ANZLIC Metadata Profile: An Australian/New Zealand Profile of AS/NZS ISO 19115:2005, Geographic information - Metadata
Metadata Standard Version
1.1
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Citation
Citation
Title
NZ Title Parcel Association List
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Abstract
This table is used to associate live and part-cancelled Records of Titles to current spatial parcels. There is a many to many relationship between titles and parcels.
This table can be used to link [NZ Property Titles List](http://data.linz.govt.nz/table/51567), [NZ Property Title Estates List](http://data.linz.govt.nz/table/51566), or [NZ Property Title Owners List](http://data.linz.govt.nz/table/51564) to spatial parcel layers such as [NZ Parcels](http://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/51571), [NZ Linear Parcels](http://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/51570) or [NZ Primary Parcels](http://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/50772)
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The match between live/part-cancelled titles and current parcels is more than 99%.
**Note:** The originating data for parcel/title associations includes some non-official sources where the official data does not support a link. If you find an link that has a source of 'External' that you believe to be incorrect, please [contact us](http://data.linz.govt.nz/feedback).
For more information about the nature of this association data see the [LINZ website](http://www.linz.govt.nz/about-linz/linz-data-service/dataset-information/cadastral-titles-data).
For more information about this table, other property datasets, and how to relate them to each other, refer to the [Property Boundary and Ownership Data Dictionary](https://data.linz.govt.nz/document/11012).
Purpose
This table is used to associate live and part cancelled titles to current spatial parcels. There is a many to many relationship between titles and parcels.
Released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International with:
Following Disclaimers: 1. This data is made available through the LINZ Data Service and is based on information contained with Landonline (New Zealand's Official Title and Cadastral System)
2. Not to be used for defining legal parcel boundaries or transacting land
Following Attribution: If you publish, distribute or otherwise disseminate this work to the public without adapting it, the following attribution to Land Information New Zealand should be used: 'CC BY 4.0 Land Information New Zealand’
If you adapt this work in any way or include it in a collection, and publish, distribute or otherwise disseminate that adaptation or collection to the public, the following attribution to Land Information New Zealand should be used: ‘Contains data sourced from the LINZ Data Service and licensed for reuse under CC BY 4.0.'
If "attribution stacking" problems exist then the requirement to display the above attribution statements is waived and in lieu the attribution statement is to be made in any terms or conditions associated with the work/ product/ application/ etc.
The function of the Registrar-General of Land is to provide a system, whereby the ownership of land can be legally evidenced, under which dealings with it can be effected and recorded.
From the earliest days of colonisation, offices have existed in New Zealand for the registration of instruments affecting land. To enable a record of ownership of land to be kept the Land Registration Ordinance was passed by the Legislative Council of New Zealand on 28th December 1841. This provided for the setting up of Deeds Registry Offices and prescribed the method of registering Crown Grants and other Private Deeds relating to Land. The system is generally known as Deeds Registration System or Deeds System for short.
The Deeds System with modifications continued until the Land Registry Act 1860 was promulgated. After a number of amendments it was replaced by the Land Transfer System (LT Act 1870 and subsequent acts). This is sometimes called the Torrens System, after its originator in South Australia. Since the 1870 all registration takes place under the Land Transfer System. The Land Transfer System provides a simple method of registration and in addition, titles issued under it are guaranteed by the State. The first digital data was created by the Land Titles Office (a division of the Justice Department) in the late 1980s - early 90s. This data formed the electronic land transfer journal and a titles index (Land Title Link). The LTO was amalgamated with DOSLI and finally LINZ. As Landonline was rolled out, the paper titles were converted into digital computer registers. The titles conversion project converted 1.8 million "live" titles and imaged 2 million instruments. Certificate of Titles as they were previously known are now mostly obsolete as Computer Registers have been issued to replace them.
Prior to Landonline LINZ wrote memorials on the back of certain documents e.g. Gazette Notices and certain Leases. Because documents are now stored electronically Computer Interest Registers are now issued as the means for recording memorials affecting these instruments. Every Computer Interest Register relates to a specific document.
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unclassified
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Crown copyright reserved
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copyright
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Released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International