An executor I worked with recently was settling her father’s estate in Brooklyn. The primary asset was the family home, a brownstone he’d owned for nearly 50 years. She had his will and his financial statements, but the original deed was missing. To transfer or sell the property as part of her fiduciary duty, she needed to prove the estate was the rightful owner. Without that physical document, she felt stuck before she’d even begun.
This situation is common. Documents get misplaced over decades, yet the need to establish clear title is a cornerstone of any estate administration involving real property. The absence of a physical deed is rarely an insurmountable problem. The official record isn’t the piece of paper in a safe deposit box—it’s the copy recorded with the government. For property in New York, that record is usually accessible online.
The Public Record: Your Official Source
A deed is the legal instrument that transfers ownership of real estate. The transfer is only fully protected once the deed is recorded in the public land records, an act that serves as official notice to the world of the new owner. This is the definitive proof that Surrogate’s Court, title companies, and potential buyers will rely upon.
For most of my clients, the property is located within one of the five boroughs. The city maintains the Automated City Register Information System, or ACRIS. This system contains images of deeds, mortgages, and other property records dating back decades. It is the first place to look for a missing deed in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, or Staten Island.
While you can search ACRIS by name or street address, these methods can be unreliable due to misspellings or changes in street names. The most precise way to search is by using the property’s Borough, Block, and Lot (BBL) number. This unique identifier is assigned to every parcel of land and will appear on any property tax bill from the NYC Department of Finance.
Interpreting the Deed and Related Documents
Once you locate the most recent deed on ACRIS, you can view and print an unofficial copy. This document will name the “grantor” (the person who transferred the property) and the “grantee” (the person who received it). For an executor, confirming the deceased’s name appears as the grantee on the last recorded deed is a critical first step.
The work doesn’t stop there. A prudent executor or trustee must also look for other documents recorded against the property. ACRIS allows you to see a history of transactions, which may include:
- Mortgages: Loans secured by the property. Even if a mortgage was paid off years ago, an official “Satisfaction of Mortgage” document must be recorded to clear it from the title. An open mortgage can halt a sale.
- Liens: Claims against the property for unpaid debts, such as taxes or contractor bills. These must be satisfied before the property can be transferred with a clean title.
- Deed Type: The language of the deed itself matters. A “Quitclaim Deed,” for instance, offers no warranties about the title, whereas a “Warranty Deed” offers the most protection to the buyer.
The system of public recording is foundational to real estate law. New York Real Property Law § 291 establishes the legal priority of recorded documents. This statute protects a buyer who records their deed against other, unrecorded claims, reinforcing why this public database is the ultimate authority on ownership.
From Document to Deliberate Action
Finding the deed is an act of discovery. It confirms an asset and clarifies ownership. But it is also the beginning of a larger process. The document itself may raise new questions. Is the ownership structure what you expected? Is the property held jointly with rights of survivorship, or as tenants in common? Are there old liens or mortgages that cloud the title and will complicate the estate administration?
These are not just clerical questions—they go to the heart of your responsibility as a fiduciary. Properly interpreting these documents is essential to the stewardship of a family’s most significant asset. It ensures that the legacy embodied by the property can be passed to the next generation as intended.
If you are an executor who has located a deed but are unsure of its implications for the estate, the next step is a careful review. Our firm schedules consultations for fiduciaries to analyze a property’s recorded history and outline how it affects the administration of the estate.





