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Gulf Press > Gulf News > UAE > Dubai Civil Court Annuls 20-Year-Old Sale of Government-Granted Land
UAE

Dubai Civil Court Annuls 20-Year-Old Sale of Government-Granted Land

Mohamed Mahmoud
Last updated: 2026/06/06 at 2:39 AM
Mohamed Mahmoud
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Land grant dispute: Dubai civil court annuls long-standing contracts

The civil court in Dubai has annulled contracts tied to a land grant in a residential area, resolving a land grant dispute that dated back more than two decades. According to court records, the judge ordered the buyer to vacate the plot and the villa built on it and to return the property to its original beneficiary, while also setting financial obligations for both parties.

Who, what, when and where of the case

The suit was filed by a UAE national who said he had granted a plot by government allocation and later entered into a 2005 agreement described as an “investment, management and lease” deal with a foreign national. The plaintiff said the document purported to give the other party rights over the property and claimed the arrangement contravened rules governing gifted land.

Meanwhile, the defendant argued the transaction was in substance a customary sale, claiming he paid for the land, constructed a villa at his expense and lived there with his family since its completion in 2009. The civil court in Dubai examined both assertions during the proceedings and consolidated parallel claims over ownership and compensation.

Fact-finding: expert report and evidence

To clarify the nature of the agreement, the court appointed an engineering and legal expert. The expert report concluded that the contract labeled as an “investment and lease” effectively functioned as a customary sale of a granted plot for 800,000 dirhams and that the buyer later obtained a power of attorney to deal with authorities and supervise construction.

Additionally, the report found the defendant had financed and completed the villa and resided in it, which supported his counterclaim for reimbursement of payments and construction costs if the primary contract were declared void. These factual findings played a central role in the court’s reasoning and final orders.

Legal basis: public-order rules on granted land

The court grounded its decision on the legal framework that treats instructions on government-granted land as matters of public order. Those rules generally prohibit the transfer, sale or other disposition of gifted plots without specific administrative permission, officials and legal texts indicate.

Therefore, the court held that any agreement contrary to these instructions is null and void, regardless of the form it takes—whether labeled as sale, investment, or long-term lease. The judgment noted the case file did not contain evidence that the necessary governmental permission had been obtained, and that the grant recipient had been aware the land was subject to restrictions.

Ruling, financial orders and court reasoning

As a result, the court ordered the restoration of the status quo ante: the defendant must vacate the land and the villa and hand them back to the original owner. However, the court rejected the owner’s claim for 10 million dirhams in damages and lost profits, finding that the plaintiff had received financial consideration during the period the other party occupied and used the property.

In a parallel outcome, the court accepted parts of the defendant’s counterclaim. Relying on the expert’s valuation and accounting, the judge obliged the original owner to repay the sums the buyer had paid for the land and the current value of the villa after depreciation. The combined obligation exceeds 2.8 million dirhams, with statutory interest set at 5 percent from the date of the judicial claim until full payment.

Implications for property ownership and market practice

The judgment underscores how Dubai courts treat transactions involving government-granted land as sensitive and governed by public-order norms. Property ownership derived from a grant is not freely tradable without administrative consent, legal analysts say, and attempts to effect informal transfers may be voided even years later by a court ruling.

Furthermore, the case highlights the practical risks for parties who informally structure deals over granted plots: a buyer who invests in construction may later have to seek reimbursement through civil claims, while the grant recipient who accepted payment risks losing both the land and claims for additional damages. Therefore, parties are advised to document approvals and permissions carefully and to seek specialised legal or administrative guidance before transacting.

What to expect next and timeline

The court’s decision is subject to any appellate remedies available under UAE procedure; either party may file an appeal within the statutory timeframe, court sources indicate. Meanwhile, enforcement steps—such as vacating the villa and effecting payment of the ordered sums—will follow the usual enforcement procedures unless stayed by an appellate court.

Observers should watch for potential appeals and any administrative follow-up from land authorities that could clarify how similar cases will be handled. Law firms and real estate professionals say the ruling may prompt closer scrutiny of past informal deals and encourage parties to regularise transactions through formal approvals to avoid future litigation.

Conclusion: clarity but continued legal risk

The civil court’s ruling resolved this particular land grant dispute by restoring ownership to the original grantee while imposing financial restitution for the other party’s expenditures. Readers should watch for appeals and possible guidance from administrative bodies on enforcement of restrictions on granted land.

Ultimately, the case reinforces the need for explicit governmental consent in transactions involving gifted plots and signals that courts will enforce public-order protections even after long periods of informal occupation or investment.

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Mohamed Mahmoud June 6, 2026
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