This paper explores the construction of the legal order governing land and property in Republican-era China by analyzing the Taiwan Supreme Court Old Archives. Focusing on land litigation in Guangdong Province, the study finds that while ownership disputes predominated, their nature diverged significantly between urban and rural contexts. In cities like Guangzhou, disputes primarily centered on the ownership of shop fixtures and buildings, where local governments and courts collaboratively forged a modern registration-based property system called pùdǐquán (鋪底權, right of pawn over commercial property). In contrast, rural conflicts typically involved ownership of farmland and forest tracts. Despite the promulgation of the Civil Code and Land Law in the 1930s, litigants continued to rely heavily on traditional proofs—such as Former Deed (上手權) and tax receipts—to substantiate their claims. Similar patterns emerged in disputes over diǎn (典權, pawning right), mortgages, and yungtien (佃權, perpetual lease). Due to the uneven progression of cadastral surveys and registration systems across provinces, courts were compelled to adjudicate based on the specific temporal context of each case, navigating a complex hierarchy of the Civil Code, local customs, and judicial precedents. Ultimately, the land and property legal order of Republican China represented a pluralist integration of traditional customs, local regulations, judicial precedents, and the modern Civil Code.