Can I Buy Ejido Land?
A very large part of Mexican real estate
is classified as ejido land. Ejido land is not private property and cannot
be bought and sold as if it were. However, since the constitutional reforms
of 1992 ejido land now can be converted into private property and sold to
third parties, including foreigners. The present article will briefly
describe what an ejido is and how ejido land is classified as well as talk
about the ways in which ejido land can be converted into private property.
WHAT IS AN EJIDO?
In general terms, an ejido is a collective group of people that live and
work on a determined piece of property as a community. While the concept of
the ejido in Mexico is prehispanic, most of the fundamental ideas and
concepts that created what an ejido is today stem from the theories of
democratic communism. Understanding this is very important when dealing with
ejidos. Most people reading this article have grown up in a society based on
democratic capitalism in which the individual and not the community
determines what he or she is going to do. In a communistic society the
community determines what it is going to do, including agreeing upon how the
land they hold is to be used.
Taking into consideration the above, it
is not hard to imagine the confusions that could exist when discussing
ownership of ejido land. Most foreigners associate the word “ownership” with
words such as “fee simple”, “private property” “Adam Smith”, while the
ejidatarios idea would be more on the lines of “community rights”, “right to
use and enjoy”, “governmental concession”.
Until ejido land is converted to private
property, foreigners cannot acquire “ownership” of ejido land in accordance
with their understanding of the word “ownership”.
Please remember:
1.- Ejido land cannot be sold to non-ejido
members until it is converted into private property. There are exceptions
where non-ejido members can acquire “posessionary” rights to ejido land,
however the rules governing posessionary rights are not very secure,
especially for foreigners.
2.- Foreigners cannot legally become
ejidatarios.
3.- What an ejidatario understands as
ownership is often times different than your understanding of ownership.
CAN EJIDO LAND BE CONVERTED
INTO PRIVATE PROPERTY? There are
two principal ways in which ejido land can be converted into private
property and they are as follows:
1.- By filing a suit based on
prescriptive rights (adverse possession). This suit will only be productive
when the person wanting to acquire title to ejido land can prove that he or
she has possessed the land in good faith for 5 years or in bad faith for 10
years. Many professionals argue that this rule does not apply to foreigners.
This article does not focus on converting ejido land into private property
in this manner, however it should not be dismissed as a viable option.
The legal institutions of “prescriptive
rights” or “adverse possession” are the methods of acquiring complete
ownership rights to property, against the owner and other third parties,
through possession of the property for an uninterrupted period of time. This
time will be interrupted if the possession of the property is left or if the
legal owner or a third party makes legal claims to the land. This method
cannot be used if a contract exists between the owner and the person in
possession of the property. Under the new Agrarian Law “prescriptive rights”
can be used to acquire ownership to property. The “good faith”, 5 year
possession rule, in general terms, means that you have to possess the
property for 5 years, be recognized locally as the owner, pay your property
taxes and not know who the true owner is. The “bad faith” 10 year possession
rule, in general terms, means that you have to possess the property for 10
years and you may or may not know who the owner is.
2.- By
having the ejido agree to “certify” the rights of each person who owns or
possesses land in the ejido and then convert the certificates to private
property titles. In order to accomplish this the ejido must agree to enter
and complete the following two procedures:
A.- PROCEDE.-
PROCEDE or “Program of Certification of Ejido Rights” is a government
procedure by means of which the government, upon the approval of the ejido,
certifies the agrarian rights to land within the ejido. This is not an
obligatory procedure and will only begin when the majority of the ejido
agrees to enter into the procedure and the ejido does not have any legal
conflicts that prohibit it from entering into the program.
Some of the
more common types of conflicts that inhibit an ejido from entering PROCEDE
include: conflicting ejido boundaries, internal conflicts, pending
litigation and determination of actual number of ejido members.
Once the
ejido has agreed to enter into PROCEDE, the government at no expense to the
ejido, will study the documents of the ejido and begin the often time long
procedure of surveying the entire ejido. The surveying procedure often takes
a long time due to the fact that each individual lot, parcel and common use
land needs to be surveyed. These surveys are based on radiolocation points
and GPS and the maps are registered with the corresponding governmental
agencies.
Once the
entire ejido is measured, an ejido meeting or “Asamblea” is called to assign
each parcel and lot to the person the ejido recognizes as the owner. If
there are areas in the ejido in conflict or that have not yet been assigned
to a specific person, the ejido can agree to leave such area to be assigned
at a later date. Once the land of the ejido has been assigned, the
government will issue the certificates or titles that correspond to the land
in questions. Certificates and titles are not synonyms and different rules
apply to each one. One thing that must be understood is the fact that in
accordance with laws governing ejidos there are three basic types of ejido
land. These three types are land are classified as follows:
1.-
“Solores” or lots and which are converted to private property through the
PROCEDE procedure and do not require the “Dominio Pleno” procedure to be
converted into private property titles.
2.- “Parcelas” or parcels.
Through PROCEDE parcels are given
“certificados parcelarios” or parcel certificates and which are governed by
agrarian or ejido law until converted to private property titles through the
“Dominio Pleno” procedure.
3.- “Uso
Comun” or common use land. Common use land cannot be converted directly into
private property titles but can be converted into either “Solares” or
“Parcels”.
As soon as
the government has issued the majority of the ejido titles or certificates
the second procedure which is called “Dominio Pleno” can begin and by means
of which each individual ejidatario can convert his parcel certificate into
a private property title.
B.- Domino Pleno.-
The
Dominion Pleno procedure is much less involved than the PROCEDE procedure.
Once the ejido legally can enter into Dominio Pleno, an ejido meeting has to
be called and the members of the ejido have to agree that each individual
ejido member can, from the date of the agreement, convert their parcel
certificates into private property. This does not mean that from this moment
on all the land in the ejido is now private property. The only thing that
the approval of Dominio Pleno means is that each individual ejido member,
whenever he or she feels it is convenient, can convert his or her parcel
certificate into a private property title.
Once the
parcel certificate is converted to a private property title and dully
registered, the ejido member can sell to persons outside of the ejido,
including foreigners, observing certain third party legal rights.
Please
understand, even though the Dominio Pleno procedure is much less involved
than the PROCEDE procedure, there are many formalities that must be
observed. If these formalities are not observed the transfer of the
corresponding property title could be declared null and void.
The fact
that vast tracts of ejido land can now be converted into private property,
coupled with the fact that recent reforms in Mexican legislation now allow
foreigners to secure tile to land much easier add up to huge investment
possibilities for people looking for security through real estate investment
with the probability of large returns. Please contact me if you have any
questions regarding the above or are interested in acquiring ejido property.
David Connell is a US
citizen, licensed to practice law in Mexico. Connell & Associates have
offices in Mexico City, Puerto Vallarta and Zihuatanejo with associate
offices in various states. You can contact Mr. Connell directly at inquire@mexicolaw.com.mx
or visIt the web page at www.mexicolaw.com.mx
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