Before I start let’s make this perfectly clear. I am not a lawyer and everything I’m going to say in the following sentences is in no way meant as legal advice and expresses purely my very own personal point of view and opinion based on personal experience. Take it for what it’s worth but if you intent to do a land deal in Panama use your own legal advisor.
This is a follow-up on an earlier blog post titled Analysis of legal problems with Right of Possession in which I explained the background of the problem we ran into with the seller of a farm in rural Panama.
It turned out that we did not only ran into a problem with the seller but also with the very authorities that are supposed to govern land use in rural Panama.
Since December 2009 when we first retained a lawyer reforma agraria - that’s the authority governing land use - has been dragging its feet. They have confirmed and certified in writing that the seller in fact did pass his right of possession to us but they refused to provide the all so important certificate of right of possession. That certificate is the most important document of all because it allows you to proof to any other authority that you are the entitled user of the land.
The fact that reforma agraria did not want to follow the legal process established by law has created a void which the other party has been taking advantage of so far. We can only speculate about why that authority doesn’t want to finish the job. They have not told anybody why they don’t want to issue the certificate of right of possession neither have they refused it or expressed any type of concern. The answer simply has been that they don’t want to get involved in a conflict.
So … If the authority governing land use doesn’t want to get involved in a conflict, then how can such conflicts be solved? And why does the authority decide to do nothing? As elsewhere Panama has rules that require any authority to respond within a certain timeframe in writing to any request presented to them. That timeframe is 30 days. It came and went and we got no answer.
About two weeks back the regional director of reforma agraria went personally with us to the farm in order to conduct - again - a visual inspection. Back in June 2009 under a different administration this visual inspection was already done and a proper report was filed. But as we learned recently it was never signed by the regional director of reforma agraria of that time. Who knows why?
We were positive that the new director will figure it all out and by seeing the farm with his own eyes the case will be quickly resolved. Way wrong!
The day for the inspection came. We set our alarm clocks at 4 AM (two hours before sunrise) and arrived at 8:30 AM sharp at the offices of reforma agraria in Chepo to pick up the director as agreed upon the day before. To our surprise he wasn’t really ready to leave. First there were other things to do - which we accepted. Then the case file could not be found anywhere. How’s that? He scheduled a trip to the farm with us to conduct an official visual inspection and then the file cannot be found. That’s strange at best. We saw the director standing on a chair searching everywhere in several file drawers in his office for the file. After a while the search was extended to other offices and suddenly the file appeared. One can only guess why this file was found outside of the file drawer located in the director’s office. There was no reason for it to be elsewhere.
You might think that after all that we were ready to leave. To our surprise others in the office recommended with many words and gestures to the director that he should not go with us to conduct that inspection. “Don’t go with them. What if the other guy is there and shoots at you” and “Wait for the other guy. Both parties need to be there” were among the recommendations given by the other office workers to the regional director of reforma agraria. In the end he left with us and after a short visit to see the district administrator we were on our way to the farm. We learned later from the district administrator that the director spoke with him about the case and told him that he won’t go to the farm.
Well … He went with us to the farm. Here is a picture of Ingeniero Diomedes Pineda, current regional director of reforma agraria in Chepo, next to our neighbor Didimo studying the case file. They are both standing at the end of the road we built in front of the Chuluganti river. The farm is located on the other side of the river.
Initially he did not want to step onto the land of the farm in question but apparently after one of the guys from the nearby village who had worked for us building the road asked the director when he will be able to work permanently for us he changed his mind. We were advised to stay with the car and Sr. Pineda left with Didimo to check out the farm. They did not find anybody there, the little shed was as before and it was obvious that nobody lives there.
They did see about 30 to 40 heads of cattle which belong to someone else. The seller had signed a lease with someone else sometime in January and that person brought his animals to the farm in February. Apart from the fact that the seller passed on his right of possession to us in June 2009 and the fact that he was told by reforma agraria and by the district administrator (they met coincidentally in the village) that he is no longer the legal user of the land it is strictly forbidden by article 31 of the codigo agrario, that’s the law governing land use, to rent out land held under right of possession.
Speaking of codigo agrario. That whole right of possession thing is based on the social function the land should be used for. Article 30 states that for right of possession you need to meet one of the following criterias:
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