CO129-335 - Governor Nathan - 1906 [8-10] — Page 527

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All AI Reviewed

519

: Crown Rent was imposed on three classes of land, viz.:- Agricultural Land, Uncultivated Land and Land covered by Buildings, instead of as formerly on only one class of land, viz.:- Agricultural Land, and that a change was introduced in respect of Agricultural Land by fixing a maximum and a minimum charge accompanied by an increase in the maximum charge for first class land and a decrease in the maximum charge for second and third class land.

e. Your Lordship will notice that under Rule 10 the rates of Crown Rent were leviable only in respect of land with regard to which no Crown Lease had been issued, i.e. in respect of land for which claims had been laid before the Land Court but in respect of which no title had been granted. Until titles were issued under Section 16 of the New Territories Land Court Ordinance of 1900, it was necessary to keep the de facto occupiers in hand by imposing Crown Rent which was done by means of Rules passed under the authority of the New Territories Regulation Ordinance, 1899. During this time such occupiers had no title to the lands they occupied and it was not known in what cases titles would eventually be granted. It was therefore considered that a small Crown Rent would meet the circumstances of their precarious tenure, and the rent charged on land covered by buildings was imposed more with a view to imbuing the occupiers with the idea that a difference existed between the value

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2026-06-02 10:17:57 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
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519 : Crown Rent was imposed on three classes of land, viz.:- Agricultural Land, Uncultivated Land and Land covered by Buildings, instead of as formerly on only one class of land, viz.:- Agricultural Land, and that a change was introduced in respect of Agricultural Land by fixing a maximum and a minimum charge accompanied by an increase in the maximum charge for first class land and a decrease in the maximum charge for second and third class land. e. Your Lordship will notice that under Rule 10 the rates of Crown Rent were leviable only in respect of land with regard to which no Crown Lease had been issued, i.e. in respect of land for which claims had been laid before the Land Court but in respect of which no title had been granted. Until titles were issued under Section 16 of the New Territories Land Court Ordinance of 1900, it was necessary to keep the de facto occupiers in hand by imposing Crown Rent which was done by means of Rules passed under the authority of the New Territories Regulation Ordinance, 1899. During this time such occupiers had no title to the lands they occupied and it was not known in what cases titles would eventually be granted. It was therefore considered that a small Crown Rent would meet the circumstances of their precarious tenure, and the rent charged on land covered by buildings was imposed more with a view to imbuing the occupiers with the idea that a difference existed between the value
Baseline (Original)
519 : Crown Rent was imposed on three classes of land, viz.:- Agricul- -tural Land, Uncultivated Land and Land covered by Buildings, C instead of as formerly on only one class of land, viz::-Agricul- -tural Land, and that a change was introduced in respect of Agricultural Land by fixing a maximum and a minimum charge accompanied by an increase in the maximum charge for first class land and a decrease in the maximum charge for second and third class land. e. Your Lordship will notice that under Kule 10 the rates of Crown Rent were leviable only in respect of land with regard to which no Crown Lease had been issued, i.e. in respect of land for which claims had been laid before the Land Court but in respect of which no titie bad been granted. Until tities were issued under Section 16 of the New Territories Land Court Ordinance of 1900.it was necessary to keep the de facto occupiers in hand by imposing Crown Kent which was done by means of Rules passed under the authority of the New Territo- -ries Regulation Ordinance, 1899. During this time such occupiers had no title to the lands they occupied and it was not known in what cases tities would eventually be granted. It was therefore considered that a small Crown Hent would meet the circumstances of their precarious tenure, and the rent charged on land covered by buildings was imposed more with a view to imbuing the occupiers with the idea that a difference existed between the value
2026-06-02 10:17:57 · Baseline
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519

:

Crown Rent was imposed on three classes of land, viz.:- Agricul-

-tural Land, Uncultivated Land and Land covered by Buildings,

C

instead of as formerly on only one class of land, viz::-Agricul-

-tural Land, and that a change was introduced in respect of

Agricultural Land by fixing a maximum and a minimum charge

accompanied by an increase in the maximum charge for first class

land and a decrease in the maximum charge for second and third

class land.

e.

Your Lordship will notice that under

Kule 10 the rates of Crown Rent were leviable only in respect of

land with regard to which no Crown Lease had been issued, i.e.

in respect of land for which claims had been laid before the

Land Court but in respect of which no titie bad been granted.

Until tities were issued under Section 16 of the New Territories

Land Court Ordinance of 1900.it was necessary to keep the de

facto occupiers in hand by imposing Crown Kent which was done

by means of Rules passed under the authority of the New Territo-

-ries Regulation Ordinance, 1899. During this time such occupiers

had no title to the lands they occupied and it was not known in

what cases tities would eventually be granted. It was therefore

considered that a small Crown Hent would meet the circumstances

of their precarious tenure, and the rent charged on land covered

by buildings was imposed more with a view to imbuing the

occupiers with the idea that a difference existed between the

value

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