Deed Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.Anti-spam check. Do not fill this in! ==Recording== {{main|Recording (real estate)}} {{morerefs|section|date=August 2023}} Usually the transfer of ownership of real estate is registered at a [[cadastre]] in the United Kingdom. In most parts of the United States, deeds must be submitted to the [[recorder of deeds]], who acts as a cadastre, to be registered. An unrecorded deed may be valid proof of ownership between the parties, but may have no effect upon third-party claims until disclosed or recorded. A local statute may prescribe a period beyond which unrecorded deeds become void as to third parties, at least as to intervening acts. ===Joint ownership=== Ownership transfer may also be crafted within deeds to pass by demise, as where a property is held in [[concurrent estate]] such as "joint tenants with right of survivorship" (JTWROS) or "tenants by the entirety". In each case, the title to the property immediately and automatically vests in the named survivor(s) upon the death of the other tenant(s). In most states joint tenancy with the right of survivorship requires all owners to have equal interests in the property, meaning upon sale or partition of the property, all owners would receive an equal distribution of the proceeds. Joint ownership may also be by tenants in common (TIC). In some states, joint ownership is presumed to be as tenants in common unless the parties are married and the deed so states or the deed sets for joint tenants with right of survivorship. Upon death, the decedent's share passes to his or her estate. A [[life estate]] is the right to use, possess and enjoy the property for a period of time measured by the natural life of a person or persons. When all life tenants are dead, the remainderman holds full title. ===Joint tenants with rights of survivorship vs. joint tenants in common=== When deeds are taken as joint tenants with rights of survivorship (JTWROS) or joint tenants in common (TIC), any co-owner can file a petition for partition to dissolve the tenancy relationship. JTWROS deed holders always take the property in equal shares; therefore, if the partnership is dissolved through partition, the proceeds must be equally distributed between all of the co-owners without regard to how much each co-owner contributed to the purchase price of the property. No credits would be allowed for any excess contributions to the purchase price. For example, if A and B co-own property as JTWROS and A contributed 80% of the purchase price, A and B would still receive equal distributions upon partition. On the other hand, TIC deed holders may be granted at partition a credit for unequal contributions to purchase price. During either partition, credits may be awarded to any co-owner who may have contributed in excess of his share to the property expenses after taking deed to the property. Credits may be allowed for utilities and maintenance; however, credits for improvements may not be allowed unless the improvements actually added substantial value to the property. ===Pardon as deed=== In the United States, a [[pardon]] of the [[President of the United States|President]] was once considered to be a deed and thus needed to be accepted by the recipient. This made it impossible to grant a pardon posthumously. However, in the case of [[Henry Ossian Flipper]], this view was altered when President [[Bill Clinton]] pardoned him in 1999. === Title deed === [[Law of Germany|Germany]] operates a 'property register'. Title deeds are documents showing ownership, as well as rights, obligations, or mortgages on the property. Since around 2000, compulsory registration has been required for all properties mortgaged or transferred. The details of rights, obligations, and covenants referred to in deeds will be transferred to the register, a contract describing the property ownership. === Difference between a deed and an agreement === The main difference between a deed and an agreement is that the deed is generally signed by only one person / party. Examples of a deed are deeds of hypothecation for creating charge on movable properties in favour of the banks/financial institutions etc. An agreement by its name suggests that there should be at least two parties signing/approving the same. Examples of an agreement are agreement to sale, loan agreement etc. At common law, ownership was proven via an unbroken chain of title deeds. The [[Torrens title]] system is an alternative way of proving ownership. First introduced in [[South Australia]] in 1858 by Sir [[Robert Richard Torrens|Robert Torrens]] and adopted later by the other Australian states and other countries, ownership under Torrens title is proven by possession of a certificate of title and the corresponding entry in the property register. This system removes risks associated with unregistered deeds and fraudulent or otherwise incorrect transactions. It is much easier and cheaper to administer, lowering transaction costs. Some Australian properties are still conveyed using a chain of title deeds β usually properties that have been owned by the same family since the nineteenth century β and these are often referred to as 'Old System' deeds. ===Wild deeds=== A deed that is recorded, but is not connected to the chain of title of the property, is called a '''wild deed'''. A wild deed does not provide constructive notice to later purchasers of the property, because subsequent bona fide purchasers cannot reasonably be expected to locate the deed while investigating the chain of title to the property. Haupt has stated that <blockquote>Because title searching relies on the grantor/grantee indexes, it's possible that a deed won't be discovered even though it was recorded. "Example: Atwood sells his land to Burns, but Burns does not record his deed. Burns later sells the land to Cooper, and Cooper records her deed. But because the previous deed (the deed from Atwood to Burns) was not recorded, Cooper's deed is outside the chain of title. In a title search, someone looking up Atwood's name in the grantor index would find no indication that Atwood conveyed the property, and nothing would lead the searcher to Cooper's deed." A deed that is outside the chain of title is called a wild deed. The general rule is that a subsequent purchaser is not held to have constructive notice of a wild deed. In the example, Cooper's title is unprotected against subsequent good faith purchasers. Suppose Atwood were to fraudulently sell the same property to another person, Dunn. A court would rule that Dunn has good title to the property, not Cooper.<ref>{{cite book|first=Kathryn J. |last=Haupt|title=Washington Real Estate Fundamentals|publisher=Rockwell Publishing|year= 2007|page= 54|isbn= 978-1-887051-41-5}} </ref></blockquote> A wild deed has been described as a deed "executed by a stranger to the record title hung out in the air like Mahomet's coffin".<ref>{{cite court |litigants=Poladian v. Johnson |vol= 85|reporter=So. 2d |opinion=140 |pinpoint= 141 |court= [[Supreme Court of Florida]] |date=1955}}</ref> Mahomet is an archaic spelling of [[Muhammad]]. There is a legend that the Prophet Muhammad's coffin was suspended without visible support from the ceiling of his tomb, just as a wild deed just hangs there, not touching the chain of title.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.infoplease.com/dictionary/brewers/mahomet.html|title=Mahomet|access-date=21 August 2015|website=Infoplease.com|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150908020352/http://www.infoplease.com/dictionary/brewers/mahomet.html|archive-date=8 September 2015}}</ref> Summary: Please note that all contributions to Christianpedia may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here. You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see Christianpedia:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission! Cancel Editing help (opens in new window) Discuss this page