Thursday, February 16, 2012

Freehold Land Title for Foreigners

Foreigners trying to obtain a freehold title on land in Indonesia should note that current law is clear in both its letter and intent: namely, foreigners cannot directly hold freehold title on Indonesian land. “freehold title”, or in Indonesian “hak milik”, does not exist for foreign property buyers.
To conclude a property sale a local nominee is generally used, with a notary creating a multi-party, multi-document legal constructs that:
Puts the “hak milik” or “freehold title” in the hand of an Indonesian nominee. It is, in fact, the Indonesian nominee whose name is on the property title and who freeholds the parcel, not the foreign purchaser fronting the money for the land.
The notary will also usually create an irrevocable power of attorney in which the nominee owner surrenders all rights to use, sell and lease the subject property to the foreign purchaser. Is such an irrevocable “power of attorney” legally iron clad? The most truthful answer is that there is very little in Indonesian law that should be considered “iron clad” and should the foreigner eventually wish to transfer or sell his “title” to a new party, the transfer transaction will be heavily dependent on the good grace and continued docility of the Indonesian nominee who will need to attend the notary and sign over the deed to the new owner or his nominee.
In such transactions the notary also typically draws up a loan agreement for a large sum of money that is theoretically on loan from the foreign purchaser to the Indonesian nominee. In principle, this creates a lien on the property held by the Indonesian nominee. The purpose of the loan agreements is to “legally compel” the Indonesian nominee stay tame and cooperative.
While such agreements are often superficially attractive to a foreigner eager to own a home here, these loan agreements may not have much force if legally challenged and may be extremely vulnerable to any future vagaries of the “personal bond” between the foreign owner and his Indonesia nominee.
There are at least two other legal pitfalls may befall such loan agreement arrangements. First, because the loan is fictional, if legally challenged the foreign owner may be hard pressed to demonstrate to a court that the “loan” was ever transacted. No less legally problematic is the prohibition under current Indonesian for any foreign borrowings not approved by the Foreign Investment Coordinating Board.

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