1. Historical Introduction 2. Problems of Ownership (The Colony) 3. Problems of Ownership (The Protectorate) 4. Corollaries of Crown ‘Ownership’ 5. Indigenous Systems of Tenure 6. Indigenous Systems of Tenure (Continued) (Decided Cases illustrating and amplifying Chapter 5) 7. Indigenous Systems of Tenure (continued) 8. Alienation of Land (Inter Vivos) 9. Servitudes, Easements, Profits and Restrictive Covenants 10. Inheritance and Succession (Alienation on Death) 11. Land Registration 12. Conclusion
Biography
T. Olawale Elias became the first Attorney General and Minister of Justice of independent Nigeria, which ended in 1966 after the coup d'état. Elias was appointed as Nigeria's commissioner for justice in 1967. In 1972, he became chief justice of the Supreme Court of Nigeria. After the military took over in 1975, Elias was elected by the General Assembly and the Security Council as a judge in the International Court of Justice (ICJ) that he served until his death.
Review of the first publication:
“It is with pleasure that one welcomes the appearance of a treatise on the land law of Nigeria…”
A. N. Allott, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, Volume 15, Issue 3






