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A Comparative Research on the Basic Land Law and/or Agrarian Reform Law of the

Philippines, Indonesia, Myanmar and Cambodia

A Research Submitted to the Faculty of Economics, Department


of Education, Davao Doctors College
in Fulfillment for the Final Examination in
Health Economics

Submitted by:
Alipio, Mark
Subang, Danielle Marie
Basa, Rhea
Labio,Cye
Samson, Delie
Lindo, Tom
Urbiztondo, Betina
Salcedo, Shaw
Ybanez, Gladys
Marasigan, Dino
Of BSRT1-51A
Submitted to:
Mr. Rodel Jun Q. Hernandez
May 2015

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Similarities and Differences of the 4 SEA Nations


Appendix to the Agrarian Reform Law
Philippines
Indonesia
Myanmar (Burma)
Cambodia
Bibliography

There is a limit of owning a land in different agrarian reform laws. Fail to do so will inflict
payments, penalties and to more extent, withdrawal of the allocated land.
A child of the land beneficiary (landowner) may be awarded by a number of hectares
Table
1.0Similarities
(True
All)requirements.
provided
that he/she meets
thetolegal
There is a right to transfer the land allocated from the deceased land beneficiary to the first
generation family provided that the land allocated will not exceed on a given limit per
person.
All Cambodian legal entities and citizens have the right to own land. (Article 2) No person
may be deprived of his ownership, unless it is in public interest.
*Myanmar, Philippines and Indonesia only give land ownership programs through
distribution of state land to agricultural farmers and/or landless or near-landless people.
In Philippines, CARP beneficiaries can transfer/sale their lands if a decade has already lapsed
provided that the agricultural land has been fully paid. (Article 27)
*In Myanmar, no one is allowed to transfer/sale. (Article 12, Section 5)
*In Indonesia, transfer/sale is not allowed, only lease or haksewaatastanah. (Articles 44,45)
Graduates with degree or associate course in agriculture who are landless are assisted by the
Table
1.1 Differences
(True
Only
totill
One
Country)
government
in their desire
to own
and
agricultural
lands.(Chapter 10, Section 40 (7))
*There is no such program in Myanmar, Indonesia and Cambodia.
Similarities and Differences
of the 4 Southeast Asian
(SEA) Nations

Myanmar (Burma)

THE LAND NATIONALIZATION ACT (1948)


[Repealed by the Land Nationalisation Act (1953)]
Act LX, 1948
[Exact Date Unknown]
It is hereby enacted as follows:
1. (1) This Act may be called the Land Nationalization Act, 1948.
(2) It shall come into force on such date as the President may, by notification, appoint, and different dates may be
appointed for different parts of the Union of Burma.
2. In this Act, unless there is anything repugnant in the subject or context,:
(a)

adult means a person who has completed his eighteenth year;

(b)
agricultural land means land which is occupied or is ordinarily utilized, or has been leased, for the
purposes of agriculture of horticulture or husbandry or for purposes subservient to agriculture, horticulture or
husbandry and includes the sites of buildings, dwelling houses and other structures on such land; but does not
include land that is within a town or village and is occupied as the site of a dwelling;
(c)
agriculturist means a person who works for the year 1948-49, or who habitually worked prior to that year,
any agricultural land, as his principle means of subsistence:
(i)

with his own hands as a land-holder or as a tenant or as an agricultural labourer,

(ii)
in the case of a person disabled by age or physical defect under his personal superintendence, throughout
the working periods of the year:
Provided that a woman who works any agricultural land under her personal superintendence, throughout the working
periods of the year, as her principal means of subsistence shall be deemed to be an agriculturist;
(d)
lease of agricultural land means a transfer of a right to enjoy such land, made for a certain time, express or
implied, or in perpetuity, in consideration of a price paid or promised or of money, a share of crops, service or any
other thing of value to be rendered periodically or on specified occasions to the transferor by the transferee, who
accepts the transfer on such terms;
(e)
agriculturist family means a group of persons, related by blood or marriage, living together and depending
for its maintenance on the earnings of one or more senior members thereof, who shall be an agriculturist or
agriculturists;
Explanation: families living together but feeding separately shall be regarded as separate families.
(f) possession means the occupation of agricultural land by any person, or by his servant, agent, tenant, or
mortgagee or by some other person holding under him:
Provided that, notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time being in force, an agricultural land
under a use of usufructuary or English mortgage or a mortgage by conditional sale, shall be deemed to be in the
possession of the mortgagee:
(g)

tenant means a person or organisation that occupies land and is liable to pay rent for the said land;

(h)
constitutional improvement means any work by which the value of the agricultural land has been
permanently increased by the cost of or by the labour of the person in possession of the said agricultural land or his
predecessor in interest, and includes any building erected on the agricultural land for the dwelling of a cultivator or for
any other person subservient to agriculture; drainage works, irrigation channels, tanks, wells, embankments, roads or
other permanent improvements; but does not include the clearance of land for purposes of cultivation, the
construction of kazins or improvements not of a permanent nature.

3.
The State shall, as from the commencement of this Act resume possession of all agricultural lands with the
exception of the agricultural lands specified in the Schedule I and to the extent specified in the said schedule and
section 4; and notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time being in force or in any agreement,
contract, deed, grant, lease of licence, all rights whatsoever existing therein before the commencement of this Act
other than the rights of the State shall thereupon cease absolutely; and no rights whatsoever other than the rights of
the State shall, save as expressly provided in section 9, hereafter accrue on such land.
4.
(1) Out of the first three classes of agricultural lands specified in Schedule I, an exemption from the
operation of section 3 shall be granted to each agriculturist family which is in possession of any agricultural lands, in
respect of one class of such lands to the extent specified therefore in the said Schedule:
Provided that if, after the commencement of this Act, any agricultural land, exempted from the operation of section 3,
is reclassified in the records of the Land Records Department or is utilized for cultivation which would have resulted in
reclassification, the State shall resume possession of any area in excess of the limits prescribed in this section and
the Schedule I.
(2) Any agricultural family which is in possession of agricultural lands coming within the first three classes of the
Schedule I shall be entitled to claim exemption from the operation of section 3 in respect of one or more such classes
of agricultural lands, provided that if the claim is in respect of more than one class of such agricultural lands, the total
limit for such exemption shall be computed according to the proportion prescribed in respect of each class of such
lands in the Schedule I.
(3)
The President may, by rules, prescribe the conditions in which a joint or undivided family may, for the
purpose of exemption under sub-section (1), be split into separate agriculturist families within the meaning of this Act.
(4)
For the purpose of sub-section (1), a parentless minor who is in possession of any agricultural land shall be
deemed to be an agriculturist if either or both of his parents was or were an agriculturist or agriculturists.
(5)

Any agricultural land in respect of which an exemption has been granted under section 4 shall be inheritable:

Provided that any agricultural land falling to the share of a person by way of inheritance who is not an agriculturist,
shall be resumed possession by the State.
(6) (1) No person who is in possession of any agricultural land, exempted from the operation of section 3, shall:
(a)
leave any agricultural land fallow without sufficient cause, or
(b)
mortgage, sell, or otherwise transfer such land to any other person or fragment or subdivide such land
except in accordance with the rules prescribed by the President and subject to section 5, or
(c)

rent or lease such land to any other person with or without consideration:

Provided that clause (c) shall not apply to any agricultural land in the possession of a religious institution or a member
of the religious order or a minor or a person of unsound mind.
(2) If any person in possession of any agricultural land exempted under section 4, contravenes any provision of subsection (1) or if the income derived from any agricultural land in the possession of a religious institution or a member
of the religious order is not utilized exclusively for religious purposes, the agricultural land in respect of which such
contravention is made shall be liable to be resumed possession by the State.
7. (1) Except where agricultural lands are liable to be resumed possession by the State for default or conditions
prescribed under any other law for the time being in force, compensation in respect of agricultural land resumed
possession by the State under section 3 shall be paid in accordance with the provisions of this section and the
Schedule II.
(2) In respect of agricultural lands over which rights have been acquired by a grant or lease and for which a premium
was paid to Government at the time of the grant or the lease the premium so paid shall be payable to the person in
possession of the said land, in addition to any compensation payable under the need succeeding sub-section and the
Schedule II.
(3) Except in respect of the compensation payable for constructional improvements, the compensation shall be
determined in accordance with the provisions prescribed in the Schedule II.
In determining such compensation the following factors shall be taken into consideration:-

(a)

the nature of the tenure of the agricultural land;

(b)

the length of time for which a person has been in possession of the agricultural land;

(c)

the benefits enjoyed by virtue of possession of the agricultural land; and

(d)
the costs incurred and any loss suffered in respect of the agricultural land, except the costs of the
constructional improvements incurred on account of the possession of or the premium paid for the grant or the lease
of the agricultural land.
(4) Constructional improvements shall be valued on the following formula:First cost of construction plus cost of improvements on the original construction minus the value depreciation minus
the value of damage.
(5)
The land revenue referred to in the Schedule II shall not include the water-rate chargeable in respect of the
agricultural land.
(6)
The President shall appoint a Commission consisting of ten members to determine the basis of
compensation in accordance with sub-section (3) and the manner of payment of the compensation and the premium
payable under sub-section (2).
(7)
The Commission may sit at such times and in such places as it may deem fit and shall have the powers
vested in a Civil Court under the Code of Civil Procedure in respect of the following matters:(a)

discovery and inspection;

(b)

enforcing attendance of witnesses;

(c)

compelling the production of documents;

(d)

examining witnesses on oath; and

reception of evidence taken on affidavit; and the Commission shall be deemed to be a Civil Court within the meanings
of sections 480 and 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
(8) The findings of the Commission shall be final and the compensation and the premium payable under sub-section
(2) shall be determined and paid in accordance therewith.
8.
The President may, where he is satisfied that undue hardship has been caused to a person by the operation
of section 3 or 7, cause to render such relief other than the grant of exemption under section 4, as he may deem fit.
9.
(1) The agricultural lands resumed possession by the State under section 3 and all other agricultural lands
under the control of the State shall be allotted for purposes of cultivation in accordance with the provisions of subsection (3).
(2) Pending the distribution of all agricultural lands under this Act, the persons who have been working such
agricultural lands immediately before the commencement of this Act shall remain in occupation of the said lands as
State tenants:
Provided that the rents for agricultural lands leased before the commencement of this Act shall be payable to the
persons who were in possession of such lands immediately before the commencement of this Act.
(3) Subject to the provisions of section 10 (1), all agricultural lands referred to in sub-section (1), except such
lands as may be required for grazing grounds and village common lands, shall be distributed to all
agricultural families other than those which have been granted exemption under section 4, and such area of
agricultural land as can be served by one yoke of cattle shall be allotted to each agriculturalists family at
least one of whose members is an able-bodied adult:-

Provided that:
(a)
such area of agricultural land as can be served by two yokes of cattle may be allotted to an agricultural
family consisting of more than four adults who are capable of working that area;
(b)
is the agricultural land in the possession of an agriculturalist family, which has been granted an exemption
under section 4, is less than an area which can be served by one yoke of cattle, such acreage of agricultural land
may be allotted to such family as will enable it to cultivate an area which can be served by one yoke of cattle;
(c)
in an area where the agricultural lands resumed possession by the State under section 3 and all other
agricultural lands under control of the State are not sufficient for distribution to all agriculturalist families in that area
as provided in this sub-section, the President may, by rules, prescribe to which of the different classes of
agriculturalist families priority shall be given for the distribution of such agricultural lands; and
(d) in respect of taungya cultivation the acreage allotted to each agriculturalist family shall be such as is suitable for
such cultivation.
10. (1) No agriculturalist family shall be allotted any agricultural land under the provisions of section 9 (3) unless one
or more members thereof join or undertake to join a co-operative organisation approved by the State.
(2)

The President may, by rules, prescribe the procedure to be followed in forming co-operative organizations.

(3)

The State may take such measures as it may deem expedient to promote the formation of collective farms.

11.
The grazing grounds and village common lands existing before the commencement of the Act shall continue
to be preserved, and a sufficient number of grazing grounds and village common lands shall be provided for each
village-tract or group of village-tracts as the case may be.
12.

(1) An agriculturist family to which agricultural land has been allotted under section

(3) shall have the right to cultivate such land and enjoy all the benefits arising therefrom subject to the rights
of the State and to the following conditions:(i)

that one or more members of such family shall personally cultivate such land;

(ii)

that it shall pay all impositions of the State;

(iii)

that it shall not cease to be an agriculturist family;

(iv)

that such land shall not be left fallow without sufficient cause;

(v)
that such land shall not be mortgaged, sold or otherwise transferred to any other person or be fragmented or
subdivide; and
(vi)

that such land shall not be rented or leased to any other person with or without consideration.

(2) If an agriculturist family, to which agricultural land has been allotted under section 9 (3), fails to observe any of the
conditions specified in sub-section (1) or if none of its members joins, or remains to be a member of, a co-operative
organization, approved by the State, all the rights under this Act of such family relating to such agricultural lands shall
be forfeited to the State.
13. Any agricultural land which is resumed possession by the State under the proviso to section 5 or section 6 (2) or
in respect of which the rights of an agriculturist family are forfeited to the State under section 12 (2), shall be
distributed as provided in section 9 (3).
14. (1) The President may appoint such land committee or other authorities, either by election or otherwise, and for
such areas as he may deem necessary for carrying out the purposes of this Act, and may authorize such Committees
or authorities to exercise all or any of the following powers:
(i)
to resume possession of agricultural lands on behalf of the State under section 3 or under the proviso to
section 6 (2) or to forfeit the rights of the agriculturist families under section 12 (2);

(ii)

to grant exemption under section 4;

(iii)

to distribute agricultural lands under section 9 (3);

(iv)
to establish agricultural co-operative organizations and to exercise such powers and functions of the
governing bodies thereof are duly elected;
(v)

To take necessary action for ensuring the effective cultivation of all agricultural lands; and

(vi)

such other powers as the President may deem necessary for carrying out the purposes of this Act.

(2)
The President may also appoint such other bodies or authorities as he may deem necessary to provide for
appeals under this Act and for receiving and examining claims for compensation and determining the compensation
in accordance with the basis prescribed by the Commission appointed under section 7 (6).
(3)
Such Land Committees, Bodies or authorities may be deemed to be Civil Courts within the meaning of
section 480 and section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and the President may invest such Land Committee,
Bodies or authorities with all or any of the following powers of Civil Courts:(a)

discovery and inspection,

(b)

enforcing attendance of witnesses,

(c)

compelling the production of documents,

(d)

examining the witness on oath,

(e)

such other powers as the President may deem necessary.

(4) Any person or authority, or a member of a Land Committee or other Body, appointed under this Act shall be
deemed to be a public servant within the meaning of section 21 of the Penal Code.
15. Whoever obstructs:
(a)
any person in carrying out the orders made under this Act or the rules by the President or any Committee
body or authority appointed under section 14, or
(b)
Act,

any Committee, Body, or authority appointed by the President in the discharge of its or his duties under this

shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to five years or with fine which may extend to one
thousand rupees or with both.
16.
Whoever contravenes any order or direction issued by any Committee, Body or authority under this Act,
shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years or with fine which may extend to five
hundred rupees or with both.
17.
If five or more persons organize themselves with the common intention of committing an offence under
section 15 or section 16 and if any one of them, in furtherance of their common intention, commits an offence under
section 15 or section 16, each of such persons shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to
seven years and shall also be liable to fine.
18.

(1) The President may make rules for carrying out the purposes of this Act.

(2) In particular, and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power, such rules may:
(i)
prescribe the manner in which the agricultural lands are to be resumed under section 3 of under the proviso
to section 5 of under section 6 (2);
(ii)

prescribe the manner in which the agricultural lands to be exempted under section 4 are to be determined;

(ii) prescribe the conditions referred to in section 6 (1) (b);

(iv)

prescribe the procedure to be followed in rendering relief referred to in section 8;

(v)

prescribe the procedure to be followed in distributing agricultural lands under section 9 (3);

(vi)

provide for election, if any, referred to in section 14 (1);

(vii)
provide for the circumstances in which, and the authorities to which, appeals shall lie in respect of any
matter specified in section 3, section 4 or section 9 (3), or any matter connected with any election referred to in
section 14 (1);
(viii) provide for the manner and the form in which and the authority to whom claims for compensation under section 7
shall be made; and the manner in which such claims shall be examined.
19.
No suit, prosecution or other legal proceedings shall lie against any person or authority for anything in good
faith done or intended to be done in pursuance of this Act.
20.
Except where there is a dispute as to the title to the agricultural land or as to the apportionment of
compensation no Civil Court shall have jurisdiction in any matter under this Act.
SCHEDULE I
1.
Agricultural land, classified as Rice or Sugar Cane land in the records of the Land Records Department in
the year 1947-48 or where no such record is maintained, ordinarily utilized for cultivation of paddy or sugar cane and
in continuous possession of an agriculturist family from 4th January 1948 up to the extent of fifty acres.
2.
Agricultural land, classified as Ya land in the in the records of the Land Records Department in the year
1947-48 or where no such record is maintained, ordinarily utilized for cultivation of Ya crops and in continuous
possession of an agriculturist family from 4th January 1948 up to the extent of fifty acres.
3.
Agricultural land, classified as Kaing land in the in the records of the Land Records Department in the year
1947-48 or where no such record is maintained, ordinarily utilized for cultivation of Kaing crops and in continuous
possession of an agriculturist family from 4th January 1948 up to the extent of ten acres.
4.
Agricultural land, classified as Dhani land in the in the records of the Land Records Department in the year
1947-48 or where no such record is maintained, ordinarily utilized for cultivation of Dhani to the extent of the whole.
5.
Agricultural land, classified as Orchard or Garden lands in the in the records of the Land Records
Department in the year 1947-48 or where no such record is maintained, ordinarily utilized for the cultivation of garden
crops to the extent of the whole.
6.
All agricultural lands classified in the records of the Land Records Department as being cultivated with
Rubber in the year 1947-48 or where no such record is maintained, ordinarily utilized for the cultivation of Rubber to
the extent of the whole.
7.
whole:

All agricultural lands belonging to a religious institution or a member of the religious order to the extent of the

(a) if they are either:

1166

Housing, Land and Property Rights in Burma: The Current Legal Framework

(i)

classified as wuttagan lands in the settlement records; or

(ii)

transferred to such institution or member by a registered deed of gift; and

(iii)

if the income derived from such lands is utilized exclusively for religious purposes.

Cambodia

Cambodia: Land Law of 1992


Publisher
National Legislative Bodies / National Authorities
Publication Date: 13 October 1992
Cite as Cambodia: Land Law of 1992
13 October 1992, available at:
The Law, dated 13 October 1992, was approved by the National Assembly of the State of Cambodia on 10 August 1992 during
the 23rd session of its first legislature. It was promulgated by Decree No. 100 on 13 October 1992.
Disclaimer
This is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content.
Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United
Nations or its Member States.
General Disposition
Article 1:
All the land in Cambodia belongs to the State and shall be governed and protected in agreement by the State. The State does not
recognize the land property right existing before 1979. The property right and any other rights related to the land shall be
governed by this law.
Article 2:
Cambodians have the full right to possess and to use the land and have the right of inheritance of the property provided by the
State for living and for doing business.
Article 3:
The State guarantees to the user of the land the right to possess, to use, and to receive lawful product of the land. The violation of
the private property shall be forbidden except when the public interest requires in cases provided by the law. In this case the
property owner has the right to receive in advance just and proper compensation.
Article 4:
The mineral, cultural and historical patrimonies underground, on the ground, at the bottom and under the bottom of the sea are
the property of the State.
Article 5:
Private right is not given in forestry reserve, fishery reserve, water reservoir for mining purposes, cultural and historical
patrimonies, monasteries, deep forests, schools, parks, public hills, old public buildings, land reserved for roads construction and
road maintenance, rail-road, rivers and seas.
PART I:ESTATE OWNERSHIP
Chapter I:Estate " Real Estate "
Section I: Type of Real Estate
Article 6:
An estate is an object which has a fixed position in one place, either by nature or by fixture. All movable objects by their natural
state but defined by law as estates are called estates as provided by law. The rights applicable to the estate are also considered as
estates.

Article 7:
Estates by nature are land, buildings that were constructed on foundations, or constructed with concrete, and bricks, buildings that
if they are moved will produce substantial loss of value.

Article 8:
Estate by fixtures are objects, even though movable by nature, are nevertheless considered as estates because they pertain to
accessories of the estates. They shall be attached to the estates; sometimes, they are the product of the estates such as forest
product of every kind prior to the harvest, or not separated from the land or, trees bearing fruits; sometimes they are useful in
business utilization of funds for agriculture, industries, commerce, such as animals raised for husbandry, for sale, for
transportation, for racing, for plowing, and vehicle, instruments, tools, equipments, fertilizer, seeds and young trees; sometimes
they are the products that enter into combination with estates by nature, and in case they are separated from the estates to become
the movable properties it destroys the pre-established order, the usefulness, the easiness and the beauty of the estates which they
were used to support, like gutters, big mirrors, statues, lamps attached to the wall or to the ceiling and board etc...
Article 9:
Estates as provided by law are objects that the law classifies into the estates by nature even though they are transportable. These
estates are ships with capacity more than 30 tons, floating houses with the same capacity, and secured rights on the estates.
Article 10:
Real estates and secured rights on that estates may sometimes be privately owned by single individual, or several individuals each
having a share of that one property or that one right which cannot be separated; sometimes it is a communal estate belonging to
one group of people or to all of them.
The property of the first category called "private property " shall be considered as private personal ownership of each person. The
property of the second category called "communal estate" shall be considered as public and communal property.
In all these cases, private person or community shall have the right to estates property on the immovable properties enumerated
below; all other rights are not recognized by law:

1.Proprietorship
2.Temporary possession
3.Authorization to cultivate land
4.Franchise
5.Usufruct
6.Right of use and of stay
7.Easement
8.Secured loan on estate
9.Mortgage
The rights related to the authorization to cultivate the land and the rights related to the franchise will be dealt with in separate
laws.
Article 11:
Usufruct, the right of use and stay, easement are the cases that affect the owner's rights; they take away the monopoly rights on
the proprietorship, due to the individual, intentional agreement or due to the compliance with the law. The above three rights
mentioned in Part III about the dismemberment of the proprietorship are not considered as secured debt.
The secured loan on estate, is considered as a secured debt in order to protect the commitment made by the realty proprietor put
his estate as an object of guaranty against his changing of mind. The proprietor shall perform his duty for the interest of the
secured lender.

Section II:The relationship between the estate and the estate owner
Article 12:
The real estate owner recognized by law has all benefits relating to real properties which are natural produce and income of
capital. The natural produce is the product from the land or domestic animal; the eligible person shall receive this produce in it
natural form. The income of capital is a product of the capital, and rent and interest; the eligible person shall receive this produce
in cash.
Article 13:
Ordinary person may organize freely their property, and their rights as private individual, simply by saying before executing the
tasks; the ordinary person, however, shall respect the regulations of legitimate law also.
Article 14:
In order to manage their possession, the community who own the property shall be considered also as a person called legal person
which shall have a personality separate from the personality of a member of the community, and which it shall represent in the
enjoyment of all rights.
In order to manage and administer their own property whether it is public or private, the community shall be subjected to a
separate law.
Article 15:
Any property that social consideration requires that it is preserved in its natural form in order to serve the public interest shall be
considered as public property pertaining to the state community. The property having the above mentioned character cannot
definitely be sold.
Article 16:
Any property that does not generally benefit the society as mentioned above, and that other persons may, each, have, that
property shall be considered as private property of the community.
Article 17:
All properties of the public domain, in the event where they cease to provide anymore benefit to the society, they turn into private
properties in accordance with the land cultivation law or franchise, and that properties are no longer unsalable.

Article 18:
The properties that are vacant and have no owner, properties belonging to a deceased who has no heir, the abandoned heritage,
should belong to the private properties of the state.
After a period of five years, the unregistered real properties, whether productive or not shall be considered as private properties of
the state.
The registered real properties whose owners failed to pay the property tax, the estate tax or the rent in time and at the rate
determined by the state within a period of five consecutive years, and, the property that every body reports that they relinquish,
shall belong to the private property of the state.
Chapter II:Proprietorship
Article 19:
Proprietorship is the right to manage absolutely and solely any property, provided that it is not prohibited by law.
The land proprietorship can only acquire on the residential land.
A separate law shall be applied to the land located in the residential area and in the municipality.

Article 20:
Nobody shall be forced to transfer his/her ownership, if the forcing is not necessary for public interest, and, no proper and just
indemnity paid to the owner.
Article 21:
The proprietor has all rights pertaining to its property and everything derived from the property itself either by nature or by
creation. These rights are called the right of accession.
Section I: The right of accession deriving from an object
Article 22:
According to the right of accession, natural resources from the land, the income of capital, the breed from animal husbandry shall
belong to the proprietor of that land.
Article 23:
Unless the proprietor pay the labor cost, the cost of the seeds, to the third person, the production from his/her property belongs
the proprietor.
Section II:The right of accession to the land bound objects and the combined objects
Article 24:
Anything that grows out of, or in combination with an object, shall belong to the proprietor of that object.
Article 25:
The ownership of the land is the ownership of the adjacent and the subjacent of the land. The proprietor can plant crop and
construct building on the land as he/she wishes unless the law and regulations prevent him/her from doing so.

Article 26:
Buildings, crops and any works done on the land or in the land, if no evidence showing that it belongs to the other person shall be
assumed as object done at the owner's resource.
Article 27:
The proprietor of the land where the buildings were constructed and the works are done by the equipments which do not belong
to himself or herself, shall pay the cost of the equipment to the owner of the equipment. The proprietor may be punished for the
payment of the damage, but the owner of the equipment has no right to acquire the works done.
Article 28:
If the crops, the buildings, and works done by the third person, by his own equipment, the proprietor shall have the rights to keep
those items, or, allow that third person to remove them. If the proprietor allows the removal of the crops and the buildings, the
one who planted or built shall take them out at his own expenses and cannot claim any damage. That third person may receive the
penalty by paying the indemnity to the proprietor, if the removal caused any damage to the land proprietor.
If the proprietor wants to keep the crop and the work already done, he shall pay the labor cost and the cost of the equipment
without considering whether the land will have more or less value. But if the court ordered to take away the crops, the buildings,
and the work already done from the third person without penalizing him, because of his sincere intention, the proprietor may not
allow to remove the trees, the buildings but he may choose to pay the cost of the equipment and the labor cost, or by paying an
amount of money equivalent to the increased value of the land.

Article 29:

The silt that grows out of the large riverbank, small riverside, little by little, can be recognised as alluvial soil.
The alluvial soil shall belong to the proprietor of the land on the water front accessible or not by the ships and the rafts. But if it is
accessible, the proprietor shall keep that water passage or the dock in accordance with the regulations.
Article 30:
The alluvial soil, that built up from one side of the river, little by little without being realized it, carried by the water current from
another side of the river, shall belong to the proprietor of riverside where the alluvial soil grows. And the proprietor of other side
of the river cannot claim for their loss of land carried by the water current. These regulations do not apply to the alluvial soil in
the sea due to the movement of the water.
Article 31:
If the large river or small river, creek whether accessible or not by ships have flood which causes a big chunk of land break away
from one part of the riverside, and deposit on the lower bank or on the other part of the riverside, the proprietor who lost the land
can claim back within that year. Beyond one year the claim shall not be taken into consideration as void unless the proprietor of
the land which has alluvial soil deposited has not possessed the land yet.
Article 32:
Islands, isles and the land that grows out of the river bank creeks which can be used as passage, navigable by ships or rafts belong
to the state in accordance with the regulations in force.

Article 33:
Islands, isles and the land that grows out of the river bank, creeks which cannot be used as passage, not navigable by ships or
rafts, belong to the proprietor who owns the land on the riverside, on the creek side where the island grows. If the island does not
excessively grow on one riverside, this island shall belong to the proprietors of both sides of the riverside using the middle of the
river as the dividing line.
Article 34:
If any river has new effluents that cross and embrace the land of any proprietor who owns the land on the riverside, and a piece of
the land becomes an isle, that proprietor still has the right on that isle even though if the isle grows in the river or small river
navigable by ships and rafts.
Article 35:
If any rivers, small rivers or creeks navigable by the ships, rafts and broken into new passage by leaving the old one, the
proprietors on the riverside may take back their old passage which became land. Each proprietor shall have its rights to the land
up to the dividing line, the middle of the river. The price of that old passage shall be determined by the provincial or municipal
court of that place. The court orders the arbitrator to estimate the price at the request of the provincial authority or various
interested parties.
If the proprietor of the land on the riverside does not want to pay at the price set by the arbitrator, the state authority shall auction
that old passage to the public. The revenue from the auction shall be divided among the proprietors who own that old passage
according to its size and the nature of its damage.
Chapter III:Co-Ownership
Article 36:
All co-owners may exercise together their rights as proprietors, each one has one part by proportion of the property only but not
by the amount of equipment. In this case, all proprietors are under a joint tenancy " that is being indivisible".
Article 37:
Each part shall be assumed to be equal. Each co-owner has the rights and the responsibility as proprietor, since his/her respective
part may be sold or mortgaged and the lender may use it as secured debt.

Article 38:
Co-owners operate these proprieties together unless if there is any different agreement.
If the majority did not make any decision different from this, each one of the co-owners shall have the duties and shall be
normally responsible for repairing, doing the maintenance and planting crops, etc... Any other more important work than that
such as changing the nature of the crop, and important repair, the co-owners can make a decision in the case where the sum of the
total parts of the present co-owners is more than half the value of the properties
Article 39:
Each co-owner may take care of, and protect the common property. Each one shall depend on and use that property up to the limit
of the rights of the others. All co-owners have to agree in unanimity upon the sale, the creation of secured rights, or the changing
the function of operating the property, with the exception that in the case where all of them agreed in consensus to draw a
separate procedure on this matter.

Article 40:
The expenses on the maintenance, the property taxes and other charges that came from the co-owners or the equipment itself,
shall be paid by the co-owners proportionally unless there is a decision made contrary to this regulation.
If anyone paid more than it should be, he may claim the extra portion from the other coowner proportionally to their part.
Article 41:
Each co-owner has the rights to force the partition of the property if there is no agreement made on the joint tenant or if there is
no intention to keep the property as permanent.
Article 42:
No person may force anyone to keep the joint tenancy and each co-owner may not take a lead to the partition of property in any
case.
Co-owners may keep all their portions in the joint tenancy for a period of time not more than five years, unless the contract is
renewed.
Article 43:
The co-ownership is terminated when their property is partitioned according to its original form, sold by agreement of all tenants,
or by auction. The revenue shall be divided accordingly, or anyone or more than one person in the group take over the other parts
by himself or themselves.
If the co-owners do not agree upon the way of dividing, they shall submit their complain to the court requesting for a partition of
property in accordance with its original form, and if the object is indivisible due to the considerable loss of its value, the court
may order to put the indivisible object in auction or sell it to the co-owners.
Article 44:
In particular, the joint tenancy which shall be permanent and still remain after the partition are the following items:
1.Land and buildings dedicated to the religion
2.Part of the land that serves the other public interest such as land road water passages, etc...
Chapter IV:Joint-ownership
Article 45:
The word " indivisibility " if one talks about fences or walls means the joint-ownership.

Section I: The wall Joint Ownership


Article 46:
The repair and the construction of the wall is the duty of the persons who have the ownership on the property in accordance with
the proportion that each one has the rights on.
In case of abandoning their joint-ownership, the joint tenants may stop paying the maintenance cost or the cost of rebuilding the
wall if the wall joint-ownership does not support his/her house.

Article 47:
Each joint tenant may not make a hole in the wall joint-ownership or do something to block or use the wall as support without the
other tenant's consent, or, if one tenant did not consent and did not request for the presence of the arbitrator to supervise in order
to protect his work against the abuse of the other's rights, shall not be done either.
Article 48:
All joint tenants that connect any walls shall make the wall joint ownership for all or for some by paying to the owners of the
walls one half of the cost or a part of the cost of the wall that they want to be the wall joint-ownership and also the cost of the
land where the wall is constructed.
Article 49:
The joint tenants may construct the wall attached to the wall joint ownership by putting the cross bar, joist, and beam to fill the
wall area leaving out 5 centimeters, but this work shall not violate the other tenant's rights. If the other tenant shall construct from
their side at the same place forward, the other tenant shall request to put cross bar, joist and beam up to one half part of the wall.
Article 50:
Any joint tenant may raise the wall joint ownership at his own expenses including the work, the labor and the maintenance of the
part constructed by himself, and taller than the original height and the proper indemnity due to the height and the price.
Article 51:
If the wall joint ownership is not strong enough to support the weight of the additional height, then the joint tenant who wants to
raise the wall, shall pull down and reconstruct the new wall. He shall pay all the expenses. And the thickness of the wall which
shall be thicker than the original thickness shall be constructed on his own land.
Article 52:
The other joint tenant on the other side who did not contribute to the construction of the additional part of the wall, but want to
use as the wall joint ownership, shall pay one half of the total cost of the work and the cost of land where the thickness of the wall
is laid.
Section II:Ditches, fences dikes joint-ownership
Article 53:
Wall joint ownership, whether there are ditches fences or dikes shall be taken care by the joint-owners, in paying the maintenance
cost, but if anyone of the joint-owners refuses to pay the maintenance cost, he may do so, by abandoning his rights to the wall
joint ownership.
But if the ditches or the dikes are normally used as drainage, the joint-owner shall not abandon his joint-ownership rights.
Article 54:
Joint-owners who have the land attached to any ditches, fences or dikes which do not belong to the joint-ownership, shall not
force the owners of the ditches, fences or dikes to be their joint-ownership.
Article 55:

Each joint-owner among all joint-owners, may pull down and move away the fence up to his borderline, but he shall put up again
the fence at his borderline.
If the ditches or the dikes joint-ownership are only the wall, the joint-owners may do the same as mentioned above.
Chapter V:Monastery Property
Article 56:
Monastery property is the property of the congregation. It shall not be sold in any case and set any age to it.
Article 57:
Monastery property can be rent or exchanged. The rent and the income from the exchange shall be used only in the religious
activities.
Article 58:
It is the duty of the Buddhist community to manage the monastery property. The congregation shall appoint an Achar or a
representative who shall have the rights to take action in the court where there is a complaint about this property.
Chapter VI:Acquisition of Ownership and Transfer of the Estate's Ownership
Article 59:
Any person can acquire ownership and can transfer it to another person through heritage and contract. Moreover, any person can
convert temporary possession to ownership through the change of the uses of the land which has already been recorded it in the
estate's ownership registration book.
Article 60:
For the concerned estates, the transfer of ownership document, or the temporary possession and secured rights shall be legal for a
third party when the document has an authentic formula and also recorded in the real estate's register.
PART II:THE TEMPORARY POSSESSION
Article 61:
Temporary possession is a state of affairs which means the act of having an exclusive possession of any property and completing
all actions toward that property as the owner did.
Article 62:
At the time the temporary possessor maintains that temporary possession without using violence, tries to maintain it with good
faith, notorious to the public, without interruption and fraud, that temporary possession can make the temporary possessor to have
an effect with regard to the law.
Article 63:
The temporary possession acquired with violence is not considered as lawful. But, if at the time one uses violence against an
unrightful third person fights to get that temporary possession, this violence has no effect on the temporary possession that one, at
the beginning, acquires it peacefully.
Article 64:
The temporary possessor shall possess with good faith which means he/she does not knows there is a third party who has the
rights on the property which he/she has been possessing.

Article 65:

The temporary possessor shall possess the property in public which means he possess without hiding it. Anyone who want to
claim his/her rights on that property will be able to know or see it.
Article 66:
For the real estate, the notice for the public is:
1 - The temporary possessor has his/her possession request to chairperson Khum, Sangkat, who has jurisdiction on that estate,
2 - The temporary possessor has regularly paid the land tax.
Article 67:
The request shall describe the size of the land, type, and its boundary. The chairperson of the Khum, Sangkat shall copy the
whole request in the certified document and sign it. If there was somebody who has already recorded it in the real estate register,
the temporary possessor cannot claim his/her request.
Article 68:
The temporary possessor shall continuously possess and maintain the temporary possession which means shall regularly do other
things as usual without abandoning during any period of time that might contrast with the process of the property itself.
Article 69:
The disposition of the estate, which is not continuously or continuously possess, is up to the opinion of the court. The court shall
examine the types of property and shall describe that in the judgment.
Article 70:
The act to keep a low yield soil in order to make it fertilized cannot be considered as an abandonment. The manner of possessing
the temporary possession in such condition during that period is considered as has continuously possessed.
Article 71:
The temporary possessor shall not fraudulently possess the temporary possession which means either by himself or by any other
person. He shall demonstrate that he does for himself as an exclusive temporary possessor and not because of any other privilege.
Article 72:
If the temporary possession is in any body's hand, that person is presumed to be a legitimate temporary possessor. Any person
who claims the rights on the temporary possession for any case shall immediately find proof of his rights.
Article 73:
The temporary possessor can transfer some or all rights to other person through a succession, with or without a will, or a contract.
The transfer document of the temporary possession shall be done in an authentic formula.

Article 74:
In the estate issue, if any temporary possessor peacefully, honestly, publicly without ambiguity got a land for 5 consecutive years
and the land is free with no record in the enrollment register and does not belong to anybody, the temporary possessor shall
become a legitimate owner of that land.
Article 75:
The rights of the temporary estate possession will become the rights of ownership after that estate has been recorded in the
ownership register.

Article 76:
Any land which the temporary possessor has abandoned for 3 consecutive years shall become the private domain of the state.
PART III:OWNERSHIP DISMEMBERMENT
Article 77:
Any property owned by a person and passed to another person who benefits it, is called dismemberment.
The rights left from that dismemberment and gotten by the owner were called ownership without usufruct.
Chapter I:Usufruct
Article 78:
The usufruct means the benefit of the product of any estate of which the ownership belongs to another person during a limited
time which cannot be longer than the lifetime of the person who has the rights to benefit it.
Article 79:
The usufruct may occur as a result of the law or agreement. The usufruct can occur with or without time limitation, or with some
time limitation and conditions.
The contract concerning the usufruct will be used as an evidence. Even between the parties, they shall have a written authentic
act. The act will be used as a public record for a third person only after it has been recorded in the estate registration book or in
the estate temporary possession book. This only concerns the real estate ownership.
Section I: Usufructuary
Article 80:
The usufructuary has the rights to benefit the fruits, either natural or as income of capital, which come from that estate usufruct.
Article 81:
Any natural fruits produced in the land at the time of the usufruct acquisition will benefit the usufructuary. Any natural fruits
produced at the end of the usufruct will benefit the owner without usufruct. Any farming, planting, harvesting, which has already
been done, shall not be charged to the owner. But, if there was a lease or exchange labor, a person shall not lose his benefits
neither at the time of the usufruct acquisition nor at the end of the usufruct.
Article 82:
Any income of capital will benefit the usufructuary based on the usufruct time's proportion.

Article 83:
The usufructuary will benefit the fruits of the estate by himself or will rent it to somebody or transfer these rights to another
person with or without fee.
The lease or contract of labor exchange cannot have over 3 year-duration. If there is a contract extension, the new contract shall
be done a year before the end of the usufruct's date.
Article 84:
The usufructuary shall benefit from the fertilization of the alluvium on the soil which he got from the usufruct.
Article 85:
The usufructuary uses all the easements and, in general, all the rights that the owner can use, the usufructuary can use those rights
as well.

Article 86:
The usufructuary shall get the quarry in the perimeter of his/her land which he/she got from usufruct as well as the owner does.
Article 87:

The owner without usufruct cannot do thing to damage the rights of the usufructuary.
The usufructuary, after the end of the usufruct, cannot claim indemnity on the estate's improvement made by him/her during
his/her usufruct, even the estate has increased the value resulting from his/her work.
But, if the usufructuary has built a house in that location, he/she or his/her heir can ask the other to comply with the regulations in
the article 28.
If he has decorated the house built in that location with mirror, photographs, and other decorative, the usufructuary or his/her heir
can choose to remove them but, he/she shall rearrange the place to its original setting.
Section II:Usufructuary's obligation
Article 88:
The usufructuary shall receive the estate as it was at that time but, before using, it shall be checked by the chairperson of Khum,
Sangkat about the material condition at that location in the presence of the owner.
Article 89:
Also, before using it, the usufructuary shall find the person to guarantee that the use that he/she does is for the best of his/her
interests as a good head of family which means the usufructuary shall faithfully benefit the fruits as he/she is the owner and, to
strive for the benefit of the owner.
The father or the mother who is the usufructuary of the minor children, not need to have a guarantor. The living spouse who is the
usufructuary of deceased husband or wife neither needs to have a guarantor.

Article 90:
If the usufructuary cannot find a guarantor, that estate shall be put for rent, or in custody under sequestration, for land and house
lease, or the fruits received by the custodian shall be subtracted from all expenses and give the rest of the fruits to the
usufructuary.
Article 91:
Even it is slow to find a guarantor, the usufractuary shall not deprive himself from the fruits which he has the rights to; those
fruits shall benefit the usufructuary since the beginning of the usufruct.
Article 92:
The usufructuary shall be responsible for the maintenance's repair, any major repair is the responsibility of the owner without
usufruct. But, if the damage was caused by the lack of maintenance from the usufructuary's part since the beginning of the
usufruct, the usufructuary shall be responsible for the repair.
Article 93:
The major repairs are the repairs of the big wall and roof material, roof crossbar change, joist change, and complete roofing, wall
repair and the overall fencing. The other repairs are considered as repair of maintenance.
Article 94:

For an old condition, or destruction by an act of God, the owner without usufruct or the usufructuaryshall not be forced to
rebuild.
But, if the owner without usufruct or the usufructuary has brought the estate for a mortgage, the owner without usufruct or the
usufructuary can request the money from the mortgage to build or to repair it.
Article 95:
While benefiting from the fruit, the usufructuary shall be annually responsible for the estate such as taxes, fees, and insurance
expenses which used to add on that estate's fruit.
Also, the usufructuary shall be responsible to execute and to renew the contract of guarantee of the estate which is in his usufruct;
this, either, means the existing contract at the beginning of the usufruct or the contract which the owner without usufruct will, in
the future, request to do it.
Article 96.
The followings are responsibilities, on the ownership during the usufruct which the usufructuary and the owner without usufruct
shall share:

the owner without usufruct shall be responsible for those payments and the usufruct shall pay back the interests to the
owner without usufruct.
the usufructuary will pay the deposit and request it back when he no longer benefits the fruit.
Article 97:

If there is a lawsuit related to the uses of the usufruct's estate, the usufructuary shall be responsible, if any, to only pay the legal
expenses and fine.

Article 98:
If, during that usufruct, there is a third person with ill will against the rights of the owner without the usufruct, the usufructuary
shall inform him. If not, in case of prejudice against the owner without usufruct, the usufructuary will be responsible for any
damage caused by him, and shall be responsible to pay back.
Section III:The end of the usufruct
Article 99:
The usufruct will end:
1.when the usufructuary die
2.when the time limitation or time period specified in the contract comes to an end
3.when the usufructuary no longer benefits the fruit
4.when the estate for the usufruct is complete destroyed
Article 100:
Also, the court will decrease the usufructuary's rights, if the owner without usufruct complains that the usufructuary abusively
uses the estate and, without maintenance, allows it to decay.
In this case, the usufructuary's creditor has the rights to intervene. The creditor can request for the repair of the damage, and will
also request for future guarantee.

Based on the seriousness of the circumstance, the judge may cut off the usufruct or will order to return the estate to the owner
without usufruct but, the owner annually pays money to the usufructuary or to the eligible person of the usufructuary until the end
of the usufrutct's time limitation.
Article 101:
The fact that the owner without usufruct sold the usufruct's estate does not change the situation of the usufruct. The usufructuary
still continues to have the rights to benefit the estate's fruits, unless the usufructuary clearly denies it.
Article 102:
If, after denying the usufruct's benefit, the usufructuary fraudulently wants to damage the rights of the creditor, the latter can suit
to void the usufructuary's denial, unless it is a case of the usufruct's heritage.
Article 103:
The usufructuary's rights will cease if the estate is complete destroyed. If it is partially damaged, the usufructuary shall have the
rights to benefit from its intact part.
Article 104:
If there is one building used as usufruct and it has been complete destroyed, the usufructuary shall not have the rights to stay in
the land, nor on the construction materials.
If the destroyed usufruct building is included in the property, the last disposition of the article 94 of this law shall apply in these
two cases unless there are other reasons.

Article 105:
The temporary possession can apply to the usufruct dispositions only in the framework of its rights.
Chapter II:The rights to use and to stay
Article 106:
The rights to use allows the beneficiary to take out from the estate any reasonable benefits for his/her own and family needs.
The rights to stay is the rights to allow the beneficiary to possess a decent place to stay in a house for him/herself and family.
The two rights: right to use and right to stay, allowed this kind of beneficiary even in the future, the beneficiary will become
married or will have children to have it.
Article 107:
The creation and the cessation of the usufruct and the rights to use and to stay occur in the same manner.
All users' rights shall be decided and agreement recorded in a certified act, or if there is no certified act the following dispositions
shall be complied with.
Article 108:
The beneficiaries who have the rights to use and to stay shall comply with the obligations mentioned in the articles 88, 89, 91, 95,
97, and 98 of this law.
Article 109:
The beneficiaries cannot transfer, rent their rights to anybody.
Article 110:

If the user takes all the fruit benefits or occupies the whole house, he/she shall pay the expense for the planting, repair,
maintenance, taxes and insurance as the usufructuary does. If the user benefits part of the fruits, or occupies part of the house,
he/she shall proportionally share the charge based on the parts he/she uses and stays.
Chapter III:The easement
Article 111:
The easement of the land is a burden on any estate called servient, or subjacent land, for another estate called using soil, or
dominant which belongs to another owner who uses it.
Article 112:
There are different kinds of easements depending on the occurring conditions such as easement by the nature, by law, and by
contract.
Section I: The easement by nature
Article 113:
The subjacent land shall receive a natural water flowed from the upper land. The subjacent land's owner cannot build road, dike,
dam, or other works to stop the water flow.

Article 114:
The above land's owner, without violating the above dispositions, has the rights to keep the rain water and the water that flows
across his/her land.
Article 115:
The owners who have land at the water's level shall allow the water to flow in the neighboring land. Also, the other neighboring
land owners shall allow the water to flow freely to other lands for anyone agricultural needs.
Section II:The easement by law
Article 116:
There are two kinds of law: the easement that serves public interest and the easement that serves private interest.
Article 117:
The easement from the law that serves public interest, comes from special law or regulations that the owner of the land shall
comply with.
Article 118:
The easement from the law that serves private interest is the disposition of the law which establishes limitation allowing each
owner's rights to do everything on their own land without violating the rights of their neighboring owners
Article 119:
The proprietors shall comply with separate regulations determining distances warning ahead the caution of danger resulting from
their work which may upset their neighbors such as drilling, digging, making a hole, pilling the dirt with bad odor, containing
chemical substance, on their own property that may cause hazardous to their neighbor's health
Article 120:
Each proprietor shall not make a hole in the door, make with the same model, window, balcony or overhanging, with the distance
less than two meters, straight toward their neighbor's land
Article 121:

A proprietor cannot plant trees, shrub or bush taller than two meters near the limit of the neighbor land within a distance less than
two meters from the limit and will have to remove them immediately on the request of the neighbor
Article 122:
A proprietor whose land is enclosed and is on the blind path to the public road or that path is too small for agricultural or
industrial business may ask, for a passage on the neighbor's land, provided that he/she shall pay for the indemnity proportional to
the damage he/she may cause due to the opening of the passage.
Article 123:
The passage shall be opened properly by taking the shortest distance from the enclosedland to the public road.
Nevertheless, the passage shall be opened to a place which causes less damage to the proprietor who accepts the opening of the
passage.

Article 124:
If the enclosed land is closed as a result of a partition for the purpose of sale, or any provision of a contract, the passage shall be
on the land which remains after the partition or other land which is the object of the contract.
Yet, in case that the passage established on these lands is not sufficient, article 122 would still be applicable.
Article 125:
Any proprietor who needs to use water that he/she has the right to irrigate his land, may request the opening of the water page on
the intermediate land; however he/she shall be in chargeable of indemnity for the profit of the owner.
Article 126:
The same proprietor, request the evacuate, the water that he/she, obtain the water passage to irrigate his land, to the lower land,
however, he is always in charge of indemnity.
Article 127:
Any proprietor on the riverside who wants to use water for the irrigation of his land, can obtain the means of building, the artistic
work necessary to establish the irrigation to the opposite riverside, however, he will always be chargeable of indemnity.
Article 128:
Any proprietor on the riverside who wants to use water for the irrigation of his land, can obtain the means of building, the artistic
work necessary to establish the irrigation to the opposite riverside, however, he will always be chargeable of the indemnity.
Article 129:
The proprietor whose land the building is claimed, can always ask for the common usage of the dam but has to contribute half of
the establishment and maintenance fee. No indemnity is due for the use of the land; in case it has already been paid, this
indemnity must be refunded.
Section III:Human Created Easement
Article 130:
Law permits all proprietors to create on their land, in favor of the other land proprietors, all easements which seems good to
them, provided, however, that these easements are really profitable to the use of the dominant land that they, moreover, will not
disturb any public order. The use and extent of the so created easements shall be established in cards that should be kept as proof
of the creation of easement. If there is no easement the following rules shall be followed:
Article 131:

All easement created by human work shall be lawfully acquired only by certification and will not be opposed by the third party
only after their registration in the cadastral register. Then, even a servient land is related to the dominant land, or a relation
between the two landowners is established, this relation will no longer exist in case of alienation of one of the two proprietors to
the third person without firmly mentioning in the conveyance document, that the easement will remain.
Article 132:
Anyone who creates an easement is assumed to agree on all that is necessary to use it. The easement of drawing water from a
fountain necessarily implies the right of passage on the land that surrounds it.
Article 133:
The proprietor of the dominant land has the rights of doing all necessary works on the servient land in order to use it and to
conserve easements provided to him.
Article 134:
All works necessary for the use and the maintenance of these easements are the charge of the proprietor of the dominant land to
pay the cost, except that he has other agreements.
Article 135:
In case that the charge is for the servient land proprietor to pay, he/she can get rid him/herself of the charge of the abandoning the
portion of his land/her land in the easement to the proprietor of the dominant land.
Article 136:
If the dominant land has just been divided the easement is due for each part, except, however, that the burden of the servient land
conditions is increased. So, for example, if it concerns the easement or a passage, proprietors of various lots shall use a passage at
the same place as it formerly existed.
Article 137:
The proprietor of a servient land cannot do anything that tends to restrain the use of the easement or make it more inconvenient.
Thus, he can neither change the place nor can he move the easement to a place different from the one originally placed. If,
meanwhile, the maintenance of the original situation would make the easement more expensive for the proprietor of the
servientland, by preventing him from doing advantageous repair, he could offer the proprietor of the dominant land a place also
convenient as a substitute and the proprietor of the dominant land could not refuse it.
Article 138:
On his side also, the proprietor of the dominant land can use the easement only within the limit specified in the card, without
being able to make, neither on the servient land, nor on the dominant land, any change which may aggravate the previous
situation.
Section IV:How the easements become extinguished
Article 139:
The easements become extinguished by:
1.the extinction of the right which create the easement.
2.the merger of the dominant and servient lands in the hands of only one proprietor.
3.the total destruction of the land on which the easement is created.
Article 140:
All regulations relating to these easements are also applicable to the temporary possession

PART IV:REAL-ESTATE SECURED TRANSACTION


Article 141:
Creditors have rights on the real property that their debtors, put as guarantees of the money borrowed, by two ways of securing
debts:
1.Real-Estate secured loan
2.Mortgage
Chapter I:Real-Estate Security
Article 142:
The security is a contract by which the debtor himself/herself or a third person put a certain property to the creditor for the
purpose of assuring him/her, of the payment of a debt by granting him/her, the right to be paid back on the price of the secured
property with privilege and preference over other creditors.
Article 143:
A real-estate security shall be in the form of a certified contract.
Article 144:
As a principle, the contract must be certified by the President of the People Committee of the Khum or Sangkat who has
jurisdiction over the real-estate. If several real-estates secure one debt, the contract shall be certified by the President of the
People Committee of the Khum or Sangkat where the real-estates are situated. This contract shall also be certified by the
President of the People Committee of the Srok and Khan who controls the real-estates.
Article 145:
The contract of the real-estate security shall be immediately submitted to affix a seal at the land office concerned. After being
certified by the state authority, a copy of the contract shall be preceded to the cadastral office for registration and archives.
Article 146:
The real-estate security shall be considered as properly executed in accordance with the law and the third party may not protest
only if the security is recorded to the real-estate property register as mentioned in the above article 145, appropriate to the
situation of the provided real-estate.
The non-compliance of this publicity leads to the disqualification of the secured debt and leaves the creditor the right to claim
only the reimbursement of the borrowed money.
This law-suit, like the one concerning loans that bear interest, is all law-suits with the statute of limitation. This statute of
limitation is within a period of five years.
Article 147:
The same real-estate can be constituted as a security of a loan for the profit of only one creditor or several creditors jointly.
Article 148:
The effective remittance of the real-estate by the debtor to his creditor is not required. It may be a simple remittance of the card of
the real-estate.
Article 149:

The remittance or non remittance of the real estate shall be expressly noted in the contract of security. If first, there is a remittance
but later on non remittance or vice-versa, the mention of this change shall also be noted on the back of the contract.
Article 150:
If there is an effective remittance of the real-estate, the secured property shall be timely returned to the debtor as soon as he/she
will be discharged of his/her debt. Within the period of ten years counting from the date of the execution of the contract, if there
is specified date for the payment and from the specified date for payment if it is forth in the contract. If the creditor has not made
a law suit to claim the owned money, he/she will be forfeited the right to claim.
This forfeiture, not only leads to the remittance of the land to the debtor but also discharges him from the debt.
Article 151:
If, the debtor remains the possessor of the real-estate, the debtor shall pay the capital and the interest to the creditor as stipulated
in the contract. In case of non remittance of real property, the creditor shall sue in court within the period mentioned in the above
article 150 and will also be forfeited the right to claim, in case of failing to sue. Expiring this period, the burden on the debtor's
real-estate, will be eliminated as indicated in the previous article.
Article 152:
In any case, the creditor shall not became a full rights proprietor of the real-estate given as security for a loan.
Any contrary clause will be considered as null and void.
Article 153:
The contract of the security for a loan, grants the creditor only the rights, to pursue the dispossession of the real-estate and put it
on sale and be paid by privilege and preference before other creditors on the price of the real-estate. If, during the term of the
security for a loan, the creditor buys the secured land that he has possession or not, the contract of sale must be executed as
mentioned in the article 144 of the present law.
Article 154:
The creditor shall use and care for the real-estate as a usufruct wary. He/she shall keep and conserve the real-estate and shall be
punishable if the damage of the real estate is imputable to his act or fault. The payment of the damage will be deductible from the
owned money.
Article 155:
On the expiration of the contract when the debtor has paid back all his/her debts or because of the foreclosure, the creditor shall
give back to his/her debtor his/her real-estate or its value if he/she has damaged it.
Article 156:
If the contract is expired and the debtor requests to reimburse and claim back his/her property but is turned down by the creditor,
the latter owes his/her debtor fruits and revenues counting from the expiring day.

Article 157:
Nevertheless, if no term is specified in the contract about the date of payment, the creditor will still have rights of collecting the
pending or garnering fruits and harvest, due to his care, work and expenses.
Article 158:

The interest are no more due from the date the debtor offered his reimbursement. The offer of reimbursement shall clearly
indicate the sum offered and shall be stated on a document signed by the head of the Khum, Sangkat, the debtor and two
witnesses.
If the debtor wants to reimburse at the middle of the year, before the harvest, he shall pay the interest of the sum due during that
year and this interest shall be 20% per year according to the rate.
Article 159:
The payment of the tax remains in charge of the debtor if the contract has no determination on it.
Article 160:
The creditor can no longer retain the real-estate when the debtor is discharged of the debt for the real-estate security, on pretence
that the debtor has to pay another debt, even it is demandable, unless there is a new security document, for the same land
established with the same formalities as previous ones.
Article 161:
The above mentioned rights of the debtor, can be used against the heirs or beneficiaries of the creditor.
Article 162:
The above rights are also those of the heirs or beneficiaries of the debtor and the members of their family who are able to claim
that they are co-proprietors of the property hold as security.
Chapter II:The Mortgage
Article 163:
Without dispossessing the proprietor of his/her real estate, the mortgage is a secured debt which allows the creditor, at the due
date, to request the sale of the real-estate that is in whoever possession and be paid on the price by privilege and preference to
other creditors.
Article 164:
Only registered real-estate can be the object of the mortgage.
Article 165:
Like the real-estate security, the creditor shall not be full owner of the real-estate securing the mortgage.
Article 166:
The contract of the mortgage shall be done at Sakari otherwise, it will be considered absolutely null.
Article 167:
The location, the land size, all charges on the land and the total value of the real-estate securing the mortgage shall be specified
Article 168:
There may be several successive mortgages on the same real-estate and at the same time, in profit of several creditors. Each one
of the creditors has rights according to the preference of the registration.Rights of mortgage creditors.
Article 169:
All mortgage creditors, whatever their rank is, may proceed to the sale of the property held as mortgage when the debtors fail to
pay at the due date.
PART V:SUCCESSION
Article 170:

Succession is the transfer of the patrimony of a deceased person in profit of one or several people called heirs or successors.
Succession shall be transferred by law or by will of the defunct. Succession by law is called ab-intestate and those by will of the
defunct is called testamentary.
Article 171:
Successions shall be divided the day after the decease dies and at the defunct's last domicile.
Article 172:
Only the living, capable and non-declared disinherited person can be successors. Conceived child shall be successor if born alive
within 300 days following the day of decease.
Article 173:
Convicts of imprisonment for life, are considered as incapable to succession. Those who benefit a grace or a commutation of the
sentence...regain their capacity. Any testamentary for the convicts of imprisonment for life will instead devolve to their
descendant.
Article 174:
The following people can be absolutely considered as incapable successors by the court:
1.Those who make an attempt on the defunct's life, while he/she was alive whether the author of the crime was the principal or
the accomplice.
2.Those, older than 16 years old, knowing the murderer of the defunct but was indifferent and did not report the case to the court.
3.Those who made a false accusation on the defunct, leading his/her sentencing to criminal penalty or penalty of imprisonment.
4.Those, though capable, did not come to take care or assist the defunct during his last time of sickness which they know about.
5.Those, close to the place to decease, though capable and with no reason, abstain from participating in the funeral ceremony.
6.Those ousted from the defunct's houses by the defunct because of ingratitude, irreverence, misconduct or other cause, did not
beg for apology before the decease.
The court shall make such disinheritance judgement only on the request of any interested person.

Article 175:
The disqualified person is considered as not having received any succession at all.
The succession which should he his, shall go to the persons who should have succeeded if the disqualified person has not been
living at the time of the decease, except the legitimate child of the disqualified person born alive within 300 days following the
date of his death.
The successor who is pronounced disinherited shall return the part of the succession he has received and the usufruct he has
collected.
Article 176:
The disqualified person may possess and look after the succession which shall devolve to his/her children who are minors.
PART VI:CONTRACTS
Chapter I:The sale of the estate
Article 177:

The sale of the estate is a contract by which, a person called the seller who shall be under an obligation to transfer his/her
property or any of his/her rights to another person called the buyer, who shall pay him/her the price of the object or the right.
Article 178:
All proprietors can sell the estate or all rights on the estate which are his/her own property unless prohibited by any law or
regulation.
Article 179:
The contract for the estate sale shall be in writing and certified according the authentic formality.
Article 180:
Shall be considered null:
The sale of the estate which is not one's own
The sale of the estate from the husband to his wife or vice-versa
The sale of indivisible estate by co-proprietor without the consent of other co-proprietor.
Article 181:
The future estates can be sold except the heritages of the proprietors who are still alive, even with the consent from the latter.
Article 182:
The transfer of the seller's rights to the buyer is considered valid from the date the document of sale is certified to have keen
sealed and recorded in the enrollment register.

Article 183:
If the estate is sold lower than half of the price which should be sold at the time of sale, the seller may request for rescission
which means, the court, upon receiving the claim from the seller or his/her heir or legible person, shall immediately pronounce
the sale as null, even the seller has clearly noted, in the contract, for any rescission even he/she has the rights to, or clearly stated
that he/she have donated to the buyer at a higher price.
Article 184:
If the sale exceeds 3 years from the selling date, the court should not consider the request for rescission.
The person who sues, be it a married woman, a refugee, an interdicted, a minor whose estate is sold by a major, shall not exceed
this period of three years.
Article l85:
If the court considers the request for rescission correct, the buyer can make a choice out of two points that is to return the estate to
its proprietor then be reimbursed the price he has paid or keeps the estate and pay the difference to make it even with the price
determined by the expert.
A third person who has made a purchase directly from the buyer also shares the same rights except that the direct buyer from the
seller himself assures to make the requirement to the seller.
Article 186:
As mentioned in the previous article, if the buyer prefers to keep the estate and pays the difference of the price, he/she shall pay
the interest of the balance due from the date of the seller sues.
If the buyer prefers to return the estate and be reimbursed, he/she shall return the product of the estate counting from the date that
the seller sued.

If the buyer has never received any revenue from the estate, he shall receive the interest of his money paid to the seller counting
from the date of the suit or the purchasing date.
Article 187:
Any selling made by the court authority such as estates bought from the auction for examples nobody can request for a rescission
of the object.
Article 188:
The buyer shall pay the sale contract and registration fees.
Chapter II:The Exchange
Article 189:
The exchange is a contract on which all parties agree to give one another an object.
Article 190:
This exchange is submitted to the same law and formalities as the sale.
Article 191:
The exchange is void when the estate is not belonged to the owner. Also considering as void:
The exchange of indivisible estate on which other co-proprietors do not agree.
The exchange of the estate which is a heritage and the proprietor is still alive even if he/she agrees.
Article 192:
The exchanger victim of fraud can claim for the restitution of the object for exchange or for an indemnity.
Chapter III:The Donation
Article 193:
The donation is a contract in which a person, called the donor, irrevocably gives an estate to another person, called the donee,
who accepts it.
Article 194:
When the donor or decides to give concerns a universality of a patrimony or an estate, the donation shall be done by writing
certified in presence of thedonee who agrees to accept it.
The third person cannot protest, once the contract for the donation is complete that is stamped and recorded in the enrollment
register.
Article 195:
The donation for the caused of death is called legacy or devise.
Article 196:
When the donee is capable to enter into a contract, he/she may always refuse to accept the legacy or devise.
His/her creditor cannot intervene to force him/her to accept the donation.
Article 197:

The donation of objects which will exist in the future made by the donor, cannot be done. The donation made in order to pay
him/her back the debt in the future cannot also be done. The donation that allows the donor to have the ownership rights over the
property already given away, cannot be done.
Article 198:
The donor can reserve for himself/herself the usufruct, the rights of use and of stay in the estate.
Article 199:
Any donations accepted by the donee, are considered irrevocable, except the below cases.
Article 200:
The revocation can be claimed by the donor or his/her legible person for the following causes:
1.If the donee does not perform his/her duty
2.If the donee is an ingrate or a disqualified person under the same conditions as those specified in the part regarding succession
3.If the donee refuses to take care of the donor when he/she is in need.

Article 201:
It is the duty of the donor or his/her legible person to request for the revocation.
Article 202:
This revocation annuls the donee's ownership rights; this produces the effect of an annulment condition of the given property and
returns it to the donor by leaving no debts and charges to the donee.
PART VII:RIGHTS CONSERVATION OF THE ESTATE
Article 203:
Every document related to the estate shall be registered at the land-office or cadastral office which has authority on the real estate
within 30 days from the date of certification otherwise those documents shall be considered as null and void. The land office or
cadastral office can make a registration only if the document is completely conformed to the law.
Article 204:
Every person can collect information about the estate debt or the charges on the estate at the land-office or cadastral office at any
time from the estate property register or estate possession register. Any request for extract or copy of the document shall be done
at the land office or department
Article 205:
The real estate shall be registered in the real estate register book. This book shall be made in two copies. One copy is kept at the
municipality or provincial cadastral office and another one at the cadastral director's office.
Article 206:
The temporary possession shall be registered in the temporary possession register. The real estate register book shall register
every current transfer, reference of the estate, lot of land division and expansion.
Article 207:
The temporary possession shall be registered in the temporary register. This register book shall be made in two copies which are
the same. One of them shall be kept at the cadastral office and another one at the municipality and provincial cadastral office.
Article 208:

The estate temporary possession register shall record only the current transfer of the estate, the partition and regrouping of the
size of land resulting from succession.
Article 209:
The real-estate ownership register shall be established at all Khum where the real estate is located, normally within the limit of
the administrative Khum. and the name of the proprietor shall be specified.
Article 210:
The real estate proprietorship register shall record:
1.Thedescription of the lot
2.The proprietor's vital records (birth certificate, marriage and death certificates
3.Changes
4.Various observations
Article 211:
The estate temporary possession register shall be made at all Khum where the temporary possession is located geographically
within the limit of the administrative Khum, with the precise name of the temporary possessor.
Article 212:
The estate temporary possession register shall record
1.The order numbers in the register
2.The area
3.The name of the neighbor land proprietor, according to the directions order
4.The nature of land use by specifying the type of plants
5.Temporary possessor's identity card
6.The change of the sources of land possession, land partition, land regrouping by successions, by providing references as
evidence.
Article 213:
The registration of the current events in the real estate proprietorship register at the cadastral director's office shall be done in
conformity with the transfer list provided by the cadastral office.
The registration of the current events in the estate temporary possession register at the cadastral office shall be done in
accordance with the change provided by the cadastral office.
Article 214:
In the first process, where our government has no land plan and technical equipment, the state authorizes the cadastral director to
use real estate ownership registers which have already been printed in lieu of the real estate ownership register and the temporary
possession register, but the registration shall be separated between the ownership land and temporary possession land in each
Khum.
Article 215:
A lot of land is a specific surface located in the Khum, not partitioned by a continuing limit, belonging to one person or in the
undivided case, belonging to several people and used in one unit
Article 216:

Considered as continuing limit dividing one land lot in several pieces are fences, passages, canals, water ways with at least two
meters wide.
Article 217:
Roads, tracks, national roads, rivers, river affluent, small rivers, canals, ditches, grooves, navigable or not navigable to rafts,
grooves that irrigate the water out or in, can never be considered as a land lot, but are all considered as public property.

PART VIII:PUNISHMENT REGULATION


Article 218:
The staff of the Cadastral Office who refuses to accept the complaint, delays the process, or refuses to write, to issue and to copy
the rights identification card, everything related to the justified complaint, shall be punished by administrative punishment
without prejudice to other punishments resulting from his/her own act.
Article 219:
The staff of the Cadastral Office who is careless, forgets to check or wrongly checks the identification mark, forgets to record the
reference in the estate ownership register, in the temporary possession register and in the identification card specifying the rights
to the secured debt and the objects on the estate, shall be punished by the administrative punishment without prejudice to other
punishments resulting from hits/her own act.
Article 220:
When the relevant authority examined and found that prejudice is truly the mistake made by the staff he/she shall have to pay the
damage and the indemnity to the eligible person.
Article 221:
Any person who secretly sold or mortgaged the estate not belonging to him/her by lying that the estate is vacant and no owner, or
by pretending not knowing that the estate has already been sold or mortgaged, but in fact he/she is aware that the estate has been
sold or mortgaged, shall be jailed from one to five years without prejudice resulting from his/her own act.
Article 222:
The same punishment shall be applied as in the article 221:
1.Any person, stated in the temporary possession register or in the estate ownership register and claims the estate which is not
belonged to him/her, as his/her own.
2.Any person stated in the rights identification card, claims the secured debt knowing that it is not his/her own and the authority
who knows well the case allowed it to happen.
3.The person who makes the rights identification card, intentionally does not state and request the registration of the debt and the
objects on his/her estate.
4.Any person who tells lie, signs the contract with the third person on the real estate.
Article 223:
The agent who has the authority conspires, with the other in creating document to steal the real estate as stated in the articles 221
and 222 of this law, is considered as an accomplice.
The accomplice shall be punished as the perpetrator.
Article 224:
Those who possessed many different kinds of land do not state in the registration of their estate within three months shall be
penalized by paying the taxes on every on their estate, effective the day that this land law is in force.

If the proprietor does not declare five years, later this land became private domain of the state.

Article 225:
Those who obstruct the land declaration shall receive the administrative punishment if they do not stop the offense then, they
shall be jailed for a period of one month to one year.
Article 226:
Those who oppose or obstruct the measurement of the land, the planting of the concrete land marking pole, the putting up of the
cadastral sign whether temporary or permanent, shall be warned. If they do not stop the offense, they shall be jailed for a period
from one month to one year.
Article 227:
Those who take out, or move the concrete marking pole and the cadastral sign, shall be warned. If they do not stop the offense,
they shall be jailed for a period from one month to one year without consideration of any damage caused by himself/herself.
This land law is approved by the National Assembly of Cambodia on the 10th day of the month of August in the year 1992 during
the regular session 23 term 01.
Phnom Penh, 13th day of October in the year 1992
The President
GLOSSARY l
Account
Act of pricing something; a book for recording debt, or for recording payment.
Acquisition; purchase
Act of obtaining; act of becoming a temporary possessor or a proprietor of an object, be it a request for a repayment of a loan a
purchase, an exchange or a succession.
Alimony
Pension paid to the family such as wife-children for their living.
Allowance for necessaries
The allowance paid by a person to another to provide a living.
Alteration
Fact of change the substance of something making it different from its original meaning, value and good in order to get a
prejudice.
Alternative
Not definite, alternative obligation.
For example, to end my obligation, I have to give him 5 mares or pay 10,000 Riels. Reimbursement might be in mares or in cash.
It is up to my choice. Obligation or duty as shown in this example is as alternative one.

Ancestors

Group of persons born before another group. For example, the father, mother, grand father, grand mother ... etc. are the ancestors
of the children, the grand children
Appeal
The appeal to the Supreme court against unsatisfied a judgment or a sentence.
Appoint
Giving a specific assignment, or a peculiar quality. For example, a named "A" appoints the named "B" as heir.
Archive
Place to store various documents of value, such as vital records register, for instance.
Army officer
High ranking soldier starting from a captain.
Authority
People who support or hold power.
Balcony
A small platform without supporting column, with guard-rail around.
Bare ownership
Property which does not bring any advantage to the owner because the owner has given his/her rights to others to benefit the
product of all ownership.
Barring by limitation
A way to exempt from any obligation when the owner neglects to claim reimbursement for long.
Behavior
The act of bad conduct only ... [Illegible]
Beneficiary
The person who benefits or gets a profit from something, from a good cause or from a privilege.
Blood relationship
Family relationship that come with birth, such as father and child, for instance. These words are in opposition to in laws
relationship.
Cadastral conservation regime Absence
State of being away or not being present at home for years.

Capacity
The capacity given fully and adequately by the law to everybody to carry out a given ask. For example, the Police Station has the
capacity to make report about the offenses happening in its area. An unfortunate person does not have the capacity to receive
inheritance from the parents.

Center
An open space in the middle; a place which is at the head of various tasks.
Certified document
A certificate read loudly and clearly by the chief of the Khum or the chief of the Srok to both parties and which he signs together
with them.
Character; disposition; nature
Appearance, personality, behavior, manners.
Charge; burden;
Assignment, function, mandate, reaction performed or fulfilled responsibility by a person.
Co-author
Any person who participates in an offense as a principal.
Co-heir
The person who joins a heritage division.
Co-proprietor
The person who owns a co-property.
Collectivity
People who make a group or a union. All people in a Khum or a Srok or a Krong are called collectionty
Community
Anything that people share together. Community is the property that a husband and a wife share together.
Compensation
The act of using the profit to cover the loss. As in law, when two persons owe each other obligation, and decided to settle in order
to get out of the mutual debt. For example, a person "A" owes 20000 Riels in Tontine payment to another person "B"; but, B also
owes A house construction cost. After both persons realize that their debt can be settled, they agree to compensate each other, to
pay off their mutual debt.
Compensation
Sum of money to eliminate a certain prejudice.
Competence
The court right to make a judgment on a lawsuit.
Concession
Property bought or definitely obtained from the government to make it his own.
Condition
The balance that must be, or a clause that must be fulfilled in sufficient number to realize a purpose. For instance, a man and a
woman who want to take each other as spouse must fulfill conditions as specified in articles 114 to 147 of the Civil Codes.
Confusion; merger

State of mistaking one for the other. In this case, the confusion of rights means a single person is at the same time receiving and
making the loan.
Convict
A person who has been sentenced by a court of justice.A person under the sentence of a court of justice.
Craftsman
Person who makes or produces things by hand for his own profit-by himself or with help from wife or children in his family.
Crop
Product obtained from cutting, picking, bunch-picking, pulling from the stalk.
Curator
Person in charge of taking care of properties belonging to a minor with emancipation or a mentally disturbed person.
Debtor
Person owing somebody cash or obligation.
Decision
High court decision like the court of appeal and the Supreme court.
Definitive
Final decision and cannot be revised or made another decision.
Descendent
A person or a group of person born after another group. For example, a child is a descendent of the parents.
Designate
Choose and order someone to take up a specific assignment or a function.
Discretionary Power
The power given to a judge to choose any means to resolve any particular problems.

Disinherit
Deprive the right to receive inheritance from a deceased, to one or several persons
Dismembrement
The act of depriving of members or limbs. In law terms, dismembrement means action off transferring his/her own rights on
property to another person.
Easement
All burden on an estate called servient estate in profit of another estate called dominant estate e.g. the lower rice-field has the
easement to receive water from the upper rice-field. This lower rice-field is called servient rice-field and the upper rice-field is
called dominant.
Eligible person

The person who has right on something, e.g. when an insured person has a fatal accident, his spouse and all of the children his or
her charge can claim for the prestation from the insurance company in their position as qualified eligible person.
Emancipation
Fact of allowing a child who is still a minor to take care of his property by himself.
Enclosure
Ditch, moat, fence, rice field dike.
Enforceable prescribed wording
Formulation having wording which can be executed
Ethnic minority
People in small fraction of different racial origin from hat of the people of larger fraction in a state or a country. For example,
Khmer Islam is a minority in Cambodia
Event
Anything that is happening; what is being done. For instance, the war between the Arab and Israel is an event worth knowing.
Evidence
Something that is a truth of one thing.e.g. witnesses of personal letters, certificates are evidence of the obligation.
Exequatur
The act of giving or allowing an opportunity to do something.Instruction or authorization to undertake and action.
Existence
State of existing etc...Existence of God.Life, e.g. no existence no life. Way of living, e.g. existence of a farmer.
Expertise
The report of an expert, ordered by a court of justice, or by a judge.
Extract
Text extracted or document copied by taking only the important part from an article or a document. For example the extract of a
birth certificate.
Filiation
Family tie that extends from the father or mother to a natural child.
Formality
Works that need to be done in conformity with the law of a court of justice.
Generation
Group of persons born in an era.
Good morale and character
The practice or the habit of everyone in accordance with the tradition or the law of each country.
Hearing by the court

Time or place where the court makes a judgment on a lawsuit. In former time it was called. " Court of law "
Heir
A person required by the law to receive inheritance from somebody. For example, a child is an heir of the father, the mother; the
grand mother and the grand father are heir of a grand-child who does not have any descendent.
House; household
In former time, the place where fire was made for warmth or cooking for the family; nowadays, it is the place where the family
lives.
Identity
All signs (or characteristics) of every person remarking and distinguishing him or her from another person.
Incapacity
Lack off capacity. An incapable person is someone who does not have the capacity to live without assistance and cannot
administer his/her properties by himself/herself in the same situation as a minor.
Incest
Take a relative forbidden by law, to be a husband or wife. For example, an uncle taking a niece for a wife is an incest.
Income of capital
Cash produced by object or cash such as interest of loan and house rent for instance.
Increment value
The increasing in value of a property over the previous value, according to some theories. Increment value is profits that a
capitalist checks on a producer leaving the latter only little labour cost just enough to live on. According to the capitalist theory,
the price of the products after deducting the labourcost, is called increment value.
Indemnify; compensate
To offer gift to sooth the heart. To reimburse the cost incurred by a loss.
Indivisibility
Not being partitioned. Example: one house represents an heritage for 5 children. If they partition this house into parts they will
destroy it. This house is then an indivisible heritage.
Instrument executed, or drawn up by a notary
A certificate made according to the formula required by law for example, the certified document.
Interdicted person
The act of restraining from doing something. An interdicted person is a person of low awareness and intelligence, dumb, or
convicted by either the penal law or civil law restraining from having the freedom to administer his own property.
Intermediate
The equal sharing of the right over one thing, something that belongs to two people and which is the limit of the property
belonging to them.
Invention
The act of creating something new before everybody else. The person who created the sewing machine before everybody else
was Thimonnier, therefore the sewing machine was the invention of Thimonnier.

Joint ownership
One property that belongs to several people e.g. several people join together to buy a car. The car is a joint-ownership of its
buyers.
Joint-ownership
State of being a joint or a party, e.g. a party of a wall.
Legacy-clevises
Letter willing to pass a heritage to one or several people.
Legal expense; court cost
Fees for lawsuit.
Legal person
A group of persons recognized by the law as a person but distinct from each of its members. For example, the Buddhist Society is
a legal person, so is the Sugar Refinery.
Legitimate
Which has as quality something which is in accordance with the law. The district chief is a legitimate authority. A child born from
a mother having a bride price is a legitimate child, or a child having a bride price.

Legitimation
The act of making someone who has no power in accordance with the law into a person having adequate power in accordance
with the law. The act of making a child not having bride price into a child having bride price is a legitimation.
Loss or withdrawal of nationality
Take away the nationality that someone has; withdraw the nationality.
Majority
The age at which the law give full and adequate legal status. In Cambodia, the majority age is 21 years old.
Marginal mention
Text annotated in brief at the beginning or at the end of a page.
Matrimonial
Any involved in time of marriage.
Means
What are the constituent parts used to resolve a task or a problem.
Measure
Means caution, attention, tactics.
Minority
The state of someone who is still young whom the law classifies as person who does not have full capacity to respond for his act.
Monopoly

The exclusive right to make or sell a specific product. No one can do it.
Mutilation
The act of causing the loss of a limb, or of causing a limb to be invalid.
Natural person
Person who possesses a physical body, that is a concrete human, as opposed to a legal person, which is a person as determined by
the law.
Natural produce
Produce of the land or offsprings of domesticated animals.
Naturalization
Making a foreigner get the nationality of the country where he or she lives. Submission to a nationality.

Novation
The act of creating a new obligation to replace an old obligation. The replacement of a rice field with harmful soil with one
located on high ground as collateral for a loan, is a novation.
Orthography
way of writing correctly vocabularies of a language.
Overhanging
Part that extends from the wall in the front part of a house.
Party
A paired up in a litigation; a paired up sign; a person on either side of a contract.
Paternity
Family tie that extends from the father or mother to a child.
Patrimony
Property that each one has; debt that each one owes; property as well as debt constitute the patrimony of each one.
Pension
Sum of money given to somebody to spend for living.
Period
A season, the time that extents over a time range. A common word is an era. The era of Khmer splendor or the period of Khmer
splendor.
Person subject to court action
Person having the right to require a court action.
Power of attorney
Power that a person gives to another to act under his name and on his behalf.

Precious things
Things of high value or high price.
Preclusion
The expiration of the right to file lawsuit in a court, because of the expiration of the period during which the law gives the power
to sue.
Preference
The liking of this person more that person.The right given to a person to have something before others.
Prejudice
The loss or the destruction done to the body, to the equipment, or to the mind as a result of an act of other(s).
Prestation; giving bail for
Object which is an exhibit of some obligation. For example, rice that a person borrows from another person is the prestation of
the act of borrowing.
Principal
Which is superior, important; which is the chief over others.
Principle
First and foremost ideas, that should be stipulated as basis of law.
Private domain of collectivities
A society's property, not to be in public use by anyone of that society and which is a property that can be sold, exchanged, rent the
society to somebody else to make it his own, such as lands in Phnom Penh city which every Cambodian person can rent or buy
from the city administration to build a house on it.
Privilege
Benefit enjoyed by a particular person more than others.
Proceedings
The method that the court of law uses to govern the [resolution of] litigation from beginning to end.
Proportion
An act or something which is right for another act or and their thing e.g. punishment by the court is proportional to the offense
committed.
Public domain of administrative collectivities
Property to be safely taken care of, following their natural shape for the people living the same society to use for a long time such
as bridge, road etc .. All these properties remain the public interest, no one can ever sell or exchange.
Publication
The act of making a statement known to the public verbally or in writing.
Quantum
Number of days in a lunar month cycle. For example, from day 7 Roc month Cet to day 7 Roc month Visak is a quantum.
Quarry

Source of stone or place where stone is extracted.


Ratification
Approval from an authority, an administration or court authority of a letter that has to be legal.
Registration register
Book where land properties are recorded.
Repeal abrogate
Annul a law and discontinue any further application of it.
Rescission
The act of cancelling a contract, because the contract has changes affecting the mutual agreement.. Here rescission means the
cancellation of contract, because the sale of any object at a price below one hall of the actual price.
Retroactivity
Action that has effect back in time.
Revenue
Product or profit which comes from a cash capital or of a product from funds used in any business
Revenue; rent; annuity
Gain that is received every year, such as interest, house rent, land rent, for instance.
Right of accession
Things that grow, or that is created by something else.The right to everything that grows, or is created by something or living
creature that is property of oneself. For example, the land owner has right to everything that grows on his land; the owner of a
cow has right to the calf born from his cow. The right of the landowner and the right of the owner of the cow is called accession
right.
Rule
law, rule.
Scope of mandate
Extent, wideness.Extent of mandate, power of mandate.
Seal
Seal made of paper or material with a stamp on it which the judge or police inspector use with the gum-lac to stick on the house
or the closet door as a prohibitory notice not to open it
Secured debt
The act of using a property to secure a loan. Old wording is "closing hand" with object. The pawning of a rice field is a secured
debt with real property.
Settlement of a Succession
Act of taking an inventory of the property of a deceased to find out what is left, and what has been lost for the purpose of
distribution to the heirs of the deceased.
Signer

Person who applies a signature; person who sings.


Slavery
Being a servant of someone.
Spouse
Husband or wife or both husband and wife.
Subrogation
The power delegated or transferred by the creditor to another person to using it in his place.
Substance
Foodstuff, clothing.
Substance
All kinds of thing which tastes good, which has good taste.
Succession
The legal passing of a dead person's property to a living person.A dead person property which goes to this heir.
Temporary possession
The right that everyone has over a property, temporarily, not fully own as something of the individual. Temporary possession is
opposed to property which is a full, adequate right over any piece of property. For example, a surveyed land is a property, an
unsurveyed land which is a "receipt land", is a temporary possession.
Third person
Third person or third party in a case.Other person or an outsider. For example, the seller and the buyer are the first and the second
party in the sale of anything, and anyone coming in to interfere, to protest in that sale is called a third person.
Title
Document having authentic format, "having appearance and form in accordance with the law". For example, what everybody
calls "sheet map", is in fact a property title.
Union
A husband and wife life.
Usufruct
Right to consume and use the product and income of capital derived from the property of other. For example, a named "A" let a
named "B" cultivate a rice field to make a living on a part of his own property, whether for a life time or over a definite period of
time, free of rent; that piece of land will remain property of "A" without change. The right that "A" give to "B" to consume the
produce from the land is called usufruct "B" is the usufruct beneficiary and "A" is the usufructary.
Usufruct beneficiary
Person receiving the usufruct, consuming the product.
Validity
Quality off anything that is still strong, solid.Valuable, considering as right.

Violence
Brutality .
Visa
Signature, seal which are put on a document to give that document its full legal value, or to certify that, the holder of the
document has already paid tax.
Ward
A minor orphan in the care of another, person.
Widowhood
State of being widow.
Work
Product which is created as an achievement of a skilled craftsman. For example, table and chair are the works of craftsman. A
novel is the work of an author.

Bibliography
https://zerosugar.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/law-no-5-of-1960-on-basic-agrarian-principlesetlj.pdf
http://www.dar.gov.ph/ra-6657-what-is-carp-comprehensive-agrarian-reform-program
http://displacementsolutions.org/wp-content/uploads/THE-LAND-NATIONALIZATION-ACT19482.pdf

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