Real property
ownership is admittedly the most sought goal in the hierarchy of human needs.
Neither can it be eaten nor cover your body. But it can provide your food to
fill your stomach and your clothes to keep you warm. A source of income that
can buy what you need. It can serve as your life's material security and
stability over which you build your home, or by which you can obtain the needed
business capital by mortgaging or selling it. Or perhaps it can be something of
sentimental value or part of a family heritage where money is not a
consideration.
Simply put,
viewed from a practical perspective, real property is synonymous to this
"material world". It is essentially, wealth. People work and even die
for it. Wars have been won or lost due to claims over territory. Relationships
are built or destroyed because of land disputes or settlement.
Government has
several departments focused on protecting and preserving its patrimony or
natural resources, and the country's territory; registering it for private
ownership by corporations and individuals; distributing it as part of agrarian
reform; financing and utilizing it for housing, agricultural and industrial
uses; or revenue generation, among others.
Real property is
measured by metes and bounds. The boundaries are important in ownership. They
must basically be precise and identifiable. They should not encroach on each
other lest there be a dispute or controversy.
Ownership must
be clearly established with due consideration to legal titles and rights. Tax
and contractual obligations must be updated or settled. For it to have further
value, it must be clean. This means it can freely disposed of free from any
lien or encumbrance.
Transactions
dealing with realty are actually complex and completed. Even realty
practitioners would have different and sometimes irreconcilable views or
approaches to the same problem or situation.
Thus, laws have
been passed, rules were formulated, decisions handed down, realty organizations
are gearing toward integration, realty practice are being professionalized and
regulated, and government agencies concerned are placed under an umbrella
institution.
It is the
intention of Metes & Bounds to provide a "one-click &
one-site" online reference to realty matters as a public service. The end
in view is to create an awareness among realty stakeholders and simplify the
otherwise complicated terms about then and recent practices.
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