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Robert Torrens

Sir
Robert Torrens
GCMG
Robert Richard Torrens 2.jpeg
3rd Premier of South Australia
In office
1 September 1857 – 30 September 1857
Monarch Victoria
Governor Sir Richard MacDonnell
Preceded by John Baker
Succeeded by Richard Hanson
Personal details
Born 1 July 1814
Cork, Co. Cork, Ireland, UK
Died 31 August 1884(1884-08-31) (aged 70)
Falmouth, Cornwall, England, UK
Nationality British
Alma mater Trinity College, Dublin

Sir Robert Richard Torrens, GCMG (1 July 1814 – 31 August 1884) was the third Premier of South Australia and a pioneer and author of a simplified system of transferring land.

Torrens was born at Cork, Ireland, in 1814. His father, Colonel Robert Torrens, F.R.S., the distinguished economist, was one of the founders of South Australia. Sir Robert Torrens was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, where he graduated M.A. In 1839 he married Barbara, widow of Augustus George Anson, née Park, and the following year left for South Australia, arriving on the Brightman in December 1840. In February 1841 he was collector of customs at Adelaide, and it is probable that he had received this position directly as he arrived. In the enlarged legislative council elected in July 1851, Torrens was one of the four official nominees nominated by the governor. When "responsible government" commenced in October 1856, Torrens became Treasurer of South Australia in the ministry of Finniss. He was elected as one of the members of the House of Assembly for the City of Adelaide in the new parliament, and on 1 September 1857 became premier, but his government lasted only a month.

In December 1857 he championed the Real Property Act of 1858 (for the transfer of real property) through the assembly, and the system became known as the Torrens title. The system transferred property by registration of title, instead of by deeds, and it has since been widely adopted throughout the world. Attempts have been made to minimise the credit due to Torrens for his great achievement, and it has been stated that Anthony Forster, then editor of the Adelaide Register, made the original suggestion. In the preface to his book, The South Australian System of Conveyancing by Registration of Title, published at Adelaide in 1859, Torrens stated that his interest in the question had been aroused 22 years before through the misfortunes of a relation and friend, and that he had been working on the problem for many years. Whoever first suggested the present method, which may have owed something to a report presented to the British House of Commons on 15 May 1857, it was Torrens and a German lawyer Dr. Ulrich Hübbe (with a knowledge of the real property laws of the Hanse Towns), who put it into practical shape, and fought it through parliament in spite of violent opposition from the legal profession. He later visited Victoria and assisted in bringing in the new system in that colony.


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