I think you mean "prescriptive acquisition meaning you occupy the land for X years and become the owner. It depends on title deeds. Nor Sor Sam or Chanotte is not the same. But for low title deed, remember the land belongs to the government.bumper wrote: I can't remember the number of years you have to occupy the land.
Talk to the Poo Yai Ban. If land is country side, you might have to go to Aor Bor Tor. Do you have copies of title deeds or there is no title deeds? These situations are very different. If there is NO title deed, there is something wrong but I have seen that before. If there is a title deed that was not separated between the children at the death of a person, you might have to go to Court to get a judgment and you enforce it at the local authorities. Many thais DO NOT KNOW THE LAW. They believe a Ta bian ban is a proof of ownership of the house. They are afraid to go to court to appoint an administrator of estate and the land is NOT subdivided for many years. But that is dangerous and not safe. A local lawyer can probably do an estate case in Court for 20,000 baht.bumper wrote: At this juncture they won't even divide the land for members of the family. They are afraid they will lose the land if they do anything further.
I think you are wrong. Send me a copy of the original title deed and your story to my email. I will answer you. By email, not PM.bumper wrote: So my plan at the moment is quietly do what I'm doing, make sure I complied with everything and maybe at that point you can help us. Right now not a good idea. I'm patient the wife makes money from the farming activities, so it's not all bad. We have three years in now, so we are getting closer.
Actually, that is fine. They have BOI approval and tax exemption. (www.boi.go.th) They normally have land in industrial areas to get more benefits.bumper wrote: I too understand they don't want major corporations coming in and buying huge amounts of land for farming or whatever.
If the lease is NOT registered on the title deed it can be enforced by law only for 3 years. If I remember, it is section 528 of the Thai Civil Code. If your lease is registered on title deed, you have maximum 30 years with option to renew. You must follow your lease. Many land departments are now refusing a lease between husband and wives, which I understand. Instead, you do a MOU + USUFRUCT or MOU + SUPERFICIES, you specified that amounts used where your personal property owned before marriage, etc. But contracts are easier if done BEFORE marriage to avoid complexity in the common property under Thai law (clauses 1471 to 1474 of Thai civil code).bumper wrote: For me doesn't really matter I have a lease on our current home. This was done for her future.
Good luck. I can't come on Udonmap often but wanted to explain that yesterday, something MIGHT have changed in Udon, and I am just talking about amphur mueang. Other districts have no problem to my knowledge except one district near Surin.