THE POWER OF THE MORTGAGEE TO SALE VIS-A-VIS LAND MANAGEMENT IN NIGERIA

E. O. ENAKIRERU, Sunny P.C IBOLOKO

Abstract


Mortgage transaction is an indispensable practice in modern day business activities. In Nigeria howevermortgage is regulated by the legal framework provided by the Land Use Act, 1978 as amended. It also appearsthat the Act is legally inadequate, and its interpretation often generates controversies in some respects. The studycritically examined the power of the mortgagee to sale vis-a-vis land management in Nigeria, the restrictivedefinition of a holder, mandatory, costly and time consuming consent, dreadful revocation of the provision ofsection 28, discriminatory compensation, resettlement without compensation, non-transferability of non-urbanland, the problem of land accessibility for security, problems of access to land in Nigeria under the act for security,problem of land availability under the act for security, problems of land affordability under the act for security,increased scarcity of land and escalating prices, implications of inadequate access to land for security, inefficientuse of land resources, inequitable distribution of wealth worsening housing conditions, environmentaldegradation, poverty accentuation, regional imbalances in economic development. The study finally maderecommendations that will accommodate the interest of the mortgagee/lender when the market goes dry. It wasfurther observed that the consent provision in the Land Use Act and clauses on revocation, compensation andsettlement were impediments to mortgage transactions in Nigeria as there were no such laws that constituteimpediments to mortgage transaction in United Kingdom and India and recommended their removal.

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