1% 10.2% 8.0% Other Private ownership should be free of any limitations Centre West 32.5% 39.2% 28.0% 10.2% 7.8% 7.8% 14.1% 14.7% 12.5% 34.2% 24.8% 25.7% 35.1% 37.2% 39.1% UKRAINE 5059 42.6% 26.6 12.3% 8.1% 1.4% 9.0% 60 and over City Village 34.7% 35.8% 41.6% Private ownership is acceptable only on a small scale for those who themselves cultivate land 34.7% 24.5% 23.0% Private ownership is acceptable only for Ukraine’s citizens 36.1% 40.3% 33.5% 35.6% 32.6% 25.7% 31.8% 25.0 18.7 5.6% 0.4% 14.7% 14.1% 15.9% 13.2% 10.2% 8.3% 6.7% 0.4% 0.9% 0.6% 5.9% 14.6% 14.9% • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 Private land ownership is totally unacceptable Private ownership should be free of any limitations Other Hard to say 13.9% 12.0% 11.0% 10.1% 6.7% 10.2% 0.2% 2.3% 0.8% 7.1% 13.0% 12.7% 2002 2009 2011 PUBLIC OPINION 8.6% 16.2% 17.0% Only farming land should be traded 15.7% 8.6% 7.0% Only small land parcels should be traded There should be unlimited trade in land Hard to say 3.7% 8.8% 7.7% 10.2% 8.8% 9.1% There should be no trade in land UKRAINE 24.8% 29.1% 24.0% 37.0% 28.5% 35.2% Should free land purchase and sale be introduced in Ukraine? % of those polled Only nonfarming land should be traded 2001 16.8% 24.8% 32.8% 21.5% 23.8% 23.0% Only small land parcels should be traded 13.1% 9.9% 6.9% 24.8% 11.0% 12.8% 15.6% 9.1% 6.2% There should be unlimited trade in land 12.6% 15.8% 25.4% 31.0% 20.4% Only small land parcels should be traded Only farming land should be traded 9.4% 3.6% 10.4% 6.7% 6.6% 15.7% Only nonfarming land should be traded 2.2% 10.5% 7.0% 12.7% 6.6% 8.8% There should be unlimited trade in land 12.1% 7.8% 3.5% 9.0% Hard to say 43.8% 31.3% 41.6% There should be no trade in land 9.3% 5.0% 6.2% 3.2% 8.4% 6.2% Only nonfarming land should be traded 9.9% 21.2% 18.3% 38.0% 22.8% 18.0% 23.0% 40.6% 34.3% 9.7% 15.5% 10.5% Only farming land should be traded East South 41.0% 30.6% 38.3% There should be no trade in land 4.5% 7.8% 5.4% 2011 Centre West 30.9% 25.3% 23.8% 2009 10.3% 18.4% 17.0% 7.1% 15.8% 17.1% Hard to say 2001 2009 2011 % of those polled, dependent on the attitude to private land ownership TYPE OF SETTLEMENT Should there be private land ownership in Ukraine? There should be trade only in small land parcels Yes There should be no trade in land Only small land parcels should be traded Only farming land should be traded Only nonfarming land should be traded There should be unlimited trade in land 14.2 Hard to say 14.9 27.0% 82.1% 5.0% 34.4% 4.6% 6.9% 8.8% 2.3% 10.9% 1.2% 0.8% 5.2% 8.7% AGE 1829 There should be no trade in land Only small land parcels should be traded Only farming land should be traded Only nonfarming land should be traded There should be unlimited trade in land Hard to say 29.2% 26.8% 3039 4049 30.5% 27.1% 34.5% 29.1% 5059 60 and over 37.4% 22.9% 42.6% 16.8% 8.5% 8.4% 8.1% 10.3% 7.6% 6.6% 8.1% 8.7% 7.5% 7.4% 9.2% 7.8% 6.4% 5.1% 20.5 18.2 12.4% Village No 37.9% 19.7% 15.4 City 14.3% 10.1% 34.4% 27.1% 35.5% 26.7% 30.9% 24.4% Only small land parcels should be traded 11.0% 8.1% 9.5% Only farming land should be traded 3.2% 9.3% Only nonfarming land should be traded 6.7% 16.3% 9.5% 5.7% There should be unlimited trade in land 8.4% 15.1% 18.2% 20.2% 24.7% 23.1% 8.1% 10.5% 8.4% 4.8% 7.7% 10.2% 14.3% 6.6% 9.9% 9.5% 18.8% 13.9% Hard to say 17.9% 2001 RAZUMKOV CENTRE 43.1% 31.7% 34.5% There should be no trade in land 2009 2011 • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 35 LAND MARKET AND CADASTRE REGISTRATION SYSTEM Did you have to get from agencies in charge of land resources or their divisions a deed of private land ownership, register a lease, obtain a certificate of a land parcel value, other documents and certificates over the past 10 years? % of those polled Did you personally have to get documents or certificates proving your title to immovable property (a building, an apartment, etc.) from the Bureau of Technical Inventory (BTI) over the past 10 years? % of those polled No 66.8% No 71.1% Yes 27.7% Yes 22.6% Do not remember, no answer 6.3% If so, how much time did it take? % of those who obtained certificates or documents from BTI If so, how much time did it take? % of those who obtained a deed 1.7% Two day 1.2% From 3 to 7 days 3.4% 0.0% 1.3% 8.4% 6.7% 26.4% From several months to a year 2.1% 2.5% 4.7% From 16 days to a month 10.3% 30.8% 10.4% 7.5% No overpayment From several months to a year One day 2.0% Two day 7.4% 15.7% 6.9% More than a year 6.2% Do not remember, no answer 6.1% 14.5% 31.0% 3.1% 2.1% Two day 3.1% From 3 to 7 days 20.0% 29.7% From several months to a year 3.5% 15.4% More than a year 5.1% Do not remember, no answer 9.5% 44.9% 14.4% 23 months 26.8% 15.5% 2.4% 6.2% From 8 to 15 days From 16 days to a month 8.8% 21.8% Overpayment One day 23.6% 13.8% Nothing in excess of envisaged by the law 3.0% What sum of money did you have to spend in excess of that envisaged by the effective legislation when getting documents or certificates? % of those who obtained certificates or documents from BTI 50.9% Nothing in excess of envisaged by the law Overpaid up to 50 hryvnias 3.4% Overpaid up to 50 hryvnias From 51 to 100 hryvnias 4.2% From 51 to 100 hryvnias 4.7% From 101 to 200 hryvnias 3.8% From 101 to 200 hryvnias 4.1% From 201 to 500 hryvnias 4.6% 3.4% From 201 to 500 hryvnias 3.8% From 501 to 1,000 hryvnias 6.8% From 501 to 1,000 hryvnias 3.5% From 1,001 to 5,000 hryvnias 4.9% From 1,001 to 5,000 hryvnias 3.3% Over 5,000 hryvnias I had to overpay in excess of the established norm but do not remember the exact amount 1.1% 9.7% I do not remember if I had to overpay No answer 5.1% 1.8% 12.3% 6.3% What sum of money did you have to spend in excess of that envisaged by the effective legislation when getting documents or certificates? % of those who obtained a deed 36 17.9% 3.6% 11.2% 11.6% 6.3% From several months to a year 24.0% 33.7% 21.7% No overpayment 23 months 26.5% 17.3% 8.4% 4.4% 0.6% From 8 to 15 days From 16 days to a month 8.7% 24.0% 11.8% 2.3% From 3 to 7 days 14.8% % of those polled, depended on overpayment for getting deeds Overpayment 2.0% 7.7% 26.0% Do not remember, no answer 3.7% 1.5% 21.7% % of those polled, depended on overpayment for getting deeds 9.3% 2.0% 8.6% 12.6% More than a year 13.6% 10.5% 8.4% 23 months 30.8% 15.1% 11.9% Do not remember, no answer Two day From 8 to 15 days 22.3% 22.5% More than a year Village 1.9% 4.7% 18.1% 14.4% 23 months City 1.8% From 3 to 7 days 1.4% 10.5% 7.7% From 8 to 15 days From 16 days to a month UKRAINE One day Village City UKRAINE One day Do not remember, no answer 5.5% 16.0% Over 5,000 hryvnias I had to overpay in excess of the established norm but do not remember the exact amount 0.1% I do not remember if I had to overpay 0.6% • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 No answer 0.4% 12.2% 13.6% PUBLIC OPINION Did you have to get from bodies of justice and their divisions (including notary offices) documents, certificates, etc. proving your title to immovable property, including inherited, over the past 10 years? % of those polled If so, how much time did it take? % of those polled, depended on overpayment for getting deeds Did not overpay One day 12.8% Two day No 76.2% 4.8% From 3 to 7 days 17.6% From 8 to 15 days 12.2% From 16 days to a month Do not remember, no answer Yes 17.5% 17.6% 23 months 18.6% 6.3% From several months to a year If so, how much time did it take? % of those who obtained certificates or documents at bodies of justice UKRAINE One day Two day 9.3% From 3 to 7 days 13.2% From 8 to 15 days 13.3% 14.6% From 16 days to a month 18.1% 23 months 18.0% From several months to a year More than a year Do not remember, no answer 8.0% 12.5% 5.6% 17.7% 24.2% 14.5% 4.8% 12.0% 13.8% What sum of money did you have to spend in excess of that envisaged by the effective legislation when getting documents or certificates? % of those who obtained certificates or documents at bodies of justice 1.7% 7.8% From 8 to 15 days 16.5% From 16 days to a month 22.6% 23 months 20.0% 12.2% From several months to a year More than a year 7.0% Do not remember, no answer 7.0% Where would it be better to organise registration of land parcels and title to immovable property? % of all those polled At the State Committee for Land Resources and its divisions Nothing in excess of envisaged by the law Overpaid up to 50 hryvnias 5.2% From 3 to 7 days 10.5% 14.6% 4.9% 4.9% One day Two day 18.1% 4.4% 6.3% Overpaid 1.6% 17.7% 3.7% Do not remember, no answer 7.3% 4.4% 3.4% More than a year Village City 8.6% 6.4% 54.0% 2.0% From 51 to 100 hryvnias 4.4% From 101 to 200 hryvnias 4.8% From 201 to 500 hryvnias 4.2% From 501 to 1,000 hryvnias 4.0% At the Ministry of Justice and its divisions 17.0% 6.8% At another state institution combining those registers 19.4% 24.8% I do not care about it No answer From 1,001 to 5,000 hryvnias 1.8% Over 5,000 hryvnias 0.0% I had to overpay in excess of the established norm but do not remember the exact amount 11.9% I do not remember if I had to overpay 12.1% No answer 0.8% RAZUMKOV CENTRE 32.0% % of those who had to execute documents of title to land or immovable property At the State Committee for Land Resources and its divisions At the Ministry of Justice and its divisions 22.9% 10.1% At another state institution combining those registers I do not care about it No answer 25.6% 12.0% 29.4% • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 37 ЗАОЧНИЙ КРУГЛИЙ СТІЛ STATE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE: EXPERT OPINIONS* THE MAIN QUESTION LIES NOT AS MUCH IN THE NUMBER OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS AS IN THE PROCEDURE OF THEIR FILLING AND OPERATION Valeriy BEVZENKO, National Deputy of Ukraine On February 11, 2010, the Verkhovna Rada set out the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Encumbrances” in a new wording. The Law took functions of state registration of title to land parcels from the bodies in charge of land resources and assigned them to judiciary bodies. This step is now denounced by critics saying that separation of the functions of state registration of land parcels and state registration of title to them is inadmissible. Such criticism may be accepted only partially. First of all, one should look at the reasons for the adoption of that Law. It is no secret that the present procedure of land title certification is extremely complex and gathered many corrupt mechanisms. Sometimes the time gap between the decision of a land parcel allotment and issue of a state deed for it is measured in years. One of the reasons for that is that the bodies in charge of land resources have long performed inorganic functions. Due to their almost exceptional concentration on issuing the state deeds for many years, activities of creation of a quality planning-cartographic basis of the State Land Cadastre (SLC), development of norms in the field of land management, land planning on the national and regional levels were too slow or not performed at all. The inability of the bodies of land resources to properly perform functions of state registration of ownership rights to land parcels is also witnessed by the fact that for more than five years, actually nothing has been done to implement the Law in its previous wording. Formally, it may be said that in that period, no title was registered with full legitimacy. At that, it is absolutely inadmissible that neglect of legislative requirements was actually authorised by the central executive body in charge of land resources. Such situation would persist even now, if said Law were not set out in the new wording. We may long discuss which model of state registration of ownership rights to land parcels is more impeccable, analyse foreign experience, but one should agree that at present, separation of the functions of registration of emergence of immovable property and registration of the rights to it among several state bodies is the most acceptable option for Ukraine. It will help promptly get off the ground the process of creation of an information system containing data of the rights to immovable property registered in the country. One should keep in mind that the Ministry of Justice now keeps more than a dozen state registers that were promptly created and have been successfully operated for a long time. Beyond doubt, in 2012, the same will be said about State Register of ownership rights to immovable property. I would also like to say to the opponents of this position that generally speaking, the main question in the field of land title execution lies not as much in the number of information systems engaged in such execution as in the procedure of their filling and operation. It may be said for sure that in case of establishment of a good mechanism of interaction between the SLC and the State Register of ownership rights to immovable property ruling out duplication of functions and providing for their prompts input with the necessary information, exchange of that information and creating no problems with the exercise of rights by the actors of land relations, the question will be resolved by itself. The mechanism of such interaction is proposed in the Bill “On State Land Cadastre” registered in the Verkhovna Rada and in general terms looks as follows. The Bill suggests a change of the very essence of state registration of a land parcel. Today, state registration of a land parcel pursues two functions at a time: state authorisation of emergence of a land parcel as an item of immovable property, and state recognition of ownership right of a certain person to it. What is bad about that system is that state registration of a land parcel is performed at every transaction with it. As a result, execution of deeds involving land parcels requires much time, which strongly affects the rights and interests of actors of land relations. That is why it is proposed to reduce the procedure of state registration of a land parcel to mere input of data of the land parcel features to the SLC. At that, by contrast to the present situation, state registration of an emerging (“new”) land parcel during its allotment out of the state/municipal lands will be performed not after but before the authorised body’s decision of its allotment. It should be noted that today, it is sometimes hard to understand the actual location of the land parcel from the text of such decisions (only the area and administrative-territorial unit are specified). In case of adoption of the Bill, a land parcel may be allocated in ownership/ use only after designation of its boundaries in kind (on ground) and assignment of the respective cadastral number to it. After the state registration of a land parcel (or amendment of its data), the body in charge of land resources is to send to the body in charge of state registration of rights a cadastral plan of the land parcel in an electronic format. The cadastral plan will be entered in the Register’s section containing data of immovable property. In its turn, the body in charge of ownership rights registration will after registration of the right to land parcel ownership/use send information of the registered right to the SLC. That information will be an element of the Land Book data and be used for state control of land use and protection, land management, collection of the land tax, etc. It should be particularly stressed that such interaction is to be fully automated, without interference of land parcel owners and users. * A remote Round-table was held on April 1-29, 2011. The panellist reports are presented in the alphabetic order. The remote Round-table participants included co-authors of the Bill “On State Land Cadastre” (reg. No.8077 of February 4, 2011) Ukrainian MPs Bevzenko and Tkach. 38 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 EXPERT OPINIONS In the result of the system introduction, state deeds of the right of land parcel ownership will no longer be necessary. That is why the Bill provides for their cancellation from 2013. Meanwhile, state deeds issued before that time pursuant to Part 4, Article 3 of the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property” will remain valid. When drafting the Bill, we also took into account that people did not want to part with stereotypes. An owner wants to have a material proof of state recognition of his rights specifying the parcel boundaries. Such document will be presented by an SLC extract of a land parcel made of two parts. The first will contain all relevant data of the land parcel, the second – the land parcel’s cadastral plan. Such an extract may be obtained any time even after state registration of the parcel. By contrast to the state deed, the information specified in an extract will always be relevant. At that, to simplify the procedure of execution of deeds involving land parcels, the functions of issue of such extracts are vested not only in the bodies in charge of land resources but also in notaries. In its turn, the ownership right to a land parcel is proposed to be certified with a certificate of state registration of a land parcel issued by the body in charge of state registration of ownership rights to immovable property. Years of experience of state registration of other immovable property in Ukraine prove that the procedure of such registration is rather simple and short. There are fears that the proposed mechanism will make individuals and legal entities to apply for legalisation of their right to land parcels to two bodies. It should be noted that persons will have to apply to those bodies only once – at the stage of the parcel emergence (in most cases – at the stage of its free privatisation). After that, all agreements of purchase and sale (lease, easement, emphyteusis, superficies) will be made without the State Agency for Land Resources involvement. That body will get the information it needs from the State Registration Service by means of electronic data exchange, not involving the land owner/user, who will pay no extra fee for that. On behalf of the Bill authors, I dare say: we are sure that the proposed mechanism, if supported by Parliament, will be introduced. What gives us hope is the fact that during the Bill development, for the first time in many years, the State Agency for Land Resources and the Ministry of Justice reached practical agreement about the mechanisms of interaction between the two information systems maintained by those bodies. STATE LAND CADASTRE IN UKRAINE: THE STATE AND PROSPECTS Mykola KALYUZHNYI, Deputy Head of the State Agency for Land Resources of Ukraine Today, the subject of creation and maintenance of state registration of land parcels and rights to them as an element of the State Land Cadastre (SLC) is among the most disputable and publicised. Such registration is important for the exercise of the state function of ownership right protection, is a factor of guarantee of such protection, official recognition and legal provision of the rights of owners – individuals and legal entities – to immovable property. Meanwhile, Ukraine, despite a relevant programme adopted yet in 1997, in fact still has no integral automated system for registration of rights to immovable property. One cannot say that it was not created. For instance, in pursuance of that programme, RAZUMKOV CENTRE in the year of its approval, the State Land Cadastre Centre under the State Committee for Land Resources was established, tasked to create and maintain the SLC automated system and the land registration system. For that: a system of registration bodies was created, including 557 registration offices designed to serve 665 registration districts; registrars were trained; the offices were provided with the necessary hardware and software; a corporate network for data transmission from local registration offices to the central office was built. However, due to the lack of budget funding the Programme was not fully implemented. It was to be funded at the expense of the land tax proceeds transferred to a special budget account of the State Committee for Land Resources, as envisaged by Article 21 of the Law “On Payment for Land”. However, the Law on the state budget used to suspend that Article every year. Since in the present conditions, electronic format of land cadastre databases alone can ensure effective registration of land parcels and rights to them, the State Committee for Land Resources developed and introduced uniform requirements to the structure, content and format of a file for exchange of data on the results of land planning activities in the electronic format on magnetic carriers. Generally, the exchange file content is formed on the basis of the data contained in hard documents drawn up by the effecters and includes information: on the results and effecters of land planning and valuation activities; topographic and geodetic works; on actors of land relations and rights to land parcels; on restrictions on the use of land parcels, cultivated areas, etc. Protection may be enhanced with such elements as electronic digital signature and data of the persons responsible for the exchange file data generation. In July, 2004, the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Limitations” was adopted. It provided for the creation and operation of a single State Register of rights in Ukraine relying on state accounting of land parcels of all ownership forms and other immovable property located on them, registration of ownership rights to immovable property, their limitations and deeds concerning immovable property. Pursuant to Article 5 of the Law, the State Committee for Land Resources was appointed the State Register’s holder, the State Land Cadastre Centre – its administrator. However, although the Law laid down legal fundamentals for operation of the system of registration of ownership rights to immovable property, it was never put into life. One of the reasons for that was presented by the long interagency dispute of institutional subordination of the system of registration of ownership rights to immovable property that effectively obstructed implementation of the Law. • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 39 STATE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE With adoption of its new wording in February, 2010, the situation with state registration of immovable property substantially changed, since the Law provided that from January 1, 2012, the State Register of ownership rights to immovable property would be maintained by the Ministry of Justice. The transfer of the immovable property title registration function to the Ministry of Justice raised a number of questions concerning the relations between the State Register of land parcels and the State Register of ownership rights to immovable property. In particular, in 2011, regulatory documents on information exchange between those systems, protection of their databases, etc. should be adopted. Meanwhile, the State Committee for Land Resources (from December, 2010 – the State Agency for Land Resources) continues to improve SLC maintenance, including land parcel registration. In particular, on January 1, 2011, the Government’s Resolutions “On Approval of the Procedures of Keeping the Land Book and the Log of State Registration of State Deeds of the Right of Ownership to Land Parcel and the Right to Permanent Use of Land Parcel, Land Lease Agreements” and “On Approval of Temporary Procedure of Assignment of Cadastral Number to Land Parcel” entered into effect, assigning the functions of registration of land parcels and rights to them to territorial bodies of the State Committee for Land Resources. In particular, the resolutions removed the collision in the effective legislation concerning a mark on the state deed of land parcel alienation and specified the procedure of cadastral number assignment to land parcels. In 2010, the State Committee for Land Resources was preparing implementation of said resolutions, namely: • drafted governmental resolutions “On Introduction of Amendments to Some Resolutions of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine” and “Some Issues of Provision of Paid Services in the System of the State Committee for Land Resources”, providing for substantial simplification of the procedure of registration of land parcels and title to them by the principle of “one stop”, harmonisation of the fee for specific works (services) with the effective legislation on the basis of economically sound indices; • performed inventory and transferred to territorial bodies of land resources 103.8 thousand registration logs, 6.8 million Land Books and 285 thousand sets of unissued state deeds of ownership rights to land parcels; • trained 1,380 experts of territorial bodies of land resources in charge of the state land register maintenance; • provided registrar workplaces in 645 territorial bodies of the State Committee for Land Resources with the necessary equipment and specialised software; • arranged specialised cartographic materials in the electronic format: index cadastral maps of 57.4 thousand cadastral areas and 379 thousand cadastral quarters and the primary planning-cartographic basis for the whole of Ukraine’s territory; • computer equipment of territorial bodies of the State Committee for Land Resources was connected to the data transmission network by telecommunications means. As of January 1, 2011, the State Register of rights to land and immovable property registered 15.92 million documents certifying rights to land parcels. In that: • 15.42 million state deeds of the right of land parcel ownership issued to individuals; 77 thousand deeds issued to legal entities; • 423.9 thousand state deeds of the right to permanent use of land parcel. • The State Land Cadastre’s automated system database stores data of 10.01 million land parcels. Today, territorial bodies of the State Agency for Land Resources perform procedures of the state land register maintenance in line with the effective legislation. What is especially important is that 40 the single system of cadastral number assignment to land parcels is being improved, resting on index cadastral maps developed for the whole of Ukraine’s territory. Meanwhile, adoption of the Law “On State Land Cadastre” remains on the agenda – the relevant bill is under review in the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine now. According to the world experience summed up and spread by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe, services of cadastral recording and registration of rights to immovable property are of fundamental importance for the land and immovable property market functioning. The publication “Land resources management in the UN ECE region: development trends and main principles” stresses that every country should create and ensure operation of the system within its own social, economic and cultural environment, since every country has its unique history and experience. According to the Commission, the experience of creation of national cadastral accounting systems witnesses, first, the advantage of framework laws over laws overburdened with technical details. Second, “the right to protection of private life” should be guaranteed. Cadastral data should be protected and at the same time accessible for users. The cadastre system should take into account the need to ensure equilibrium between the right to information and the right to personal data protection. We hope that the review of the Bill “On State Land Cadastre” in the Verkhovna Rada Committees and at plenary sittings will enable drafting and adoption of a clear, brief and efficient law on the state land cadastre development and maintenance. STATE LAND CADASTRE AND REGISTRATION OF TITLE TO IMMOVABLE PROPERTY: JOINTLY OR SEPARATELY? Volodymyr RYBAK, Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Committee for Construction, Urban Development and Housing and Utilities Sector and Regional Policy With emergence of the right of private land ownership, Ukraine faced the uneasy task of creating the state land cadastre and the system of state registration of rights to immovable property and their encumbrances, necessary both for the state and for land owners. Introduction of the modern land cadastre and registration system is conditional upon the development and adoption of the relevant legislative and regulatory acts relying on the good world practice to establish legal, economic and organisational fundamentals of the state land cadastre maintenance and state registration of ownership and other rights in order to provide for identification of land parcels and recognition and state protection of title to them, create conditions for the immovable property market operation, etc. With the adoption of the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Encumbrances” in 2004 it was expected that such registration would be performed in the state land cadastre (SLC). This approach alone could enable implementation of the model of “one stop” servicing individuals and legal entities. It was planned to create a single cadastre of land parcels and immovable property, i.e., a model where one database contains information both of land parcels and of buildings and structures (their portions) located on them. • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 EXPERT OPINIONS Implementation of that model would make it possible to escape the problem of maintaining two parallel information systems, namely: the SLC system (maintained by the State Committee for Land Resources bodies), and information of buildings and structures (offices of the Bureau of Technical Inventory, BTI), and concentrate all data of land parcels and immovable property in one cadastral system with an integrated database. The bulk of information of buildings and structures was generated in course of cadastral surveys and only part of information was provided by BTI offices. CADASTRE AND REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE: PROSPECTS OF COEXISTENCE The necessity of such approach to the cadastral database formation is conditioned by many factors, including the world experience, since a land parcel and buildings and structures on it make a single property complex as one item immovable property and one (in most cases) legal object. Instead, the Verkhovna Rada in February, 2010, adopted a Law setting the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Encumbrances” in a new wording, changing approaches to the system of state registration of title to immovable property and their encumbrances, and henceforth, to the SLC system creation. Analysis of provisions of that Law (in the new wording) and the Bill “On State Land Cadastre” registered in the Verkhovna Rada prompts the following conclusions. Bodies of the State Committee for Land Resources, as owners of the State Register of Land Parcels, will provide for the state land cadastre maintenance and state registration of land parcels, to be certified with an extract from the State Land Cadastre of state registration of a land parcel, containing all data of a land parcel entered in the Land Book, including the land parcel cadastral plan. Bodies of the Ministry of Justice, as the holder of the State Register of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property, will maintain the single state information registration system containing data of rights to immovable property, their encumbrances, objects and subjects of those rights, and registration of rights proper will be certified with an extract of registered rights and/or their encumbrances from the State Register of rights. Such approach does not meet people’s interests, since an individual first has to “bow” to the State Committee for Land Resources bodies to get an extract of state registration of a land parcel, and then to the Ministry of Justice bodies to have the right to a land parcel certified and to get an extract of registration of title to a land parcel. It should also be noted that the cancellation of state deeds of the right of ownership of land parcels envisaged by the Bill will inevitably make people to apply for registration of their land parcels, for which, state deeds have already been issued to them, to the State Register of Land and the State Register of Rights. I suggest that double registration of land parcels and the title to them at the expense of citizen is inadmissible. If the state changes the rules of registration of land parcels and ownership rights to such land parcels, it must not harm citizens, on the contrary – creating the system of SLC, state registration of land parcels and the State Register of rights with new rules, one should care about protection of the citizens’ right to land. Roman TKACH, National Deputy of Ukraine Today, Ukraine found itself in a paradoxical situation whereby private ownership is recognised in the country, immovable property exists, both official and grey markets of immovable property flourish but there is no cadastre or register to guarantee owner rights. The state of the land cadastre maintenance is absolutely unsatisfactory. The State Committee for Land Resources, trying to introduce automated maintenance of the state land cadastre since 1993, unfortunately, did not succeed in that. It failed to perform the programme of creation of an automated system of the state land cadastre maintenance for 1998-2005. The main task of the State Land Cadastre Centre was to perform state registration of land parcels in the so-called State Register of Lands, made up of two parts: the Log of registration of state deeds of the right of ownership of land and the right of permanent use of land, land lease agreements, and the Land Book, containing data of land parcels. Contrary to its name – the State Register of Lands, today, registered are not land parcels but documents certifying the right of land parcel ownership or use. One should also keep in mind that paper registers are kept by local bodies of the State Committee for Land Resources, while electronic ones by the State Land Cadastre (SLC) Centres. Data of the State Register of Lands are not public. The automated SLC system is only in the making. Its elements are localised (active only on the city and district level), not integrated in one network, and contain information only about formalised land parcels. In terms of provision of land owner rights, registration in the State Register of Lands is not decisive, does not guarantee the title to a land parcel and is performed mainly for accounting of the land size and distribution among owners. Registration of rights to various items of immovable property is performed by different bodies in different databases (rights to land parcels are registered by bodies in charge of land resources; ownership rights to immovable property located on land parcels – by Bureaus of Technical Inventory; injunctions of alienation, detachments and mortgage of immovable property – by notaries). After the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Encumbrances” enters into force on January 1, 2012, registration of all those rights in Ukraine is to be performed in one register. In such conditions, the importance of adoption of the Law “On State Land Cadastre” can hardly be overestimated. Ukraine remained the only the post-Soviet state where the land cadastre is not legislatively regulated.1 At that, one should not forget that adoption of the law does not mean creation of the land cadastre as such yet. The main goal of adoption of the Law on SLC is to create the 1 E.g., in Belarus, the state land cadastre has long been in use, thanks to the World Bank’s assistance. Meanwhile, Ukraine cannot even use funds of the World Bank’s special loan under the project “Rural Land Titling and Cadastre Development” due to the absence of the relevant law. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 41 STATE REGISTRATION SYSTEM IN UKRAINE legal framework for the land cadastral activity, state land cadastre maintenance, provide public access to the system, produce an effective mechanism of state management of land resources, rational use and protection of lands, development of the land market and improvement of the land taxation system. but the Bill provides a clear procedure of the systems’ interaction and enables automatic data exchange without special requests or inquiries. The practicability of such interaction will be ensured by the uniform legal norms of the cadastre and the single register, and interdependence of the two systems. As we know, in February, 2011, a new Bill “On State Land Cadastre” was submitted to Parliament. The Bill has been endorsed by the concerned Committee, got positive conclusions of other Committees and expert praises. Proposing exactly such a system, we also took into account the following. When designing the bill concept, it was necessary to avoid confrontation of positions on such basic norms as: • arrangement of the cadastral registration system (i.e., a single or two-component system); • identification of the entities empowered to maintain the land cadastre (i.e., only the bodies in charge of land resources, or, maybe, the land cadastre maintenance on the local level should be assigned to village, settlement, and city councils). The Law on SLC passed by Parliament in 2007 solved those issues in favour of creation of a two-component cadastre registration system and engagement of basic local self-government bodies in the land cadastre maintenance on the local level. These were the main reasons for the President’s veto, since he suggested that the land cadastre and the state register of ownership rights to immovable property should make one system and the land cadastre should be kept by one entity – a central executive body in charge of land resources. The new bill conceptually provided that the land cadastre was an information system separated from the state register of ownership rights to immovable property, and the function of the land cadastre maintenance was vested in the bodies in charge of land resources. Let us dwell upon the reasons for that stand in more detail, since this is decisive for subject discussion. Working on the Bill, we proceeded from the assumption that the SLC should not contain a single register of ownership rights to immovable property – since cadastres usually make focus on physical properties of land (e.g., specifying the form, size, coordinates, boundaries, valuation, soil quality, pollution, existing structures, plantations, etc.), while title registration systems focus on its legal properties (e.g., rights to parcels, third party claims to them and encumbrances imposed). For instance, the size, location, and owner (user) of a land parcel remaining the same, its target purpose, pecuniary valuation and other properties may often change. This especially refers to the pecuniary valuation of a land parcel whose size depends on construction of new infrastructure facilities (roads, communications, etc.) to (or near) the parcel, accomplishment of the territory making its location more beneficial, and the market situation. If those data are entered in the State Register of Rights, it will need to be changed almost every year. All this makes said register unstable, and the main thing – the mentioned additional data do not influence the nature of the land parcel owner (user) rights. And vice versa: land parcel properties staying the same, its owner may change, which has no effect on the land parcel but is important for the establishment of the title to it. As we know, a few years ago, the Law “On State Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Encumbrances” was adopted in Ukraine, whereby a single system of state registration of ownership rights to land parcels and other immovable property and their encumbrances was to be created within the SLC. The Law also provided that the rights would be registered in the SLC maintained by the central executive body in charge of land resources. However, the Law norms remained on paper. The State Committee for Land Resources, possessing all legal tools to create the register of land parcels and the register of rights to immovable property, has not managed to build an effective system, while the Ministry of Justice has created several other subordinate registers dealing with market circulation of property, including immovable property: the Register of ownership rights to immovable property, the Register of Legal Deeds, the Register of prohibitions of alienation of immovable property, and the Mortgage Register. The rationality of creation of a two-component system is also witnessed by shrinking space for corrupt abuses. The thing is that if the registration system were created as part of the land cadastre, the State Committee for Land Resources would unilaterally perform functions of transfer, execution, registration, control of use of all land parcels and other immovable property, which in present-day conditions involves strong corrupt risks for the system. Instead, division of those functions between different bodies of state power will enable introduction of mutual control to rule out abuses and mistakes, and will make the systems more open thanks to alternative sources of information. In view of the such circumstances and especially given the urgent need of creation of the cadastre registration system, introduction of a cadastre subordinate to the State Committee for Land Resources and a single register of rights subordinate to the Ministry of Justice seems the best solution. Quite possible, in some 10 years those systems may be united, in line with the current European trends, but now, creation of such united system is impracticable and unrealistic. I can only remind to the adherents of this idea that the rest of Europe has been moving towards such union for decades, and databases are being created and improved for centuries. Ukraine is still at the initial stage of that movement, and the main task now is to create a single system of registration of rights that would guarantee those rights, and a basic database. In case of adoption of the Bill on SLC in the proposed wording before June, 2011, one may expect the beginning of operation of those systems as soon as from 2012. The fact that the Bill’s provisions were coordinated with both the State Committee for Land Resources and the Ministry of Justice gives grounds to hope for true interaction of those state agencies, for both the cadastre and the registration system to work as interrelated automated systems. In other words, the cadastre guarantees the actual existence of the subject of a deal, while the registration system guarantees the rights to commence a deal. Clear thing, both cadastres and registration systems may deal with the same items – land parcels but the volume of identical information in them is minimal – the cadastral number, the owner’s name and the land parcel’s plan. The cadastre is to cover the whole territory of the country, contain data of all lands and their properties, while the registration system deals only with the items in circulation. Hence, the land cadastre components have a different legal nature and do not immediately deal with state registration of rights to immovable property. The main problem posed by the coexistence of the cadastre and the register is that those two systems are developing separately, 42 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 EXPERT OPINIONS TO DECIDE ON THE OBJECTIVES AND PRIORITIES OF THE STATE LAND POLICY AND REGAIN PROFESSIONALISM OF STATE LAND SERVICES limits their ability to manage the land parcels they own and to defend their rights. In course of 20 years of the land reform, the social status of village residents substantially deteriorated, adverse demographic processes accelerated, the food security declined. Meanwhile, it is already clear that the project “Issue of state deeds of the right of land ownership in rural areas and development of the cadastre system” intended for 2004-2012 and funded by the World Bank will not be implemented in full. Іhor YATSUK, Deputy Secretary of the National Security and Defence Council of Ukraine As a result, the country has not fully introduced the automated system of the state land cadastre maintenance and the system of maintenance the State Register of rights to immovable property and their encumbrances. The SLC system that worked well in the Soviet times even on paper carriers and ensured clear and perfect accounting of all land parcels without exception and their quality was actually destroyed. As a result, the state lost control of the national land resources, which used to be one of priority tasks of the state authorities of all levels and was strictly observed in the Soviet times. The land reform in Ukraine was started yet with the Supreme Council of the Ukrainian SSR Resolution of December 18, 1990 “On Land Reform”, whereby all lands of the Ukrainian SSR were subject to the land reform from March 15, 1991. The country entered the stage of development or, rather, creation of new land relations. Since then, dozens of regulatory acts have been adopted, including on the state land cadastre (SLC) creation and its gradual automation. The Programme of creation of an automated system of SLC maintenance for 1998-2005 was approved. However, due to lack of funding, it has never been fully implemented. Attempts of introducing an automated system of SLC maintenance neglecting the good practice gained before 1990 were doomed to failure with such personnel of the land service. Looking back, we see what a huge mistake we have made. One may say for sure that reliable and full information on land resources would have ensured weighty guaranteed proceeds to the state and local budgets at the expense of the land fees, and bodies in charge of land resources and local self-government bodies would have provided for rational land use and protection, prompt regulation of land relations, substantiation of the size of payment for the land, reformation of land relations and introduction of a regulated land market. The disastrous state of land relations (e.g., in the case of creation of an automated system of the land cadastre maintenance) will persist as long as black is called white in this country, and the key departments of the State Committee for Land Resources – in particular, of the state cadastre – are led by radio physicists and other persons who have no idea what is demanded form them, while licensing and expert examination of land planning documentation is performed by “specialists” without the required experience of work at land planning organisations. It seems that the Programme’s failure was not the last and the greatest drawback in the present land policy. Today, as well as in 1990, the state is undecided about the end goal of the land reform, objectives and priorities of the land policy. Instead of development and pursuance of a considerate longterm state land policy, those persons will mainly fulfil current assignments of leaders of the concerned political forces, in particular, for venal redistribution of the most plum lands. At some stage, redistribution of farming land through its sharing was declared its goal. Today, it is clear that that goal was wrong. Sharing resulted in emergence of great many land parcels with the average size a bit more than 4 hectares, unfit for efficient agriculture. The land structure optimisation remains obstructed by the moratorium on alienation of the bulk of farming lands. The unskilled provisional heads of the land bodies do not see land planning as a tool of implementation of the state land policy, and the state land cadastre only gives them convenient and safe means for corrupt deals. Apparently, redistribution of land as such (through privatisation, sharing, etc.) cannot be the reform’s goal. Instead, the main goal should have been formulated as enhancement of the efficiency of land use and protection. Therefore, reformation of ownership relations in agriculture produced no positive results, and the key elements of the production potential – land, fixed assets, labour resources – suffered deep ruination. Recently, the professionalism of the state land institutes’ personnel has substantially deteriorated in connection with political instability in the country. For instance, over the past four years the state land service has had five heads. The HR patchwork of arbitrary replacements of highly professional management of state bodies in charge of land resources is observed not only in the capital but also in the regions. The situation in the field of land relations, land use, land planning and land protection remains complicated and requires urgent improvement. It is necessary: • to complete formation of law-based land ownership relations; • to substantially enhance the efficiency of state management of land resources and land use, first of all, by formulating the objectives and priorities of the state land policy, the goal of land relations in the country; • to adopt a comprehensive approach to modernisation and expansion of the legislative framework in the field of land relations with clear forward-looking planning, in particular, to coordinate the land law with other spheres of legislation (civil, urban planning, etc.); • to introduce advanced technical means in the form of computer systems for state land cadastre maintenance, state registration of land parcels and immovable property going with them, and the rights to them. The legislative framework for cancellation of the moratorium on sale of farming land and creation of a fully-fledged land market has not been formed even now. Land agencies free of financial and legal liabilities dare behave increasingly venally. This, in turn, facilitates spread of corruption. Furthermore, bodies in charge of land resources several times unreasonably changed the forms of the title documents and the procedure of state land record maintenance, again, mainly at the expense of citizens’ pockets. The present system of registration of documents of title to land parcels causes dissatisfaction in the regions, leads to spread of cases of violation of constitutional rights and interests of citizens, RAZUMKOV CENTRE And most of all, the state land and associated services should regain the adequate professional level, introduce principles of responsibility and professional honour in their activity, bar involvement in corrupt schemes and deals. • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 43 A SYSTEM OF CADASTRE, OR A REGISTER OF TITLE? WHAT WE ARE CREATING, AND FOR WHOM Serhiy KUBAKH, Manager of the World Bank project “Rural Land Titling and Cadastre Development” F or the last 10 years, the system of recording of immovable property and the system of title registration in Ukraine were developing independent of each other, staying in the competences of different levels of governance and different agencies. Such structure does not meet the goals of development of the immovable property market and requires huge unreasonable expenses from both the state and immovable property owners. In 2004, the Law “On State Registration of Property Rights to Immovable Property and Their Limitations” united the system of recording of buildings, premises, and land plots, the system of registration of title, and the cartographic-geodetic component. However, due to inter-agency disputes, the Law was never implemented, and in February 2010 the Verkhovna Rada made amendments to it, providing for registration of title on the basis of cadastre maps. At that, the functions of state registration of land plots are vested in territorial bodies in charge of land resources, and of registration of title to immovable property – in justice agencies.1 As a result, a paradoxical situation arose: despite the development of civil turnover of immovable property, ownership rights to many immovable property facilities are still not registered. The Ukrainian state wastes time on discussions, and neglecting the national legislation and changing priorities, compromises its reputation in the eyes of own citizens and the international community. Present-day EU practice of creation of cadastre registration systems Land and real estate records in each country are kept since the dawn of land law relations, but the cadastre forms differ dependent on the national economic situation. However, most European countries where the system of immovable property records and registration was created not long ago opted for the creation of a single system, since exactly such systems are the most efficient for the time being. Other countries resort to cadastre reforms to bring cadastre registration systems to uniform standards, including, in particular: • maintenance of a system of registration of immovable property rights on the basis of records of land plots (a land plot and real estate are viewed as one piece of immovable property); • the title to land plots and immovable property is registered in the same Register of title; • the title is registered and cadastre maps are kept by the same institution; • registration of title is an administrative function (state registration of title should be separated from judicial and/or notary bodies); • the system’s services are mainly focused on the user; • the system of registration of title should be selfrepaying. All modern systems of registers are created on the basis of an index cadastre map. The cartographic technology used to make a cadastre may include up to 250 features of a land plot, providing the most cost-effective 1 This ran contrary to the World Bank requirements, since the extension of its loan for the Rural Land Titling and Cadastre Development project was conditioned by introduction of a single cadastre registration system in Ukraine, whereby the land cadastre maintenance and registration of the rights to land and other immovable property were to be vested in the same body under uniform rules. 44 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 A SYSTEM OF CADASTRE, OR A REGISTER OF TITLE? WHAT WE ARE CREATING, AND FOR WHOM and accurate means for immovable property description. Electronic data of the state land cadastre provide a platform for successful inter-agency cooperation at keeping urban, forest, water and other sectoral cadastres. Taken together, they produce a full and clear picture of the country’s resources, promote good governance and control. So, what should the cadastre registration system in Ukraine look like, to meet present-day requirements and principles of operation of similar systems in developed economies? The main criterion arouses no doubts: it should be efficient, i.e., accurate and reliable, focused on the EU REQUIREMENTS • a system for the identification and registration of payment The EU has no special legislation on registration of title to immovable property, neither does it have a model law or a set entitlements; of guiding principles of creation and operation of the system • aid applications; of registration of title to immovable property. However, some • an integrated control system; provisions may be interpreted as kind of minimum standards of creation of functional land markets. For instance, discussing the • a single system to record the identity of each farmer who conditions of new countries’ admission to the EU, the Council of submits an aid application. Europe notes: Therefore, the EU member states should introduce a land Membership requires that the candidate country has parcel identification system (LPIS) as an element of IACS in the achieved stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy, way chosen in their discretion. The technical requirements to LPIS the rule of law, human rights and respect for and protection are as follows: of minorities, the existence of a functioning market economy as well as the capacity to cope with competitive • information is to contain the identification number of the plot, pressure and market forces within the Union. Membership its area and use; presupposes the candidate’s ability to take on the • it should consistently cover the area under a single system; obligations of membership including adherence to the aims 2 • cartographic accuracy needs to be measured at a scale not of political, economic and monetary union. less than 1:10 000 with the maximum error of 1 metre afield Observers commenting on that provision add to it the point of on the basis of orthophotomaps; building functional (effective) land markets: • the system and its connection with the integrated system (GIS One of the key requirements of the… EU for accession Integrated Automated Control System) database are to ensure of Central European countries… is the establishment interconnection between graphic and digital databases and of free market economies which parallel the economies efficient use of graphic information in all procedures: mass in Western Europe based on the adoption of the Acquis spread of information among the population, administrative Communautaire… Central to this objective is the verifications with immediate transfer of all information, its use privatisation of lands and the establishment of efficient land by local bodies or on-site inspectors or operators of space markets .3 positioning control devices; Therefore, it may be assumed that correspondence to the EU • the system should be updated regularly: at least once a legislation means that a national system of registration of title year, on the basis of information obtained in the result of to immovable property is introduces so as not to obstruct the verification. Orthophotographs should be updated to ensure immovable property market operation. continuity in the general information quality. Generally, a fiveThe EU legislation contains more norms on creation of land year cycle is set out, but actual updating ranges from three cadastres, focusing on farming land. For instance, the member to seven or more years, dependent on the land use stability. states are to introduce geo-information systems on the basis of Therefore, apart from digital identification of land plots, the orthophotomaps to provide the basis for strict control of subsidies member states should prepare graphic identification of plots now, to agricultural producers, prepare the relevant register with the and the system should be automated. list of locations, features and applicable rights,4 introduce the Integrated Administration and Control System (IACS.)5 Pursuant At present, it remains unclear if the above requirements will to Article 4 of the Council of Europe Regulation No.3508/92 (for apply to the new EU member states not engaged in CAP. However, Central European countries): if a member state cannot introduce a land cadastre meeting the European requirements, its agricultural producers will probably not • the alphanumeric identification system for agricultural be entitled to direct support under CAP. parcels shall be established on the basis of land registry maps and documents, other cartographic references or of Note. The above-mentioned cadastre reforms and formulation aerial photographs or satellite pictures or other equivalent of requirements to modern cadastre registration systems take supporting references or on the basis of more than one of place in line with the Recommendations “Cadastre 2014. A vision these elements. for a future cadastral system”, worked out by a working group of International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) Commission 7 “A In 2003, the Council of Europe Regulation 1782/2003 amended vision of the cadastre”. The recommendations are continuously that provision by adding to that requirement the list of elements to amended and updated, witnessing that with the development of be included in IACS. Specifically (Article 18 of the Regulation): information technologies, methods of remote land probing and • a computerised database; global positioning, the cadastre and registration system should be improved. • an identification system for agricultural parcels; 2 European Council, Conclusions of the Presidency. – Copenhagen, June 1993, SN180/1/93 REV 1, p.14. T. Bogaerts, I.P. Williamson & E.M. Fendel, The Role of Land Administration in the Accession of Central European Countries to the European Union, (2001). R. Prosterman & L. Rolfes, Review of the Legal Basis for Agricultural Land Markets in Lithuania, Poland and Romania, in Structural Change in the Farming Sectors of Central and Eastern Europe, Second EU Accession Workshop in the Rural Sector, Warsaw, Poland, June 27-29, 1999. 4 J.M. Perez, Cadastre and the Reform of European Union’s Common Agricultural Policy: Implementation of the SIGPAC, Castastro 161, 162 (July 2005). 5 IACS is used for implementation of the EU Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). CAP covers many programmes of subsidies to agricultural producers. Some programmes envisage provision of direct assistance to producers on the basis of the cultivated area. IACS rests on the idea that the schemes/plans based on the area should involve the land plot identification system. See: Id.at 1656 Id.at 168. 3 RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 45 A SYSTEM OF CADASTRE, OR A REGISTER OF TITLE? WHAT WE ARE CREATING, AND FOR WHOM user, provide for his utmost convenience, promptness of servicing at minimum cost and, the main thing, trust-worthy. As regards the identification of the cadastre system and title register development strategy, one should begin with identification of the end goals of creation of the immovable property title registration system, and the goal of the State Land Cadastre. Only then can we discuss if the Ukrainian laws and bills meet them (and to what extent). Discussion of the final objectives can also help distinguish the goals of the Law on registration of rights to immovable property from the goals of the bill on the land cadastre. Should there be two systems? If so, how to harmonise those systems to avoid duplication of efforts either of state bodies, or of private persons? Registration of title to immovable property First, one should ask why the state is interested in registration of title to immovable property. Is its main goal to serve the interests of registered right owners and individuals eager to make transactions with immovable property? Will registration of title help the state to control relations in the field of immovable property or plan territorial development? In developed countries, registration of title to immovable property serves two interrelated tasks: (1) defends the rights of individuals to immovable property (rights of ownership, pledge and lease), and (2) helps during transfer of title to immovable property through sale, lease or inheritance, as well as the emergence of mortgage rights. Trade in immovable property is deemed useful both for individual citizens and entire society, since it enables transfer of immovable property to the persons willing and ready to invest in its improvement. Naturally, trade leads to an increase in the immovable property value, and immovable property becomes a reliable place to invest savings. With the development of the immovable property market, banks get an opportunity to set the market value of immovable property and accept immovable property as mortgage against loans. In that way owners may use immovable property as mortgage to acquire materials for its improvement (so raising its value), or may invest those funds in other production activity, which is especially important in agriculture. Mortgage lending performed in a community thousands of times for years can lead to the general increase in the living standards. This cannot be achieved without active and reliable markets of immovable property, and those markets depend on a reliable and accessible system of registration of title to immovable property.6 Therefore, protection of ownership and other rights promote trade in and mortgage of immovable property. So, the title registration system is at least to provide the following capabilities: 1) to identify land plot location and boundaries; 2) to identify the immovable property owner; 3) to identify the title to immovable property.7 Established procedures of registration of title to immovable property may be developed to make the process of transfer of title (or creation of new property because of property division or merger) cumbersome and expensive, or relatively simple and affordable. That is why the procedure design can speed up or slow down trade in immovable property. An efficient registration system should have the following features:8 • simplicity. The system should be simple in operation and easily understood by the public; it should have no unimportant information. People should clearly realise what for the system exists and what benefits it gives; • accuracy. It is important that the system contains accurate information and that the information is protected against unauthorised interference. An inaccurate register may pose more problems than it can resolve; • expedition. The system should be able to promptly process transactions. If it enables officials to delay transaction processing, this may undermine its public utility. More than that, a system enabling delay of input of a large body of transactions and at the same time leaving the officials an opportunity to speed up handling of some transactions will give room for corrupt acts; • cheapness. The system should be affordable and rest on the living standard of the population it serves. If registration processes are unreasonably costly, people will try to avoid formal registration of transfer of property rights, opting for informal methods whose application will expose the population to substantial risks which it may even not be able to assess, but in the result, a register of rights may be created that will not present the actual ownership of immovable property; • suitability to the circumstances. The system should meet the national conditions. It is inadmissible to implement a smart multifunctional database of immovable property in the environment where the national budget and the system users cannot afford to pay for its creation and maintenance. It is closely related with the issue of simplicity but also with that of measurement accuracy; • security. The system should guarantee that the registered owner is the legitimate owner of the land. This principle is not inherent in the system of registration of documents/deeds on the basis of which the title to immovable property is legally transferred. In the system of registration of title to property, the register’s tasks include verification of the presented documents for their sufficiency for the transfer of title to immovable property and the decision that registration is necessary and sufficient for establishment and termination of title to immovable property. Registration of title to immovable property gives the population many benefits – and it is the system used elsewhere in Europe. Its main drawback is that its creation is very costly, since it relies on measurement and mapping of all plot boundaries (at least the boundaries of all plots staying in private ownership) and settlement of disputes about the title to immovable property. 6 To be sure, an efficient system of registration of title to land by itself will not create an immovable property market, or a mortgage market. Individual trade in immovable property and financing of those transactions by lenders are influenced by the general level of the economy, preferences of citizens and lenders, possibilities for other investments, etc. However, an efficient system of registration of title to immovable property is really needed for full-scale development of the immovable property market. 7 S.R. Simpson, Land Law and Registration 16-17 (1976). 8 For the list, adapted and amended by Simpson, see id. at 17-18. 46 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 A SYSTEM OF CADASTRE, OR A REGISTER OF TITLE? WHAT WE ARE CREATING, AND FOR WHOM Land cadastre “Land cadastre” – the terms is used to denominate different types of land description systems. Land cadastres mainly contain the description of land plot location and boundaries but may also carry information about the land quality, land use and immovable property taxation. As a rule, they contain some data of the rights of land plot and constructions’ owners, but that information is mainly used for land plot identification rather than the complete description of rights. Where the land cadastre fully integrates the system of registration of title to immovable property, the term “legal cadastre” is used to describe the data contained in the system’s part used for the title registration. The main question here is how the establishment and maintenance of the land cadastre will be funded. What part of that work will the state subsidise from the budget, and how much will land owners pay? The greatest costs are associated with identification of plot locations, measurement of plot boundaries, identification of constructions’ location and size, development of land plot and constructions’ plans, as well as certification and registration of title to land plots not entered in the register of title to immovable property yet. As soon as the owner’s title to a land plot or constructions is registered in the system, further transactions with land and constructions should not be expensive. However, the initial work at generation and collection of spatial and legal information about land plots and immovable property will be long and expensive. No country managed to avoid this. It would be useful to examine the cost of creation and maintenance of separate elements of the state land cadastre. In particular, to compare (1) the costs related with data required by owners of title to immovable property and persons buying the title to immovable property, and (2) the costs related with data required by state bodies. The experience of cadastre operation proves that the bureaucratic community tends to collect and update unneeded information. Officials can easily order data collection since the relevant costs are born by others, especially the population. Every inquiry means a burden on the population, and the general effect from such inquiries may be ruinous. Collection of information gives a kind of work to officials, along with the sense of their authority. And as long as the population has to buy such data to present them to officials, the demand to present them will give extra work to such experts, sometimes satisfied with close relations with officers requesting information. That is why people tend to sceptically view any provisions regimenting presentation of information and demand substantiation of grounds for its collection. Hence, the cadastre is to provide the public with accurate and reliable data of land plots and immovable property, but the issue of the cadastre maintenance funding remains vital and topical since no cadastre system can work for free or only at the expense of payment for title registration. Ukrainian choice After the new Land Code entered into effect (on January 1, 2002), disputes arose between the Ministry of Justice and then State Committee for Land Resources as to which agency should care about registration of land ownership rights. On the one hand, the advantages RAZUMKOV CENTRE of creating a single body in charge of the cadastre and registration were advocated, on the other that approach was criticised, and it was proposed to separate those functions between different organisations. Such disputes should be solved by laws drawing the line in discussions. Finally, it was decided to create two systems: of registration of title to immovable property, and of the land cadastre, to be maintained, respectively, by the Ministry of Justice and the State Agency for Land Resources. However, creation of an efficient cadastre and registration system means a long-term state investment in the national economy infrastructure development. It does not matter who keeps registers. What matters is how to ensure the system integrity in the conditions of engagement of different institutions, provide for a high level of inter-agency cooperation, formalise data exchange, unite databases, integrate the accumulated information and avoid duplication. The question is not even how much shame Ukraine will bring on itself if it fails to introduce an efficient cadastre system. It will nullify actually everything that has been done over the past almost 11 years. A state unwilling to play by accepted rules, neglecting principles of economic coexistence, will hardly be adequately viewed by the international business community. The national investment policy will come to naught due to the absence of tools securing investor rights. The new wording of the Law “On Registration of Ownership Rights to Immovable Property and Their Encumbrances” (2010) specified that registration of title under the procedure it established would be started from January 1, 2012. That is, till that time, everything will stay the way it is now. However, time alone will show if a new system of registration of rights will be implemented, or the old system will be called new, or that deadline will be postponed, and if it will be efficient in terms of the above criteria. One thing is clear – to make a system, one should have a clear plan of action and resources, not change the strategy and priorities of achievement of the set goals. Since no optimal decision on creation of a single cadastre registration system was taken, one thing is obvious: without an efficient cadastre system there can be no efficient title registration system, and without efficient governance and exchange of data between those systems, there will be no state guarantees. So, a lean compromise is better than a fat lawsuit – a compromise will make it possible to get the matter of the ground and come to action. However, a positive result may be expected if those systems are efficient. To ensure their efficiency, the Government tasked the Ministry of Justice and the State Agency for Land Resources to coordinate efforts, their key element being, according to the World Bank recommendation, exchange of information between the systems. Those efforts should be started with adoption of the Law “On State Land Cadastre” recently submitted to Parliament, since that Law will finally lay down the legislative framework of the most important element of the land market infrastructure – the land cadastre. So, today, the land cadastre concept and fate depend on concerted and coordinated efforts of different agencies and, most of all, the political will. It is important that the search of a legislative compromise does not distort the land cadastre functions and goals. • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 47 PROSPECTS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT IN UKRAINE Andriy MARTYN, Doctoral candidate at the National University of Bio-Resources and Use of Nature of Ukraine C reation of an efficient land cadastre system is one of the key preconditions for steady development of land market relations, since exactly the land cadastre performs the task of accounting all land property units, on its basis the title to land parcels is effectively guaranteed, in the cadastre, land is evaluated for fiscal and regulatory purposes. However, at present, Ukraine has no integral land cadastre system providing an effective basis for regulation of the land relations, property valuation, registration of title to immovable property, monitoring and control in the field of use of nature, etc. Next to all cadastre elements are formed with serious difficulties, and the cadastre itself cannot be seen as a source of necessary, reliable and timely data on land resources. That is why it makes sense to consider the key problems of creation of the state land cadastre and formulate some proposals for their solution. Commercialisation of land cadastre procedures Land cadastre procedures involving maintenance of the state land register are performed by the State Land Cadastre Centre and its branches in the regions. The purpose of that commercial entity is to make profit. As a result, land cadastre procedures involving maintenance of the state land cadastre are commercialised and actually do not accomplish socially useful functions, being a burden for actors of land relations. That is why the main task of the state land cadastre (hereinafter – SLC) development should be to bar commercial institutions from cadastral procedures and conceptually refocus cadastral activity from profit-making to self-repayment, and to meet consumer demand for information on cadastral items. At the same time, it is highly important to ensure publicity and accessibility of cadastral plans and maps, as well as orthophotoplans and index maps created within the framework of the project “Issue of state deeds of the right of land ownership in rural areas and development of the cadastre system”,1 on the Internet – this will be the first step towards regular enhancement of the cadastral data quality and openness, since the long-lasting secrecy of cadastral data may be seen as one of the main preconditions for stockpiling untrue or unreliable geospatial data on land parcels in cadastral databases.2 Discretion of cadastral data A serious drawback of the present-day land cadastre system is presented by the discretion of cadastral data: as of the beginning of 2011, the state land register contains semantic and cartographic features of only some 11.7 million land parcels, or 46.6% of their total number (25.1 million). Therefore, the present land cadastre has signs of discretion – accounted are not 1 As of February 1, 2011, within the project framework aerial photography was performed on the area of 457.6 thousand km2 and orthophotomaps were created: to scale 1:10,000 – 380.1 thousand km2; 1:5,000 – 43.6 thousand km2; 1:2,000 – 7,300 km2. An index cadastral map of 186.3 thousand km2 was developed. 2 Only after the issue of the Security Service of Ukraine Order “On Approval of Amendments to the List of Data Constituting State Secret” No.755 of November 25, 2009, secrecy procedures with respect to geospatial information and accurate planning-cartographic materials were finally cancelled in Ukraine. 48 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 PROSPECTS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT IN UKRAINE all lands within Ukraine’s borders but only some land parcels. In fact, despite the formation of a new system of land relations in Ukraine, resting on the variety of land ownership forms, more than half of land parcels remains a kind of terra incognita for SLC. Registration of boundaries of every land parcel is performed irrespective of other land parcels. The axiom that a boundary always delimits two land parcels and presents their common attribute is actually ignored, every land parcel in Ukraine now has its own boundary, recorded and registered irrespective of the boundaries of adjacent land estates and tenures, and the requirement of “absence of overlapping and gaps” between adjacent parcels is met only for a limited number of parcels, data of which are collected in the State Land Cadastre Centre’s database. The complete uncertainty of the legal status of the data of the so-called SLC automated system (SLC AS) at the present stage does not allow us to deem “checks” performed by said Centre legally valid. Therefore, an important technical task is to move from discretion to continuity and integrity of geospatial data in SLC. Mutual coordination of boundaries of adjacent land parcels, administrativeterritorial units, and cadastral areas and quarters should become a fundamental principle of the cadastral system creation, not a “desired but unnecessary” result of its operation. Unaccomplished land inventory Fundamental improvement of the land cadastre data quality, and a decrease of the conflict potential of land relations in Ukraine are sometimes associated with land inventory, intended to answer the question about the present state of land estates and land tenures. Exactly the land inventory is hoped to raise land relations to a qualitatively new level, free of a number of systemic drawbacks of the present system of land resources management dealing with recognition and guarantee of rights to land. At the dawn of the land reform, land inventory was seen as the way to obtain primary data for land parcel allocation to citizens and keeping land records.3 In other words, the inventory was to provide for the creation of the “initial land cadastre”, making the basis for new cadastral plans (maps) with all cadastral items. However, complete land inventory has never been accomplished, first of all due to insufficient budget funding of the land reform measures in early 1990s. This fact, along with repeated attempts of administrative-command pushing of land privatisation,4 resulted in incompleteness and inaccuracy of SLC data. In fact, land parcels “appear” in the land cadastre following cadastral survey, involving fixation of their actual boundaries in kind (on ground). Therefore, continuity of land cadastre records can be provided only through regular inventory of stateowned land, in the present conditions called to ensure: 1) completeness of SLC data of all land parcels, cadastral areas and quarters, administrative-territorial units within Ukraine’s borders; 2) check of authenticity (validation) of the available semantic and cartographic data of land parcels, for which, the state has registered documents of title; 3) detection and registration of limitations on use of lands (territorial areas) around existing determinative sites. At that, the regulatory-legal basis of land inventory in Ukraine is highly flawed. For instance, the respective legislative norms are contained only in Article 35 of the Law “On Land Management” (2003). The key requirements to land cadastre inventory of lands in populated localities (cities, townships, villages) as an integral part of basic information for SLC maintenance are specified in the Regulations on land cadastre inventory of lands of populated localities approved by the State Committee for Land Resources Order No.85 of August 26, 1997. At present, said regulations no longer fully meet the effective legislation requirements. In fact, land cadastre data containing information on boundaries of land parcels, cultivated land, functional and territorial zones, cadastral areas and quarters, administrative-territorial units, are to pass the legislatively provided procedure of authenticity check. The present Ukrainian legislation does not specify the procedures enabling large-scale correction of mistakes in SLC, including in course of the land inventory. At that, one should keep in mind that “adjustment” of spatial features of land parcels involves not only correction of land parcel registration data but also reissuance of “incorrect” documents of title, adjustment of land parcel indices, reimbursement of losses to land owners and users, and prosecution of the persons who previously admitted inaccuracies in land planning, topographic and geodetic operations. Without legislative regulation of land inventory procedures, mistakes in SLC may be corrected by 3 See: Verkhovna Rada of the Ukrainian SSR Resolution “On Land Reform” No.563 of December 18, 1990 (Items 3, 4); Presidium of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Resolution “On Performance of Land Inventory in Suburban Areas of Cities” No.743-PV of December 4, 1995. 4 See, e.g.: Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Resolution “On Acceleration of the Land Reform and Privatisation of Land” No.2200 of March 13, 1992; CMU Decree “On Privatisation of Land Parcels” No.15 of December 26, 1992; President of Ukraine Decree “On Immediate Measures at Acceleration of the Land Reform in the Field of Agricultural Production” No.666 of November 10, 1994; CMU Resolution “Some Issues of Exercise of the Right to Land Ownership by Citizens of Ukraine” No.844 of August 5, 2009. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 49 PROSPECTS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT IN UKRAINE judicial procedure involving forensic examination, although it should also be noted that the Land Code (2001) provides a specific procedure (almost never applied in practice) of extrajudicial settlement of disputes about boundaries of land parcels owned or used by individuals, local self-government bodies and executive bodies in charge of land resources. Survey, topographic and geodetic operations during land inventory should be aimed solely at identification of coordinates of land planning sites’ locations, their boundaries and size.5 One should keep in mind that physical conduct of any works (including topographic and geodetic) on land parcels without their owners’ (users’) consent should be viewed as a breach of their right to inviolability of residence or other possession. Therefore, total land inventory, including of land parcels staying in private ownership/use, can be made today solely using information obtained by the Earth remote probing means. Problem of boundaries of administrativeterritorial units The problem of “legalisation” of the existing Ukrainian administrative-territorial system deserves special mention. There are mass “territorial claims” of populated localities to surrounding areas and vice versa, territorial disputes between districts and regions. That is why “binding” cadastral units to the administrativeterritorial system makes cadastre-registration system a “hostage” to territorial conflicts between local state administrations and local self-government bodies. Some 4 million hectares of territorial sea stay beyond cadastral zoning, while by its legal regime, it falls within Ukraine’s territory. One should realise that the problem of legalisation of the existing boundaries of administrative-territorial units in most cases involves a conflict of interests that cannot be effectively solves by various commissions and conciliatory bodies. That is why there is an urgent need to work out the legislation enabling settlement of “territorial conflicts” and ultimate delineation of administrative-territorial units, i.e., strict delimitation of jurisdictions of territorial governance bodies (boundaries of villages, townships, cities, city districts, districts, regions, the Autonomous Republic of Crimea.)6 An authorised executive body must be appointed to independently perform the arbitration function in territorial disputes and take the final decision on boundaries between administrative-territorial units. Maintenance form Despite the awareness that in the present conditions, only electronic land cadastre databases can ensure efficient processing and use of data on land resources, and in spite of the drive to computerisation and automation of land cadastre procedures, the land cadastre in Ukraine remains “on paper”. Automation of SLC maintenance is actually barred. The main reason for that lies in the above-mentioned total uncertainty of the legal status of land cadastre data “in the electronic form”: at present, no legislative act in Ukraine specifies the legal mode of АС SLC data and methods of their use in the law-enforcement practice. Data in “exchange files” (the basic information, on the basis of which the SLC database is formed) with the results of the accomplished land planning works accumulated on a paid basis by the State Land Cadastre Centre’s units since 2003 are legally void since, despite the adoption of the Laws “On Electronic Documents and Electronic Document Circulation” and “On Electronic Digital Signature” in 2003, exchange files never had digital signatures or a documentary status. Furthermore, establishment of boundaries of cadastral areas and quarters in Ukraine was rather irregular and chaotic. Only on January 1, 2011, the Government’s Resolution “On Identification of Immovable Property Items for State Registration of Rights to Them” No.1117 of December 8, 2010, ultimately introduced the Procedure of drawing and approval of index cadastral maps and cadastral plans of land parcels, requirements to their execution. That regulatory document set rather general requirements to the creation of index cadastral maps (plans), in particular, envisaged different procedures of their creation in the electronic and paper formats. The fate of the present cadastral zoning remains unclear, since, according to the State Committee for Land Resources, as of 2008, 56.5 thousand cadastral areas and 378 thousand quarters had been singled out in Ukraine, and in the previous years, those cadastral items were generated on the basis of recommendations given by the State Committee for Land Resources. Production of cadastral plans involves serious difficulties conditioned by the controversy of the effective regulatory-legal framework. In fact, in Ukraine it has long been impossible to produce a cadastral plan of a land parcel fully meeting the requirements of regulatory-legal acts. Land and branch cadastres The land cadastre should provide the fullyfledged basis for branch cadastres (urban, forest, water, of natural curative resources, natural resort territories, fauna and flora, territories and sites of Ukraine’s natural preserve stock), as well as the State Register of immovable monuments of Ukraine. 5 The main regulatory document on cadastral survey in Ukraine is presented by the Main Department of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre of Ukraine Order “On Approval of Instruction on Topographic Survey to Scale 1:5,000, 1:2,000, 1:1,000 and 1:500 (HKNTA-2.04-02-97)” No.56 of April 9, 1998. 6 Here, we intentionally do not touch upon the problem of administrative-territorial reform. 50 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 PROSPECTS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT IN UKRAINE However, at present, one should note complete “independence” of those information resources, kept on the agency basis and not integrated into a single information system. The land cadastre system should incorporate data of environmental monitoring, monitoring of land, monitoring of soil of farming lands, and monitoring of irrigated and drained lands. Technologies of remote Earth probing data processing combined with land tenure and land use registration data can produce a system for automated detection of violations in the field of use of nature and performance of appropriate state control measures. For instance, remote probing enables quite rapid and reliable deciphering of developed parcels, parcels used for mineral resources extraction, areas under crops, the forest cover, etc. Correlation of actual monitoring data with geospatial data on boundaries of land parcels and the farming land structure in a computer system will enable automatic detection of the bulk of violations of the land and nature protection legislation. Land accounting problem The system of statistical reporting on land resources, quantitative land accounting7 needs to be brought in conformity with the present-day classification of land by target purpose and coordinated with the European classification systems CLUSTERS (Classification for Land Use Statistics: Eurostat Remote Sensing Programme) and CORINE (Coordination of Information on the Environment). Ukraine’s European choice will require creation of preconditions for the national land cadastre system integration within the INSPIRE (Infrastructure for Spatial Information in the European Community) initiative framework, aimed at creation of the infrastructure of spatial information on the European scale, which is expected to help demonstrate the value of information for good state governance, private business and individuals. The INSPIRE project establishes the general rules of creation of the infrastructure of spatial information that may later be used to pursue the environmental policy or actions that can have an environmental impact. That infrastructure may also be used in other branches (e.g., transport). INSPIRE will rely on spatial information infrastructures created and used by the EU member countries. Components of those infrastructures are to include: metadata; spatial data sets (including cadastral data on parcels and their boundaries and possessing some legal ownership status); network services and technologies; agreements on information use, including join access; coordination and monitoring mechanisms; technological processes and procedures. Participation in the INSPIRE project should also be viewed in the wider context of two other initiatives: GMES (Global Monitoring for Environment and Security) and GEO (Group on Earth Observations). Both initiatives make particular focus on the need to improve data integration and management of information for Earth monitoring using space observation and ground networks. In this context one should welcome the State Committee for Land Resources Order “On Approval of Requirements to the Structure, Content and Format of Execution of the Results of Land Planning Works in Electronic Form (of an exchange file)” No.573 of November 2, 2009, introducing from May 15, 2010, a new procedure of execution of land planning work results in the electronic form (of an exchange file) created for data entry in the Land Book and the Log of registration of state deeds of the right to land ownership/ permanent land use, land lease agreements kept in an electronic format, and establishing the set of lexical and syntactical rules for exchange file construction. Law on the land cadastre Adoption of the Law “On State Land Cadastre”8 is to become a serious milestone in the land cadastre development in Ukraine. One should also welcome such novelties of the Bill as its departure from the archaic practice of certification of title to land parcels using state deeds and legislative provision of a single document of title to a land parcel – an extract from the State Register of ownership rights to immovable property. It specifies the exhaustive list of land planning and land valuation documents presenting grounds for data entry in the state land cadastre. The Bill provides for implementation of a fundamentally new approach to imposition of limitations on land parcel use and regiments the procedure of data exchange between the State Land Cadastre and the State Register of ownership rights to immovable property. The provision of publicity of the State Land Cadastre data is extremely important. We hope that the efficiency, integrity and transparency of the land cadastre system will be subject to continuous future monitoring. By and large, it may be argued that in the present conditions, skilled and incorrupt managerial staff and wise legislation present the key for successful creation of the land cadastre system in Ukraine. 7 See State Statistic Committee Order “On Approval of Forms of State Statistical Reporting on Land Resources and Instruction on Filling in State Statistic Reports on Quantitative Land Accounting (forms No. 6-zem, 6a-zem, 6b-zem, 2-zem)” No.377 of 5 November 1998 (as amended by the State Statistic Committee Order No.420 of October 16, 2001). 8 Bill No.8077 of February 4, 2011. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 51 UKRAINIAN PARADOXES AND PROBLEMS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT Anton TRETYAK, Director, Educational-Scientific Institute of Economy of Natural Resources and Environmental Land Use of the State Environmental Academy of Education and Management of the Ministry for Environmental Protection and Natural Resources of Ukraine T he world practice proves that the only workable mechanism to establish order with the legal status and use of land, regulate land relations and involve land property in economic circulation is provided by the land cadastre, comprehensively solving legal, socio-economic, territorial organisation and environmental tasks. That is why all steps involving redistribution of land, creation of new land tenures (estates), organisation of efficient use and protection of land should be made solely on the basis of reliable land cadastre information about land property as the basis for efficient use of Ukraine’s national wealth – land and other resources – and management of land use by legal entities and individuals. However, over the entire period of land and property relations’ reform, no land cadastre system has been created in Ukraine. Despite the submission of several bills on the state land cadastre, its idea and essence have not been legislatively outlined – in particular, due to the poor professionalism and incompleteness of such outlines. The most recent (fourth) version of the bill (registration No. №8077 of February 4, 2011) was no exception. Such situation again actualises the need of conceptual analysis of the problem and a sound perception of the state land cadastre (SLC) system that should be built in Ukraine. The main problem for Ukraine now is presented by the process of recording data of land property, land use and assessment in the state land cadastre. As we know, the world practice knows only two kinds of land plot record systems. One is usually used for management, property is recorded for modelling at solution of managerial tasks. The other involves records enabling identification of land plots and other items related with them, with associated rights and duties and ensuing consequences, after completion of the procedure of state registration of documents of title and land plots as the main item of the state land cadastre. 1 SLC in Ukraine is a system of the second type, first of all, legal. So, first, the provisions envisaged in the bill on SLC are mainly intended to make the legal portion of the land cadastre system. Its entries will be land plots as the main items of immovable property, buildings, ameliorative and other structures, land tenures, perennial plantations, plots of the land interior and water bodies.1 Second, the presumption of official description of the entered property should be applied, i.e., precedence of official description of the data entered in the state land cadastre over all other descriptions of that property. This point is fundamental, since an SLC item is recognised on behalf of the state within It corresponds to Article 181 of the Civil Code of Ukraine. 52 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 UKRAINIAN PARADOXES AND PROBLEMS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT *UFNTFOUFSFEJOUIFTUBUF MBOEDBEBTUSF ,JOETPGDJWJM MBXPCKFDUT *NNPWBCMFTJNNPWBCMFQSPQFSUZ /BUVSBMSFTPVSDFT -BOE QBSDFMT 'PSFTU MBOE QBSDFMT 0CKFDUTHPJOH XJUIMBOEQBSDFMT #VJMEJOHT $POTUSVDUJPOT 3FDMBNBUJPODPOTUSVDUJPOT 4FQBSBUF XBUFS GBDJMJUJFT 1FSFOOJBM QMBOUBUJPOT the boundaries and with the features assigned to it during its entry in the state land register. Apparently, the state land cadastre should be understood as a single state system for confirmation and recognition of documents and data of the state border of Ukraine, boundaries of administrativeterritorial units, cadastral zones and quarters, areas (protected, sanitary, subject to special procedures, etc.), territorial limitations on the use of land, land plots, as well as description and storage of data of land classification, its quantitative and qualitative state, land distribution by category, form of ownership, among land owners and users, evaluation of lands and land plots and their legal procedures. An SLC defined like that can perform a number of functions, specifically: first – accounting, necessary to perform registration of land cadastre items and the rights going with them; second – fiscal: the state should form the taxation base on the basis of true data and determine the -PHJDBMNPEFMPGUIFTUBUFMBOE DBEBTUSFTZTUFN 4UBUF-BOE$BEBTUSF 4VCTZTUFNTPG4UBUF-BOE$BEBTUSFFMFNFOUT $BEBTUSF [POJOH 4UBUF -BOE 3FHJTUFS "DDPVOUJOHPG RVBOUJUZBOE RVBMJUZPGMBOE "TTFTTNFOU PGMBOEBOE MBOEQBSDFMT "VUPNBUFETZTUFNPG4UBUF-BOE$BEBTUSFLFFQJOH 4ZTUFNPGTUBUFSFHJTUSBUJPOPG PXOFSTIJQSJHIUTUPJNNPWBCMFQSPQFSUZ RAZUMKOV CENTRE cadastral value of items by means of proper standard pecuniary valuation. The tax service now runs a highly sophisticated information system and is ready for integration and creation of the taxation base of items of land use; third – informational: provision of individuals, businesses, the state with reliable, legally significant data on items of land use. This boosts competition and promotes use of information for state regulation of land relations, planning, investment projects, etc. The first function, ensuing from the purpose of the system of state registration of ownership rights to immovable property and their encumbrances, may be extended to include: guarantee of recognition and state protection of title to immovable property, creation of conditions for immovable property market functioning. In particular: the first function may be replaced with the registration and recording function, since the first section of the State Register of ownership rights to immovable property, vested in judiciary bodies, mainly rests on the land cadastre data. Registration of previously recorded immovable property will not require repeated recording. Responsibilities of the bodies in charge of title registration and the bodies in charge of cadastre maintenance should be clearly delimited and specified in regulatory documents. Informational resources of items of the SLC and the State Register of ownership rights should be integrated. Therefore, the standards and electronic circulation for outside users should be clearly specified for easy and prompt exchange and use by individuals. Finally, cadastral recording of natural resources should be spatial. An electronic country map should finally be made, showing accurate boundaries of administrative-territorial units, cadastral zones and areas subject to territorial limitations. SLC in land law relations In the land law theory and practice, legal relations pertaining to land are divided into substantive and procedural, in line with law norms division by organisational forms. Substantive legal relations pertaining to land are regimented by norms that specify the rights and duties of actors of land relations (e.g., the right to obtain a land plot). Procedural relations are regimented by norms that specify the procedure of emergence, amendment and termination of legal relations pertaining to land (e.g., the procedures of exercise of land administration (land management process), state land cadastre maintenance, consideration of disputes pertaining to land, etc.). By the functional application of the land law norms, procedural legal relations pertaining to land are subdivided into regulatory and protective. SLC • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 53 UKRAINIAN PARADOXES AND PROBLEMS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT on the national level, there will be information necessary and sufficient for decision-making also on the local level. maintenance falls under both regulatory – in terms of conduct by actors of legal relations pertaining to the land cadastre, and protective relations – in terms of the state response to unlawful conduct of procedural legal relations pertaining to land (e.g., at settlement of land disputes dealing with land plot boundaries or limitations on land use). Therefore, one of the key strategic objectives of SLC maintenance is to separate the procedure of legal relations dealing with emergence (land administration), state registration, recording and evaluation of the state land cadastre items. SLC items include: the state border of Ukraine; boundaries of administrativeterritorial units; boundaries of territories subject to limited and special procedures of land use; land plots, water bodies as elements of procedural legal relations falling under SLC, specifically: coastal waters of 12 nautical miles; water areas of Ukrainian ports; water areas of gulfs, bays, estuaries, harbours and roads whose shores entirely belong to Ukraine, as well as the portion of water areas of rivers, lakes and other water reservoirs limited by the line of the state border. Description of SLC elements by functional application of the land law norms is presented in Table “Description of the State Land Cadastre elements by functional application of the land law norms”. Whereas all SLC elements by functional application of the land law norms belong to regulatory and protective procedural legal relations pertaining to land, its data should also have a legal status. Therefore, the state land cadastre cannot be a usual informational system of land plot data. An hierarchical SLC system will provide sufficient for management, detailed or summary data of cadastral areas (quarters), actors, etc. The reliability and accuracy of the data will be ensured through their integration, and with time, the task of integration of the land cadastre, the cadastre of immovable property and the system of branch cadastres should be set. Information support in the first place means prompt access to data (which will also enable monitoring of all items). In the first place, we should conditionally separate the portion of emergence of the SLC items to be referred to the market of self-regulating institutions, i.e., to be dealt with by business entities that are active on the market and able to compete (chart “Model of multipurpose use of State Land Cadastre data”). Principles of the State Land Cadastre maintenance The fundamental points of SLC maintenance are as follows: And, finally, the state land cadastral system is a key to effective municipal management of territory development. Discussion is underway, whether cadastral records may be transferred to the municipal level. We suggest minimising the parameters that will ensure unique identification of land property – hence, • obligatory recording of all items located within the land plot boundaries, irrespective of the form of ownership and location on the territory of Ukraine; Description of state land cadastre (SLC) elements by functionality of land law norm Item Title of SLC element Functions of SLC element Kind of legal relations of land procedure 1 Cadastre zoning Registration, accounting, information Regulative 1) 2) 3) 4) 2 State Register Registration, accounting Protective 1) Log of registration of state deeds to the right of ownership of and the right of permanent use of land, land lease agreements specifying cadastre numbers of land parcels; 2) Land Book, containing data of land parcel; 3) Register of territorial limitations on land use 4) Register of boundaries of administrativeterritorial units 3 Accounting of Accounting, fiscal, quantity and quality information of land Protective and regulative 4 Assessment of land Fiscal, information and land parcels Regulative 54 Content of SLC element the place for limitations on land use; boundaries of cadastral areas and quarters; boundaries of valuation districts and areas; cadastre numbers (territories of administrativeterritorial units) 1) accounting of quantity of land and land parcels; 2) accounting of land quality 1) 2) 3) 4) land classification; business assessment of land; standard pecuniary valuation of land and land parcels; expert pecuniary valuation of land parcels • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 UKRAINIAN PARADOXES AND PROBLEMS OF STATE LAND CADASTRE DEVELOPMENT .PEFMPGNVMUJQVSQPTFVTFPG4UBUF-BOE$BEBTUSFEBUB 0CKFDUPGBDDPVOUJOH JOUIF4UBUF -BOE$BEBTUSF 5FSSJUPSJFTMBOET DBEBTUSBMBSFBT RVBSUFST BSFBTPG UFSSJUPSJBMMJNJUBUJPOT POVTFPGMBOET MBOEQBSDFMTBOE UIFJSQBSUTGBSNJOH MBOETCVJMEJOHTBOE TUSVDUVSFT'FBUVSFT PGSFDPSEFEJUFNT QIZTJDBM CVTJOFTT MFHBM TQFDJBMRVBMJUBUJWF QBSBNFUFST 3FHJTUSBUJPOBDDPVOUJOHBOEGJTDBM GVODUJPOTPGUIF4UBUF-BOE$BEBTUSF 0CKFDU PGMBX 4UBUF BDDPVOUJOHPG RVBOUJUZBOE RVBMJUZPGMBOE $JWJMDJSDVMBUJPOPGMBOEQMPUT BOEQSPQFSUZHPJOHXJUIUIFN (VBSBOUFFTPGSJHIUT $PMMFDUJPOPGMBOEQBZNFOUT 0CKFDU PGNBOBHFNFOU %FTDSJQUJPOGPS PSHBOJTBUJPO PGNBOBHFNFOU BOEMBOEQMBOOJOH &GGJDJFOUBOE SBUJPOBMVTF PGMBOE *OGPSNBUJWFGVODUJPOPGUIF4UBUF-BOE$BEBTUSF • uniform rules and methods of SLC maintenance. All registration and recording operations, operations of issue of information, issue of certified extracts should be performed under common rules. There should be no other requirements and interpretations of the law; • continuity of SLC maintenance, since land property is circulated every day; • publicity of information. The land cadastre is a public register. It can contain no restricted information. Information should be structured so that the data from the SLC and the public register are accessible to everyone under rules clear to everyone and established by regulatory acts. Information cannot be refused if a request is in compliance with law norms. All SLC elements are interdependent and interrelated. The main purpose of that system is to provide state guarantees to owners of registered items of the land cadastre. Unfortunately, today, such guarantees are almost absent. The land title registration system is to create insurance funds that should cover losses sustained by title-holders, if their rights are violated in course of introduction of the title registration system. That domain of procedural legal relations is not regimented at all. Meanwhile, the mentioned Bill on SLC does not even mention the system of insurance of registrar operation and insurance of databases. In the end, SLC records of its items shall present the ultimate evidence to rule out land ownership disputes, visits to various institutions and courts’ ability to pass varied rulings. So, there should be one source and common rules of data processing. RAZUMKOV CENTRE Conclusions 1. SLC data in Ukraine are used for state registration of title to immovable property, land tenure taxation, rent, regulation of land relations, land use and land administration planning, protection of land and soil, etc. So, they should have a legal status and be entered in and issued from the cadastre in line with the norms of procedural legal relations. 2. SLC should be understood as a single state system of documents and data of the state border of Ukraine, boundaries of administrative-territorial units, cadastral zones and quarters, areas (protected, sanitary, subject to special procedures, etc.), territorial limitations on the use of land, land plots, as well as data of land classification, its quantitative and qualitative state, land distribution by category, form of ownership, land owners and users, evaluation of lands and land plots and their legal procedures. 3. The main functions of SLC in Ukraine should be: registration and accounting, fiscal, informational, and use of its data – multifunctional, covering, in particular: civil circulation of land plots and property closely tied with them, state guarantees of land ownership rights, collection of land fees, organisation of efficient and rational use of land and other natural resources. 4. All SLC elements by functional application of the land law norms belong to regulatory and protective procedural legal relations pertaining to land, therefore, its data should have a legal status, and its records should be the ultimate evidence to rule out all land ownership disputes, visits to various institutions and courts’ ability to pass varied rulings. Therefore, SLC cannot be a usual informational system of land plot data. • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 55 AN IDEALIZED MODEL LAND ADMINISTRATION SYSTEM: A THOUGHT EXPERIMENT Malcolm D. CHILDRESS Senior Land Administration Specialist, World Bank T his essay proposes a thought experiment: If you could combine the best aspects of the world’s land administration systems into one new system and set it into motion under a new mandate, what would you do? And how would you ensure that the marvelous new system was not corrupted by rent-seeking and vested interests? This is far from an obvious question, perhaps, and one without any single, “right” answer, but one which the policy-makers of Central Europe have had to wrestle with country by country as they strive to move from privatization and re-allocation of property to the administrative support of robust property markets and a balanced public interest role in promoting efficient, equitable and sustainable land use. This process continues to this day and has become more important as booms and busts in urban real estate, rising food prices and environmental crises make land markets and land management a crucial topic for sustainable development, public administration and environmental and social justice across the region.1 Idealized global hybrid This essay proposes one, necessarily idiosyncratic, answer to the question. Our cobbled-together system we call the “idealized global hybrid” combines the technological sophistication and private sector management approach of the Netherlands, the pragmatism about boundaries of the British system, the customer orientation of the Australian system, and the electoral accountability of the American system. This system would not look unfamiliar: global experience, particularly that of countries with highly sophisticated land administration systems, reveal more similarities than differences in solving the practical challenges of recognizing, recording and updating land and property information to a high standard of accuracy, legal reliability and user-friendly efficiency. Ultimately, the biggest similarity has to do with institutionalized practices of good governance and accountable public administration which are embodied through service standards, professional capacities and ethics, automated data management, customer orientation and political accountability. Although information technology plays a leading role in managing complex information and business processes in these systems, technological solutions are only as good as their environment, and must be based on “operating systems” of local access, institutional and capacity development, a judicial system capable of enforcing the rule-of-law in property cases, and an active public that is willing to demand accurate and efficient services and reject corrupt or inept practices. 1 This article refers to: Enemark, Stig. (2010) Spatially Enabled Land Administration: Responding to the Global Agenda and Addressing Societal Needs. Keynote paper at The GSDI-12 World Conference, Singapore, October 2010; United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), Working Party on Land Administration. (2000). Study on Key Aspects of Land Registration and Cadastral Legislation. 56 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 AN IDEALIZED MODEL LAND ADMINISTRATION SYSTEM: A THOUGHT EXPERIMENT Before taking up the challenge, the thoughtexperimenter may first wish to ask: why should a modern citizen care about the arcane, archaic, legalistic and bureaucratic backwater of land administration? First and foremost because the legal security of her house, garden and farm depend on it, and second because the society relies on this information to be able to manage properties and carry out transactions (purchase/sale, lease, inheritance, divorce, bankruptcy, mortgage, compulsory acquisition, etc.) between independent parties with no prior relationships. This security and management ability ramifies at the collective level: the manner in which a country, a region or a locality manages land has fundamental importance for sustainable development. The relationship between land, its users and the larger social and economic framework has been called the sustainable land management paradigm (Enemark, 2010), as depicted in the Diagram “The Sustainable Land Management Paradigm”. The benefits from well-managed land are cross-cutting across all sectors of the economy and society. In particular urban real estate development, agricultural production and natural resource management depend heavily on well-managed land resources with good incentives for investment, utilization and resource conservation. Land administration functions, specifically land registration and cadastral functions, play a central role in the sustainable land management paradigm by defining ownership rights and other rights, restrictions, responsibilities and interests in land, providing a geographic representation of the land parcel to which those apply and linking that information to a person or entity. Land markets, land development and investments into land and building rest on a documentary foundation of land registration and cadastre, and the confidence that actors in these areas have in their land rights is directly dependent on how well these institutions function. 5IF4VTUBJOBCMF-BOE.BOBHFNFOU1BSBEJHN Certainty of ownership with strong legal protection thus contributes to a long list of benefits in the society: • security of tenure; • reduction in land disputes; • improved conveyancing; • stimulation of the land market; • security for credit; • monitoring of the land market; • facilitation of land policy reforms; • management of State lands; • support of land taxation; • improvement in physical environmental management; • recording of land-resource information; • provision of geo-spatial information. -BOE "ENJOJTUSBUJPO 'VODUJPOT-BOE 5FOVSF -BOE7BMVF -BOE6TF -BOE%FWFMPQNFOU So let’s design our idealized global hybrid system: • It will combine a land registration function and a cadastral function into a single automated land information system based on key data requirements in an integrated data system or data bank (like the Netherlands or Sweden). • It will be complete and updated, available for consultation on the Web for a fee, and available for web transactions to licensed, certified users (like in Scotland). • Its records will hold up in court cases and the system itself will almost never lose a legal challenge (like in Australia), but will be indemnified if they are harmed as a result of relying on the records held in the registry. • Customers will believe they get good value for money in the services the system provides and believe that the system’s services are reasonably -BOE *OGPSNBUJPO 4USVDUVSFT $PVOUSZ$POUFYU *OTUJUVUJPOBM"SSBOHFNFOUT RAZUMKOV CENTRE and So the bureaucratic backwater of land administration is actually a key institutional element of governance and basic building block for economic, social and environmental development. 4VTUBJOBCMF EFWFMPQNFOU &DPOPNJD4PDJBM &OWJSPONFOUBM -BOE 1PMJDZ 'SBNFXPSL planning • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 57 AN IDEALIZED MODEL LAND ADMINISTRATION SYSTEM: A THOUGHT EXPERIMENT priced and free of corruption. The perceived benefits of using the system, the relative costs and the ease of access will largely reduce informal transactions to a negligible level over time. • The underlying geo-spatial and attribute data, including individual property owners’ names will be public and searchable by property. • These data, tied spatially to the country’s geodetic control and street addressing systems, will be available for commercial uses for a reasonable fee (like the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia). The system will be self-financing from user fees and will generate additional economic benefits from commercializing some types of land information (as in all the above). Now let’s unpack the constituent elements of the system: land registration, cadastre, IT infrastructure, spatial data standards, system management and the governance environment. Land registration Land registration is a process of official recording of rights in land through deeds or as title on properties. It means that there is an official record (land register) of rights on land or of deeds concerning changes in the legal situation of defined units of land. It gives an answer to the questions by whom is the property owned and how are the rights and interests to the property defined. Cadastre is systematically organized inventory of data concerning properties within a certain jurisdiction, based on a survey of their boundaries. Such properties are systematically identified by means of some identifier, like a unique parcel identification number. The outlines of the property and the parcel identifier normally are shown on large-scale maps which, together with registers, show for each separate property the nature, size, value and legal rights associated with the parcel. The cadastre answers the questions where and how much. It is obvious that these two sets of information need to cross-reference each other systematically and automatically to be able to respond to the range of queries and informational needs which a modern economy generates. There are two main types of systems of land registration, deeds systems and the title registration systems. Deeds systems record contracts related to a parcel of land and have to be indexed by name and parcel. A deed registration system means that the deed itself, that is, a document which describes an individual transaction, is registered. The deed is evidence that a particular transaction took place, but it is not in itself proof of the legal rights of the involved parties and, consequently, it is not evidence of the transaction’s legality. Thus before any dealing can be safely concluded, the ostensible new owner must trace her ownership through a valid chain of title to a root title, or at least to a cut-off date in time satisfactory to show that there are no other interests in conflict. Deed registration, whether the “basic” or the “improved” one (based on a survey and on documents of competent notaries as well as on an active role of the register) is usually applied in countries which are mainly based on the Roman law (in Europe: France, Spain, Belgium, The Netherlands) and also in countries that were influenced by the Roman legal system through colonization: South America, parts of North America, and some African and Asian countries. A title registration system means that it is the parcel itself, not the deed which is the object of registration. A paper or electronic folio is opened for each property and the folio contains the complete geographical information, plus the name of the rightful claimant and the restrictions and charges which correspond to the parcel. Around the world, there are both deeds and title registration systems, which operate largely on the same principles but differ in procedures.2 The cartographic/ mapping/surveying functions slightly differ among these groups, i.e., the English group makes use of large scale ordnance survey maps and permits general boundaries (i.e., features such as a wall or hedgerow instead of a precisely surveyed line), the German group of parcelbased cadastral maps, and the Torrens group makes use of incidental survey plans. Having said this, technology is increasingly making the procedural differences in these systems less important. Land registration and cadastral information is increasingly managed as a unified data model in a highly flexible database environment. Another way to categorize title registration systems on a more functional basis would be whether or not registration carries a state guarantee, whether rectification of the registration on ground of error, fraud or adverse possession is allowable; on differences in maps and survey and in the methods of initial compilation. As Diagram “Are rights guaranteed by the state?” shows, a majority of jurisdictions surveyed by the UNECE Working Party on Land Administration (UNECE 2000) have some form of state guarantee of registered rights. The USA is a notable exception and relies almost entirely on title insurance to mitigate title risks, at a significant costs to property transactors. So deeds or title system for the idealized global hybrid model? We will first note that in a fully integrated data model, the distinction is much less important than in 2 The English Group of deeds systems includes, most of the USA, some Canadian provinces, Nigeria, India, and Sri Lanka. The Germanic/Swiss/ Scandinavian Group of deeds systems includes: Germany, Austria, Alsace-Lorraine, Switzerland, Egypt, Turkey, Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, and Finland. The Torrens Group of title systems includes Australia, New Zealand, some provinces of Canada, some parts of the USA, Morocco, Tunisia, Syria. Torrens systems emphasize public availability of the registered information. England, Ireland and Scotland operate title systems similar to the Torrens type, and have recently introduced electronic conveyancing and digital signature capacities. 58 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 AN IDEALIZED MODEL LAND ADMINISTRATION SYSTEM: A THOUGHT EXPERIMENT "SFSJHIUTHVBSBOUFFECZUIFTUBUF 3FNFEZCZ UIF$PVSU (VBSBOUFFE CZUIF4UBUF “general” and “fixed” boundaries depends on the pace of creating or updating the system, the existence of physical features, disputes to be expected, the amount of necessary security and the costs. A cost/benefit calculus therefore is necessary to make a policy choice in this area. As shown in Diagram “How are registered property boundaries defined?”, respondents to the UNECE survey are split between coordinate-based and general boundary definitions. )PXBSFSFHJTUFSFEQSPQFSUZ CPVOEBSJFTEFGJOFE earlier, paper-based eras. We will opt for a title system in order to give the strongest security through a state guarantee of title, and we will index the cadastre and the registry together in a single data model and IT system, so it will create electronically searchable records of all transactions relating to a specific parcel of land, and thus make title searches easy, quick and reliable. The Cadastre #PUITZTUFNT BQQMZJOEJGGFSFOU BSFBT (PWFSOFECZ HFOFSBMCPVOEBSJFT 1SFDJTFMZEFGJOFE CZDPPSEJOBUFT The task of a cadastre is mainly geographicallyoriented i.e. fixing and representing the parcel in an accurate relationship to the surface of the earth, especially as it relates to neighboring boundaries and landscape features. To do this the cadastre needs to represent every property parcel to a socially sufficient accuracy on a large scale map with a parcel identifier. This identifier is used in the land register to indicate the legal object in a unique way. This identifier (usually called a unique parcel identification number) connects the legal description of the property parcel with the cartographic representation of it. In addition to the map or the geometrical representation of the parcel the cadastre also contains descriptive attributes about the parcel recorded alphanumerically: i.e. unique parcel identifier, local location, area, kind of use and attributes like data for land tax such as assessed value, proprietor and/or taxpayer. The cadastral information also contains a crossreference to the land register. Cadastral systems vary in the way that parcel boundaries are mapped and described geographically. The English system relies mainly on physical boundary features, man-made or natural. The precise position of the boundary within these physical features depends on the “general” land law of the country concerned.3 This boundary system is known as a “general boundary system”. The system provides, however, for the precise surveyed boundaries to be “fixed” if desired by the owners. After entering the precise survey data in the land register (i.e., the geometric coordinates) the boundary is “legally” fixed for everybody and guaranteed. Without registering the precise survey data, these boundaries are not legally fixed and have the legal effect of “general boundaries”. The choice between So general boundaries or fixed boundaries for our idealized model system? We choose a general boundaries system like the United Kingdom with the option of fixing boundaries on demand at the property-holders’ cost in order to avoid costly and largely superfluous ground surveys of parcels whose boundaries are not in dispute. We will digitize all our parcel maps in a geographical information system tied to a national coordinate system so that they can be linked to all other types of geographic information from utility maintenance systems to zoning and disaster prevention plans. At the same time we will put all the registry’s legal information into the same data model, so that searches using cadastral identifies will generate lists of ownership rights and vice-versa. Should one agency run the cadastre and the registry? Should the cadastre and the registry be combined into a single agency, or be separated? Global experience reveals preferences for both. In our idealized global hybrid system we select a unified agency which will have separate registry and cadastral departments linked electronically and automatically in one data model and one IT environment, like Germany’s. This allows for a high degree of specialization in core functions of registration and cadastre, and ample checks and balances on each department’s actions by the other, while ensuring that the actual data environment is seamless and uniform, with full cohesion between cadastral and registration data and functions, and continual updating.4 To make the system work there are four major administrative actors, each playing a distinct and specialized role in 3 The term “general boundaries” originates from the English land recording system. The single agency model may have some risks of concentrating too much power in its executive, but its advantage in resolving the potential for non-cooperation between cadastral mapping and registration functions is a significant advantage. 4 RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 59 AN IDEALIZED MODEL LAND ADMINISTRATION SYSTEM: A THOUGHT EXPERIMENT the work flow of property recordation, conveyancing and updating, and each providing checks and balances on the others: • notaries are responsible for the correctness of the documents to be presented to the registrar; • surveying and mapping agencies are responsible for the geographical identification and description of the property parcel(s); • the registry is responsible for the integrity, storage, access to and maintenance of the legal land records, in order to maintain a correct picture of their legal situation; • the information technology management department covers database storage, geospatial representations, user interfaces, communications and security, i.e., all the functions necessary for recording and supplying information. Therefore in our idealized hybrid model, the legal framework will carefully spell out the roles and responsibilities of each of these actors and give them liability for errors or negligence in the performance of their role. How can our system maintain integrity and embody good governance? To be successful, a land registration and cadastre must enjoy popular support. For this reason registrars are local elected officials in the USA. If they fail to perform they can be voted out of office the next election. We will make our idealized system feature elected registrars in each local jurisdiction. We will stipulate full public accessibility to the land records on request. We will create an independent ombudsman and a complaint channel to a national supervisory authority, and we will implement regular user survey’s whose results will be published annually. We will also institute a separation between front office staff who simply receive and route requests, and back-office staff who review them in order to decrease the possibility for petty corruption, and let’s set rigorous service standards for every type of transaction. These features are found through the world and a policy of open access to registry records is observed in the large majority in the UNECE survey as shown in Diagram “Is the land register open to public inspection?” *TUIFMBOESFHJTUFSPQFO UPQVCMJDJOTQFDUJPO 3FHJTUFS XIPMMZPQFO 0QFOPOMZ UPPXOFS 3FHJTUFS QBSUMZPQFO 60 Financing of the land recording system We have options to finance it out of the government budget, or a mixture of user fees and budget or wholly by feeds paid by consumers. As we can see in Diagram “How is land registration financed?”, the vast majority of systems surveyed by UNECE are either wholly financed through user feeds or a mixture of user fees and government funding. In this case our idealized global hybrid system will opt for a mixed set of funding sources because some transactions may be in the public interest and partial subsidization of some transactions my promote various public goods. )PXJTMBOESFHJTUSBUJPOGJOBODFE 'JOBODFEXIPMMZ CZHPWFSONFOU 'JOBODFEXIPMMZ CZGFFTQBJE CZDVTUPNFST 'JOBODFEQBSUMZCZ HPWFSONFOUBOEQBSUMZ CZDVTUPNFSGFFT We have the outline of our system: • a locally accessible, automated registration of every transaction; • linked systematically and automatically to the parcel’s cadastral information in a title registration system operated by a single, self-financing property administration agency; • characterized by a high degree of user-orientation and featuring a number of systems to ensure its integrity and transparency. We think we have the best of world experience in this formulation. Now we have to operate it. For the operational challenge, we have scarcely scratched the surface of the legal and regulatory construction, human capacity development, financial management, detailed IT architecture/testing/quality control, data acquisition, cadastral mapping and public education necessary to really make our idealized system work as fully functioning entity managing thousands of transactions per day in local offices. But even the partial picture revealed by the thought experiment shows that global practices in land administration robustly share certain basic features. Those interested in the evolution of new and reforming systems can benefit from a consideration of these features and the audacity of experimenting with thoughts of how they can be used in concert in the interests of the sustainable land management paradigm. • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 RESULTS OF THE LAND RELATIONS REFORM AND PROSPECTS OF THE LAND MARKET INTRODUCTION IN UKRAINE Anatoliy YURCHENKO, Department Head, Educational-Scientific Institute of Economy of Natural Resources and Environmental Land Use of the State Environmental Academy of Education and Management of the Ministry for Environmental Protection and Natural Resources of Ukraine I n course of 20 years of land reforms, Ukraine saw serious changes in the land ownership structure that however did not result in the growth of land use efficiency, in particular, in agriculture, where land resources are the main means of production. Privatisation of farming land was not accompanied with regular enhancement of state guarantees of inviolability of rights to land plots acquired by the country citizens and legal entities. Due to the deterioration of the land cadastre operation, there is growing concern about introduction and efficient operation of the farming land market as a prerequisite of optimisation of the agriculture structure, solution of socio-economic and demographic problems of the rural population. Progress of the land “reform” The guarantee of validity of a title to land property is one of the main duties of the state in terms of provision of constitutional rights, freedoms and legitimate interests of the country citizens. In the present conditions those duties are vested in the executive bodies in charge of land resources. Meanwhile, according to analysts, over the period of the “reforms”, the information base for regulation of land relations and protection of the rights of citizens, legal entities, territorial communities and the state has largely been lost.1 Most of the present agricultural land tenures and estates have no planning, cartographic and land cadastre materials. Quantitative recording of lands is in decay. Recording of the qualitative state of land resources state has actually been reduced to nought. Standard pecuniary valuation of farming land resting on materials of the Soviet times is obsolete. Registration of land plots is irresponsible and fragmentary. 1 The reforms were accompanied with steady growth of the value of land cadastre operations, bureaucratisation of the process, forms and substance of the relevant procedures. At the same time, the quality of execution of title documents to land and certification of rights to land plots declined disastrously. The bulk of the land cadastre activities envisaged by the law (Article 196 of the Land Code of Ukraine) is not performed at all, others, such as recording of land quantity and quality, are performed formally, giving rise to doubts about the reliability of the relevant information. Over the years of the land reform, the form and substance of state certificates of private land ownership were changed four times. The present-day agricultural structure was shaped without the land cadastre and land management support at creation of land tenures of modern market-oriented agricultural enterprises, determination of their limits, See: Novakovskyi L.Ya. Ways of perfection of legislative support for regulation of land relations. – Zemlevporyadnyj Visnyk, 2009, No.4, p.23 (in Ukrainian). RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 61 RESULTS OF THE LAND RELATIONS REFORM land property structure, land and farming land area. The number of agricultural enterprises is growing impetuously and, according to the State Statistic Committee, exceeded 57 thousand.2 not been created in Ukraine, which questions the expedience of cancellation of the moratorium on market circulation of farming land plots from January 1, 2012. Delimitation of state and municipal lands (actually not even started) was suspended. Land inventory goes on as an indefinite, formal and costly process. Inventory: the necessary step to success The state land cadastre (SLC) materials contain no official information about almost 70% of land plots for which documents of title have been issued (totalling some 25 million.)3 The technical level of delimitation of millions of individual land plots is generally low. Not all of them have the turn point coordinates. For their location, different systems of coordinates were used. In most cases land plot locations on cadastral plans and on ground do not coincide. From the early years of Ukraine’s independence, numerous international sponsor organisations tried to provide assistance to Ukraine with the creation of a civilised land cadastre, acting both directly and by providing grants. The state’s inconsistency and helplessness are showily witnessed by the situation with the “Issue of state deeds of land ownership in rural areas and cadastre system development” project dealing with the cadastre system development. After the Ministry of Justice, due to amendments in the legislation, assumed the duty of maintenance the register of title to immovable property, the World Bank restructured the project and cancelled funding of creation of the register of title to immovable property. The Programme of creation of an automated system of the state land cadastre maintenance that envisaged its completion yet in 2005 was not accomplished. State registration of land plots is performed not by a state body but by an enterprise whose respective powers are not specified by the law. Limitations imposed on the title to land plots formally recorded in title documents have no practical effect. Establishment and restoration of borders of administrative-territorial units remain a lasting problem. Repeated attempts of adoption of the Law of Ukraine “On State Land Cadastre” and year-long disputes between the specially authorised state body in charge of land resources and the Ministry of Justice of Ukraine for the right to perform state registration of ownership rights to land plots and their limitations are nothing but an irresponsible imitation of an efficient state land policy in the field of land plot delimitation, certification of rights thereto with the relevant documents of title and state registration of land plots. As a result, the concerned Law of 2010 is to enter into effect only from January 1, 2012. Therefore, proper organisational and legal mechanisms for protection of title to land plots have In our opinion, introduction of market circulation of land should be preceded by the post-reform inventory of land and agricultural land tenures, first of all, outside populated localities. At the same time it makes sense to examine the available land cadastre documentation for authenticity of establishment and staking of land plot boundaries in kind (on the ground) and their correlation with the concerned cadastral maps. Only on the basis of the land and the land tenure inventory materials one can establish the legal and technical possibility, using the information base of the modern land cadastre, to execute procedures of purchase and sale of the part of privately owned land plots the title to which is duly certified with state deeds and will not require correction of the legal and technical mistakes made. One cannot rule out the probability of replacement of documents of title to land plots, solution of the problem of duplication of rights to the same land plot for several assignees of title to land. The results of land and land tenures’ inventory outside populated localities can be used for verification of SLC databases in general. We are sure that only in that case, realistic terms of a civilised land market introduction in Ukraine can be determined. In our opinion, correction of technical and organisational-legal mistakes made at land delimitation will require 5-7 years of skilled work of executive authorities dealing with land and local selfgovernment bodies and large budget expenditures, along with appropriate legal support. It would be irresponsible to further pretend that the SLC has no problems, since falsity of a great deal of the land cadastre information every day draws us closer to the global crisis on the real estate market the effects of which will affect the investment attractiveness of the national economy for years. Bill “On State Land Cadastre”: solution of old problems, or creation of new ones? On May 19, 2011, the Verkhovna Rada reviewed in the first reading the Bill “On State Land Cadastre”. The all-Ukrainian public organisation “Union of Land Planners of Ukraine” has analysed that Bill as far back as February 2011.4 The Main Scientific-Expert Department of the Verkhovna Rada Staff produced its opinion, too.5 The conclusions reveal rather a critical view of the Bill. In particular, it seriously narrows down the SLC content, confining it to legal regulation of cadastral zoning and state registration of land plots alone. Since 2 Statistical reference book “Agriculture of Ukraine”. – Kyiv, State Statistic Committee, 2009, p.52 (in Ukrainian). In that, plots for gardening – 2.7 million, truck farming – 1.7 million, personal subsidiary farming – 11.7 million. See: Modern land policy of Ukraine. – Kyiv, 2009, p.50 (in Ukrainian). 4 Scientific expert opinion of specialists of all-Ukrainian public organisation “Union of Land Planners of Ukraine” on the Bill of Ukraine “On State Land Cadastre”. – Zemelne Pravo Ukrayiny, 2011, No.3, p.34-39 (in Ukrainian). 5 Opinion on the Bill of Ukraine “On State Land Cadastre”. – Ibid, p.39-41.2 3 62 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 RESULTS OF THE LAND RELATIONS REFORM the Bill’s title does not correspond to its substance, it seems reasonable to change the title or to specify in it also legal mechanisms of soil classification, environmental assessment of land, pecuniary valuation of land plots, cadastral surveys, recording of land quantity and quality. The Bill does not envisage fully-fledged legislative regimentation of SLC maintenance issues. It is proposed to elaborate the provisions of that Law in 20 resolutions of the Cabinet of Ministers, which points to insufficiency of the regulatory content of the Bill and is fraught with a delay of its implementation by at least 2-3 years, until the Cabinet of Ministers issues such resolutions, and the relevant methodological documents are developed. In April, 2011, the Educational-Scientific Institute of Economy of Natural Resources and Environmental Land Use of the State Environmental Academy of PostGraduate Education and Management conducted a sociological survey of the attitude of officers of regional and local executive bodies in charge of land resources and specialists of state land management project organisation to the problems of legislative regimentation of SLC maintenance. It suggests that only 28.5% of respondents agreed that the Law “On State Land Cadastre” should regiment only the mechanisms of cadastral zoning and state registration of land plots. Almost 60% is sure of the need of comprehensive regulation of land cadastre activities in the volume envisaged by Article 196 of the Land Code of Ukraine. Respondents unanimously agreed that state registration of land plots should be performed only by professionally trained state registrars whose qualification requirements, duties and rights are duly specified; the Law should also specify the exhaustive list of documents to be submitted by applicants for state registration of land plots. The proposal of state registration of land plots by the so-called State Land Cadastre Administrator does not find enough support (6%). And the so-called “electronic document” (form in-4) should not replace the document of title during state registration of land plots (60% of respondents). Only 14% of respondents expressed the opinion that the funds coming to state land bodies for state registration of land plots should be used to support the State Land Cadastre Administrator’s activity, 16% believes that those funds should be transferred directly to the state budget. 70% is sure that the money should be spent on the registration system development. “The cadre decide everything” So, what are the main reasons for growing dissatisfaction of society with the results of the state land policy, in particular, concerning the acquisition and exercise of rights to land? We are sure that the state can pursue an efficient land policy in a market environment, relying on highly qualified land planners. However, during the land reform Ukraine saw serious impairment of the professional level of the RAZUMKOV CENTRE land authorities’ management, and with that, of the land policy efficiency. Land cadastre operations in the period of mass privatisation of land involved many unskilled persons who had neither adequate special training, nor sufficient experience and were trained only to perform the simplest actions. The “new specialists” employed in the land cadastre concentrated only on land sharing, formation of land plots of different forms of ownership, execution and state registration of title documents. With time, such their activity acquired varied, mainly selfish features. The central executive body in charge of land resources established with temporary functions over the period of the land reform implementation has never worked as a responsible, efficient and respected state executive body. The politicisation of HR policy in land regulations, in particular, key appointments by party quotas, increasingly affect public confidence in the authorities and their ability to ensure order in the land relations. The HR policy in land structures evolved into kind of business, a way to ensure immunity for unlawful land transactions, since legal nihilism has become an absolute principle of activity of both the ruling and opposition political forces. Very painful processes of systemic dysfunction of management in the field of land relations are deepening in Ukraine. Since the State Agency for Land Resources, as a central executive body, over the entire period of operation proved unable to generate and effectively implement the state market land policy, it seems reasonable to consider its liquidation and transfer of all responsibility for land affairs in the country directly to one of the ministries with a serious experience of state governance. Regional bodies of land resources in such case should be subordinated to the concerned regional state administrations. Land management bodies should work on the principles of professionalism, integrity, thorough and apolitical personnel selection. Therefore, Ukraine should enhance the regulatory influence of the state on creation of the optimal structure of agricultural production, development of mechanisms of market circulation of farming land. Creation of a fully operational market of farming land should become the logical outcome of the land reform. • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 63 THE CZECH EXPERIENCE LAND REFORM, CADASTRE OF IMMOVABLE PROPERTY AND CARTOGRAPHIC, GEODETIC AND CADASTRAL SERVICES IN UKRAINE AND THE CZECH REPUBLIC * Milan KOCÁB, Research Institute of Geodesy, Topography and Cartography Aleš TŘÍSKA, CHEPOS Joint-Stock Company Alexandr DRBAL, Research Institute of Geodesy, Topography and Cartography A s far as we know, in Ukraine, the population holds state deeds of the right of private ownership to land parcels (approx. 80%) and “certificates of the right to a land share” (approx. 20%), that are appropriately registered. “State deeds” specify only the parcel area, the names of the adjacent parcel owners and a plan made to scale 1:5000. As far as the plan is concerned, it is unknown who performed the survey and made the plan, how the parcel area was obtained, there is no coordinate grid and list of coordinates of the parcel turn angles, the system of coordinates used in not specified. In most cases, land parcels are materialised on ground by land management organisations using local contours (roads, woodland belts etc.), i.e., actually not using points of the public geodetic grid (PGG) or fine grids and not even in the local system of coordinates. Parcel angles are fixed with usual wooden pegs, as a rule, destroyed during field works. Fortunately, since January 1, 2002, there has been a moratorium on land purchase and sale (only land lease is allowed), otherwise there would have arisen insoluble land law problems associated with land parcel boundaries and areas. Now, Ukraine is about to cancel the moratorium and allow land purchase and sale. It is planned that it will be registered by the Ministry of Justice, and the documents for that will be prepared by regional Land Cadastre Centres and, possibly, Bureaus of Technical Inventory. Proceeding from the above and from the experience of a number of foreign countries, it may be said that in Ukraine, land ownership and lease rights are not clearly specified yet: • property is registered in regions, there is no single central database of land parcels; • farming land lease agreement do not reflect the parties’ will and are quite difficult to execute; • ownership verification is complicated – the principle of the register and cadastre openness does not work; • parcels are actually not shown on the ground, have no exact planning, accurate theodolitic plans and, as a result, exact areas, which also questions their spatial location; * This article builds on the reports by Dr. D.Tříska “Land reform – the case of the Czech Republic” and Prof. А.Tříska “Privatisation of land: key principles”, presented at the working seminar “Prospects of the land reform implementation in Ukraine” (April 7, 2011, Kyiv) (in Russian). Of course, the best option would be for a competent Ukrainian delegation to visit the Czech Republic where specialists could learn all issues of organisation and practical functioning of the Cadastre of immovable property. 64 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 THE CZECH EXPERIENCE • for most parcels, the soil productivity class is not determined (it is determined every time at lease or sale); • records and topographic surveys are made not by the dedicated state services of geodesy, cartography and cadastre, and licensed surveyors and land planners, which witnesses the absence of a uniform state technical policy; • with such land accounting, the state cannot impartially plan profits and, most of all, effectively subsidise agricultural production. All this is very important for land parcel lease or sale and can be done professionally only in presence of a state cadastre of immovable property (CIP). Proceeding from the above, it seems reasonable to discuss the issue of introduction of a CIP relying on internationally accepted principles in Ukraine. As an example of such CIP, let us take a look at the Cadastre of the Czech Republic. Principles of CIP establishment and keeping in the Czech Republic The Czech cadastre exists from 1817, has established traditions and enjoys trust of citizens who got used to enter data in the Cadastre over that period and in that way solve legal issues concerning immovable property. That is why nobody questioned that system when the new cadastral Law No.344/1992 (hereinafter – the Law) was drafted. The Czech cadastre rests on principles established by the Law and is used for: • protection of ownership rights to immovable property; • tax and payment purposes; • environmental protection; • protection of cultural monuments; • protection and keeping of the agricultural and forest stocks; • protection of mineral resources; • generation of information about territories and passage of decisions on their development; • evaluation of immovable property; • scientific, economic and statistical purposes; • creation of other information systems. Key principles of the cadastre of immovable property: • official character (the state acting through the cartographic, geodetic and cadastral service keeps official cadastral information); • accessibility and openness for the public (everyone may see the cadastral information, make copies and extracts, get information about immovable property for an appropriate fee); RAZUMKOV CENTRE • reporting (immovable property owners, state authorities and local self-government bodies are to report data of immovable property to cadastral offices (CO)); • cooperation (immovable property owners are obliged to cooperate with COs); • accounting (all Cadastral records have an accounting number, legal relations are to occur first, and only then may be recorded in the Cadastre); • information system (the Cadastre is kept as an information system using computer means); • information system of state governance bodies (the Cadastre is incorporated in the National Information System of state governance bodies). According to the Law, the main principles at introduction of amendments to the Cadastre include: • intabulation (meaning that the ownership right arises simultaneously with its record in cadastral registers); • accounting (immovable property owners are obliged to timely and documentarily report to COs about changes in the rights to immovable property); • legality (data are entered in the Cadastre on the basis of the owner’s application, check of the presented documents and subsequent permission to enter them); • official character (a CO is obliged to make a record of ownership rights, encumbrances and restrictions in CIP on the basis of the owner’s application); • priority (records of all legal relations dealing with immovable property are made from the date when the request is received by a CO); • reliability of records (records of CIP data made after January 1, 1993, meet the true state of affairs); • continuous control (an application for immovable property entry in the Cadastre is accompanied with a document proving that the applicant was the immovable property owner before 1993); • optionality (additional rights to immovable property are only registered on a request of the person entitled to dispose it); • formal publicity (the Cadastre is open for the public, every citizen may see it, make copies and extracts, get information about immovable property for an appropriate fee). With account of the mentioned principles and in line with the Cadastre openness, the laws dealing with the cadastral system were amended. In particular, amendments were made to the Civil and Trade Codes, the Law on Land Property, Residential and Non-Residential Premises, the Regulations of privatisation and restitution and the Law on seizure of property. • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 65 LAND REFORM, CARTOGRAPHIC, GEODETIC AND CADASTRAL SERVICES IN CZECH REPUBLIC The public welcomed the openness of the Cadastre. Only some data (i.e., identification numbers) have not been publicly released since 1993. No cases of harm because of openness were recorded (including in connection with restitution claims, in most cases reflected in the Cadastre). A very important decision that required political solution was as to which body should keep the register of ownership rights and the cadastre. What were the criteria for the keeper’s selection? transfer, records of pledge, encumbrance, pre-emptive rights, etc. Administration involves the review process and the sequence of operations performed in a cadastral office, specifying the terms, the person in charge and the supervising person. Each administration is divided into the following operations: • beginning of administration; In the Czech Republic, the Cadastre of immovable property has always been kept by land management bodies of state governance that had and now have the appropriate equipment and personnel for that, independent of lobbyist interests of different agencies and reporting only to the Government. • verification of the completeness or sufficiency of documents; • submission for review; • transfer of submitted information for update; • generation of proposals on changes; So, keeping the register of ownership rights and the cadastre was vested in the Czech land management and cadastral department (Český úřad zeměměřický a katastrální, ČÚZK) – the main body of the state cartographic, geodetic and cadastral service. • coordination of would-be changes of a cadastral record; • recording; • correction of written documentation; It might be more economic to assign the Cadastre creation and keeping to a private firm. However, first, judging by the experience of some European countries, this is not free of drawbacks, second – it would require big changes in the legislation. • end of administration. An important condition is presented by creation of a practical mechanism of interaction among the state, legal entities and individuals. Cadastre self-financing is also very important for the state budget, data transparency, reliability and speed of operations. The Czech Cadastre is public, contains all items of immovable property located on the country territory in the digital electronic format, and is accessible at the ČÚZK website.2 For searching, the numbers of land parcels or structures within the cadastral area or map (general cadastral map of the territory) are used. The graphic cadastral portion has planimetric points on the map of land parcels or structures. At the ČÚZK website one can also remotely get official extracts from the Cadastre (a paid service for getting documents intended for legal action and for application to state institutions). In addition to specially designed computer protection, cadastre offices also prevent corruption through the process of administration (the client’s tracking of information flow in the cadastre), like “Input”, “Record” and “Topographic plan” (placement of the land parcel and its structures on the cadastral map). “Input”-type administration is performed to record rights on the basis of agreements of immovable property 2 All those operations are independent, performed by different persons who have different rights, duties and passwords to enter the Cadastre of Immovable Property Information System (hereinafter – CIPIS). All stages are controlled, and written information is kept in the archives of documents. Those measures let only a specified group of officials amend CIP data, minimising room for corruption. In case of court process, all information is easy to find. The administration procedure that lasts one month may be tracked on the Internet stepwise. Furthermore, more detailed information about the concerned issue may be prepared officially on request. Farming land Alongside CIPIS, the information system of state governance bodies also incorporates the Land Parcel Identification Systems (LPIS) being created in the EU countries for getting geospatial information about territorial units and used for managing agricultural subsidies. The geospatial information obtained is intended for area management and focuses on farming land identification, land (soil) data quality verification and database update processes. LPIS rests on the principle of farming blocks (actually cultivated land territories held by one farmer and associated with one culture). All updates of databases (registers) are performed by agriculture department officers locally, which substantially saves funds on View Cadastre at Nahlížení do KN: http://nahlizenidokn.cuzk.cz/. 66 • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 THE CZECH EXPERIENCE LPIS maintenance. At that, the land data quality is much higher than the European average, thanks to the good performance by Czech state officials. Amendments are introduced in the real time mode. If, say, farming block boundaries are changed, the changes are recalculated and reassessed in a fully automatic mode. Every year onethird of the Czech territory is covered with a new set of areal photography. The register data are fully accessible on the farmer’s portal; using them, one may get extracts and farming block maps, fill in an application for a subsidy, send data and control the process of change in the real time mode via the Internet. What is good is that in the Czech Republic, LPIS is dealt with by only two state institutions: the Ministry of Agriculture that maintains the land register (LPIS), and the State Agricultural and Interventionist Fund that decides on subsidies. Since almost half of funds for agricultural subsidies comes from the EU budget, this issue is important. Information is usually tied to physical milestones (i.e., part of territory limited by local elements – highways, waterways, forest boundaries, etc.). Such blocks are divided into smaller parts. At subsidy payment, correspondence of the total area to that specified in the application for subsidy is verified, and the farming block area is recorded in the register. In the Czech Republic, the principle of farming blocks is widely used (one block always has one user and one culture). Many EU member states employ private firms to digitise information for subsequent computerisation but the latter, unfortunately, have to deal with low accuracy of geodetic data. For data verification, some EU countries gradually begin to employ officers of state institutions for whom such activity is different from their main duties – in that way, they can save money but not improve the quality. At that, they often forget that LPIS exists to help farmers with fair subsidies and at the same time – to control the legitimacy of getting subsidies and the efficiency of business. LPIS might also be used in Ukraine – for agriculture management by state and local bodies. More than that, the system would draw Ukraine closer to the EU. Among other LPIS benefits, one should note the possibility to control areas under crops, and use of farming lands at harvest planning, tax regulation, control of the spread of farm pests, diseases and weeds, erosion of soil, floods, etc. ORGANISATION AND STRUCTURE OF THE CARTOGRAPHIC AND GEODETIC AND CADASTRAL SERVICE OF THE CZECH REPUBLIC CIP maintenance in the Czech Republic rests on the cartographic, geodetic and cadastral service – the Land Measurement (geodetic and cartographic) and Cadastral Service, established pursuant to the Czech Law No.359/1992 on land measurement and cadastral bodies (as amended), that not only establishes appropriate service units but also decides on their activity and competence.3 The activity in the field of cadastre of immovable property (CIP) is regimented by a separate Czech Law No.344/1992 (as amended). The structure of the Czech land measurement and cadastre bodies is shown on Chart “Organisational structure of land measurement and cadastral service of the Czech Republic”. 0SHBOJTBUJPOBMTUSVDUVSFPGMBOENFBTVSFNFOU BOEDBEBTUSBMTFSWJDFPGUIF$[FDI3FQVCMJD $[FDI-BOE.FBTVSFNFOU BOE$BEBTUSBM%FQBSUNFOU $BEBTUSBM EFQBSUNFOUT -BOE .FBTVSFNFOU %FQBSUNFOU -BOENFBTVSFNFOU BOEDBEBTUSBM JOTQFDUPSBUFT $BEBTUSBM PGGJDFT • creation and operation of the planimetric and elevation base (state geodetic grids); • creation, updating and issue of the basic and specialised public cartographic products, other publications; • standardisation of names of unpopulated geographic points on the territory of the Czech Republic, names of populated localities and other geographic points beyond the Czech borders; • creation and maintenance of an automated information system of geodesy, cartography and CIP of the Czech Republic; • approval of documentation upon the results of cartographic and geodetic activity. (b) coordinates scientific research in the field of geodesy, cartography and cadastre; (c) ensures and coordinates international cooperation in the field of geodesy, cartography and CIP; 3FTFBSDI *OTUJUVUF PG(FPEFTZ 5PQPHSBQIZ BOE $BSUPHSBQIZ Czech land measurement and cadastral department ČÚZK performs the following tasks: (a) provides for uniform performance of the following activities: • maintenance of CIP of the Czech Republic; (d) guides land management and cadastre offices; (e) maintains the central cadastral database, maintained on the national scale using computer means and providing data remotely (via the Internet); (f) resolves disputes in the field of cartographic and geodetic activity; (g) approves standardised names of geographic points and cadastre territories; (h) decides on cancellation of decisions of land management departments; 3 Some provisions of the Law were later updated by Czech Laws No.107/1994, No.200/1994, No.62/1997, No.132/2000, No.186/2001, No.175/2003, No.499/2004 and No.365/2006. RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011 • 67 LAND REFORM, CARTOGRAPHIC, GEODETIC AND CADASTRAL SERVICES IN CZECH REPUBLIC (i) appoints the person responsible for basic and specialised public cartographic products; (j) issues and cancels permits to activities subject to licensing, approves results of cartographic and geodetic works; (k) provides for organisation and conduct of professional tests for occupational fitness; (l) registers persons licensed to perform cartographic and geodetic works; (m) issues basic public and specialised cartographic products; (n) perform other tasks in the field of geodesy, cartography and CIP, including for its development. Cadastral offices 0SHBOJTBUJPOBMTUSVDUVSFPGBDBEBTUSBMEFQBSUNFOU %JSFDUPS $BEBTUSBMEFQBSUNFOU DIBODFSZ $BEBTUSBMPGGJDFT *OUFSOBMBVEJU 5FDIOJDBMTFDUJPO $BEBTUSFPQFSBUJPO VQEBUFEJWJTJPO )3EJWJTJPO #VTJOFTTEJWJTJPO 5FDIOJDBMBOE PSHBOJTBUJPOBMEJWJTJPO -PHJTUJDEJWJTJPO 1SPKFDUTBOE JODPNJOHJOTQFDUJPO 4FSWJDFQFSTPOOFM &DPOPNJTU TFDSFUBSZ Land measurement department Perform the following tasks: 0SHBOJTBUJPOBMTUSVDUVSF PGUIF-BOE.FBTVSFNFOU%FQBSUNFOU (а) public operation of CIP; (b) maintenance of planimetric and elevation geodetic grids and fine grids; %JSFDUPS 4FDUJPO EJSFDUPS DIBODFSZ )3EJWJTJPO *5NBJOUFOBODF EJWJTJPO #VTJOFTTBOE BENJOJTUSBUJWF EJWJTJPO -PHJTUJD EJWJTJPO *OUFSOBMBVEJU -BOE.FBTVSFNFOU4FDUJPOu 4FDUJPO%JSFDUPS%FQVUZ%JSFDUPSPG UIF-BOE.FBTVSFNFOU%FQBSUNFOU ;"#"(&%EBUB DPMMFDUJPOEJWJTJPO ;"#"(&% LFFQJOHEJWJTJPO $FOUSBM"SDIJWFTPG (FPEFTZ $BSUPHSBQIZBOE $BEBTUSF 1MBOJNFUSJD BOEGJFME TVSWFZEJWJTJPO 4FDSFUBSJBUPGČÚZK $PNNJTTJPO GPS(FPHSBQIJD /BNFT (FPEFUJDEBUBLFFQJOH BOEVTFEJWJTJPO $BSUPHSBQIZBOE QSJOUJOHEJWJTJPO (c) review of violations dealing with the Cadastre; (d) approval of changes in local geographic names and support for the activity of standardisation of geographic names; (e) approval of changes in the borders of cadastral territories; (f) maintenance of basic public cartographic materials, including SM5 (state map of the Czech Republic 1:5000); (g) other tasks in the field of geodesy, cartography and cadastre set before them by ČÚZK. Land measurement and cadastral inspectorates 0SHBOJTBUJPOBMTUSVDUVSFPGMBOENFBTVSFNFOU BOEDBEBTUSBMJOTQFDUPSBUFT 1BSEVCJDFMBOE NFBTVSFNFOUEJWJTJPO Performs the following tasks: (а) creates and operates the State planimetric and elevation base; (b) decides on erection, movement or removal of points of the State planimetric and elevation base; (c) maintains the main base of geographic data of the Czech Republic (ZABAGED); %JSFDUPS $POUSPMBOETVQFSWJTJPOTFDUJPO %FQVUZ%JSFDUPS *NNPWBCMFQSPQFSUZDBEBTUSFJOTQFDUPS $BEBTUSBMTVSWFZJOTQFDUPS 4UBUFDBSUPHSBQIZJOTQFDUPS 1SJWBUFTFDUPSJOTQFDUPS 4FQBSBUF XPSLQMBDFT #VEHFUFDPOPNJTU )3TQFDJBMJTUuFDPOPNJTU %SJWFS Perform the following tasks: (d) issues basic and specialised public cartographic materials; (а) control the Cadastre observance by state cadastral offices of the Czech Republic; (e) maintains the database of the planimetric and elevation base (in conventional technical units, i.e.. triangulate sheets, 50х50 km afield); (b) check the results of cartographic and geodetic works used for the Cadastre and public cartographic product maintenance; (f) manages the Central Archives of Land Measurement and Cadastre, as specialised archives; (c) submit proposals to ČÚZK concerning: measures at remedy of drawbacks revealed in course of control; cancellation of permits to completion of the results of cartographic and geodetic works; (g) performs geodetic and cartographic operations on the state border; (h) examines violations in the field of geodesy, cartography and cadastre within the limits of its competence; (i) performs other tasks in the field of geodesy, cartography and cadastre set before it by ČÚZK. 68 (d) decide on cassational appeals against CO decisions; (e) examine violations in the field of geodesy, cartography and cadastre; (f) perform other tasks in the field of geodesy, cartography and cadastre set before them by ČÚZK. • RAZUMKOV CENTRE • NATIONAL SECURITY & DEFENCE • №6, 2011
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