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Chinese Real Property Law
This is a series of responses by Lou Jianbo and Pat Randolph to inquires about Chinese real estate law. Many of the questions were posed originally by Martin Thuemmel as part of his own commentary to a more general inquiry by Hilary Joseph.

Questions: (1) Is the concept of the Chinese land use right part of private law or administrative law? (2) If it is a concept of private law, is the land use right a contract right or a property right?

(1) Martin's suggestion that the land use right is really a creature of administrative law is quite interesting. It is true that there are some administrative preconditions to the creation of land use rights. Articles 8, 9, 10 of the Urban Real Estate Administration Law establish specific prerequisites to the transfer of a land use right to a potential user. For instance, the transfer of land use rights must comply with the general land plan, city zoning and the annual land plan. Such requirements relate primarily to government administration.

Notwithstanding the various administrative requirements, we believe that once an authorized governmental unit transfers a land use right on a specific parcel of land to individuals or entities, the right becomes a civil right - a property right. The fact that the State originally is involved in the creation of a land use right should not control its characterization. When the State gives an award of to an excellent citizen, we do not say that citizen has no private ownership interest in the award.

We should also note that it is not true that one party to a tudi shiyongquan contract is always the state. Land use rights can be retransferred by the holder to a third party subject to certain conditions. Martin may be correct when he says that there has been some debate over whether to accept *contracts* concerning land use rights as civil law contracts because of the extensive involvement of administrative agencies. It nevertheless is beyond question that a land use right itself is a civil right. This is established by article 80 of the General Principles of Civil Law. In fact, scholars view it to be a great achievement of the economic reform of China that Article 3 of the General Principles of Civil Law provides that "parties to a civil activity shall have equal status." The General Principles do not provide directly that they deal with property relationships or personal relationships between the State and other parties. But the State is in some sense a public legal entity, so, when it enters into a contract with individuals or other entities, it should have equal status with its counterpart, at least in theory. In the land use right transfer contract, the State should also be treated equally with the potential users. We must admit that since the State has the monopoly position in land use right transfer, and since the State has also land administration authority, the terms and conditions of the land use right transfer contract are mostly decided by the State. Nevertheless, the potential user still has the freedom not to enter into the contract. That is why it still should be considered a civil contract.

Martin referred to three judicial explanations by China's Supreme People's Court and found some conflicts among them. He concluded from the conflicts that even the Supreme People's Court was not clear about whether a land use right was a contract right or property right (in English law sense). He attributes the changes in the judicial explanations to what he called the 'lack of dogmatic clarity' of the nature of land use rights.

Martin has not taken into consideration the fact that the different explanations reflect the endeavors of the Supreme People's Court to distinguish the administrative prerequisites of the land use rights from and the civil right nature of the rights themselves. The history demonstrates an effort on the part of the Court to make use of developing legal mechanisms to address legal disputes regarding land use rights. In its 1987 "pifu" called 'How to Apply Article 13 of the Land Administration Law and Article 14 of the Forest Law', the Supreme People['s] Court [took into consideration the provisions of the Land Administration Law and the Forest Law that] land use disputes would first be addressed by the People's Government, but there would be an appeal right to the People's Courts. The pifu provided that such disputes, although initially addressed to the People's Government, are still disputes over civil interests. It stated that the People's Court that heard the case would have the disputing private parties as litigants. The People's Court was to handle the case in the civil chamber. In its opinions on the new administrative procedure law of 1991, however, the Supreme People's Court proclaimed: 'If citizens, legal persons and other organizations unsatisfied with the decision of people's governments or their departments on the ownership, use rights over the land, minerals, forests and other natural resources sue the governments' decision to the people's courts, the people's court should handle the cases as administrative cases.'

There is, of course, an apparent conflict in these two decisions. If we examine the language of them carefully, however, we can find that they are more consistent than might first appear. The 1987 decision is actually an expedient measure. At the time there was no such thing as administrative procedure law. Administrative decisions could not be challenged. In fact there were no administrative divisions in people's courts. Article 13 of the Land Administration Law and article 14 of the Forest Law, however, provided that those who are not satisfied with government decisions concerning the ownership or use rights over land, woods or woodland could appeal to the People's Courts. These provisions presented a major challenge to the People's Courts: how to comply with the statute when there was essentially no mechanism for review of the governmental determination concerning the land use right. The rough response - flawed but pragmatic - was the 1987 decision of the Supreme People's Court to treat the appeal as a dispute between two private individuals. If a private party was not satisfied with the decision of people's governments and should appeal to the courts, the courts would regard have the [counter] disputing party, instead of the governments that [made] the decision, as the litigant. The Supreme People's Court had to limit this category of cases to the civil procedure law and could not include the People's Government in the litigation. Since the litigants - nongovernmental parties - are the disputing parties, the case could still be handled as a civil case by the civil division of the court.

Unfortunately problems remained as to who should be the plaintiff and who should be the defendant, and as to how the court treat the decisions of the government if the courts' finding conflicted with the governments' decision. Taking all these things into consideration, when the Administrative Procedure Law came into force, the Supreme People's Court decided immediately that these kinds of cases should be handled as administrative cases. That meant automatically that the governmental entity that made the decision which the plaintiff is wished to appeal will be the defendant in the administrative litigation. Thus, we can explain some of the differences in approach between the 1987 and 1991 pronouncements. The 1992 Notice of the Supreme People's Court on the Issues Concerning the Acceptance and Hearing of the Real Estate Cases makes clear the position of the Supreme People's Court on the civil right nature of land use rights. This notice consists of two paragraphs. Paragraph I provides that disputes over the real estate interests (including land use rights) between citizens, legal persons or other organizations should be accepted and heard by the civil division of the People's Court. Paragraph II provides that if citizens, legal persons or other organization unsatisfied with the decision of the governments or their departments on land ownerships or land use rights, or the administrative penalties on real estate issues by the governments or their departments, they can institute an administrative pleading to the People's Courts.

(2) Now the rest of the question is whether the land use right a right in rem or a creditors' right (or, more precisely, a contract right). Land use rights appear in the General Principles of Civil Law in article 80 under the title 'Property Ownership and Related Property Rights.' As we have discussed before, rights under this title are rights in rem.

 
 


    

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