QLDIn ForceAct
Land Title Act 1994
sec.122Lodging a caveat
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### sec.122 Lodging a caveat
A caveat may be lodged by any of the following—
a person claiming an interest in a lot;
the registrar under section 17 ;
the registered owner of the lot;
a person to whom an Australian court has ordered that an interest in a lot be transferred;
a person who has the benefit of a subsisting order of an Australian court in restraining a registered proprietor from dealing with a lot.
However a caveat may only be lodged by an equitable mortgagee if it is a caveat to which section 126 applies.
To remove any doubt, it is declared that an interest in a lot does not include an interest in a proposed lot under the Land Sales Act 1984 that a person obtains by agreeing to buy the lot under a contract for the sale of the lot.
s 122 amd 1994 No. 33 s 11 (retro); 1997 No. 40 s 30 ; 2001 No. 57 s 7 ; 2014 No. 46 s 75 sch 1
(sec.122-ssec.1) A caveat may be lodged by any of the following— a person claiming an interest in a lot; the registrar under section 17 ; the registered owner of the lot; a person to whom an Australian court has ordered that an interest in a lot be transferred; a person who has the benefit of a subsisting order of an Australian court in restraining a registered proprietor from dealing with a lot.
(sec.122-ssec.2) However a caveat may only be lodged by an equitable mortgagee if it is a caveat to which section 126 applies.
(sec.122-ssec.3) To remove any doubt, it is declared that an interest in a lot does not include an interest in a proposed lot under the Land Sales Act 1984 that a person obtains by agreeing to buy the lot under a contract for the sale of the lot.
- (a) a person claiming an interest in a lot;
- (b) the registrar under section 17 ;
- (c) the registered owner of the lot;
- (d) a person to whom an Australian court has ordered that an interest in a lot be transferred;
- (e) a person who has the benefit of a subsisting order of an Australian court in restraining a registered proprietor from dealing with a lot.