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10 results for "Registers of Deeds"
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Record #:
20507
Abstract:
This bulletin discusses the recent Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals decision in NVR Homes, Inc. v. Clerks of the Circuit Courts (IN RE NVR LP) and its effect on the collection of the North Carolina real estate excise tax when the grantor in an instrument transferring an interest in real property is a debtor in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding. The consequence of the decision for the state's registers of deeds is discussed.
Source:
Land Records Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7527 A45), Vol. Issue 27, Sept 1999, p1-4, f
Record #:
28604
Abstract:
A review of legislation enacted during the 1997 session of the North Carolina General Assembly discusses changes in the statutes regarding access to birth records, death certificates, and information on drug and alcohol abuse. There are also changes in the procedures for recording maps and plats.
Source:
Land Records Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7527 A45), Vol. Issue 23, July 1997, p1-4
Record #:
28603
Abstract:
There is some confusion among registers of deeds about the affidavit of lost note that may be used in the new cancellation procedure, which authorizes the owner of the note to record a certificate of satisfaction. Despite the absence of a separate line for the date of satisfaction, this information must be recorded.
Source:
Subject(s):
Record #:
28601
Abstract:
The 1993 session of the North Carolina General Assembly enacted new chapter 57C of the General Statutes, which provides for the creation of a new type of business entity, the limited liability company. This new entity has some of the characteristics of a partnership and some of a corporation.
Source:
Land Records Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7527 A45), Vol. Issue 18, Mar 1994, p1-2
Record #:
28602
Abstract:
This article discusses the legal status of the uniform indexing standards, which become effective January 1, 1995, and the potential liability of a register of deeds who fails to index an instrument according to the standards after the effective date.
Source:
Land Records Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7527 A45), Vol. Issue 18, Mar 1994, p2-3
Subject(s):
Record #:
28600
Abstract:
Several questions have been raised regarding whether a North Carolina register of deeds may record a certified copy of a document from a recording office in another state, and whether the register of deeds must again certify the acknowledgment pursuant to Section 47-14 of the North Carolina General Statutes.
Source:
Subject(s):
Record #:
20484
Abstract:
The 1987 NC General Assembly enacted a statute to allow a trustee to cancel a deed of trust by recording a notice of satisfaction. This bulletin attempts to answer some of the questions registers of deeds continue to have regarding this method of cancellation. Campbell discusses three topics in the Bulletin: execution of a notice of satisfaction by the trustee or mortgagee, the necessary elements of a notice of satisfaction, and the register's entry of satisfaction when the notice is recorded.
Source:
Land Records Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7527 A45), Vol. Issue 12, May 1990, p1-2
Record #:
20480
Abstract:
Few duties are more troublesome for a register of deeds than the certification of acknowledgements on documents executed by corporations. This bulletin attempts to make such certifications easier by reviewing the legal principles that govern corporate acknowledgement and distilling from them the elements essential to a legally correct corporate acknowledgement.
Source:
Land Records Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7527 A45), Vol. Issue 8, Mar 1986, p1-3, f
Record #:
28599
Abstract:
A review of North Carolina recording statutes supports the reasoning of cases in which changes in a recorded instrument are made by preparing and recording a correction deed. An attempt to alter the original instrument results in a new instrument that the register of deeds should not record unless it is re-executed and re-acknowledged.
Source:
Subject(s):
Record #:
20472
Abstract:
This bulletin informs registers of deeds of an indexing problem raised by Mr. Lynn Nesbit, Iredell County Register of Deeds, and Mr. William P. Pope, Statesville attorney. The problem concerns the indexing of instruments that subordinate the lien of a previously recorded deed of trust, commonly called subordination agreements. It arises because statutes do not direct how such instruments are to be indexed. Using a hypothetical example, the author recommends a solution.
Source:
Land Records Bulletin (NoCar KFN 7527 A45), Vol. Issue 4, Oct 1981, p1-2