An executor for her father’s estate recently sat in my office, frustrated. She had the will, the account statements, and a buyer for the family home in Brooklyn—but she couldn’t find the deed. The title company was waiting, the buyer was getting anxious, and the entire estate settlement process was at a standstill. Without that one document, a lifetime’s most significant asset was locked in place, inaccessible to the family it was meant to benefit.
This situation is far too common. Families often think of a deed as just another piece of paper to be filed away. In my practice, I see it as the foundational document of a family’s legacy. It’s not just proof of ownership; it’s a blueprint that dictates what happens to that property when you’re gone.
The Deed Is More Than Paper—It’s a Plan
The words on a deed carry immense weight. How title is held determines whether the property must pass through the long and often costly probate process in Surrogate’s Court. For example, a property held by a married couple as “joint tenants with right of survivorship” will automatically pass to the surviving spouse. A direct transfer—outside the scope of a will and the court’s oversight.
But if that same deed lists the owners as “tenants in common,” the story is entirely different. Each owner’s share is theirs to pass on through their will. This means the deceased’s portion becomes part of their probate estate. This might be intentional—perhaps to provide for children from a previous marriage—or it could be an oversight that forces a family into a court proceeding they never anticipated.
Understanding these distinctions is central to prudent stewardship. We work with clients to ensure the way they hold title to their property aligns with their overall estate plan. An improperly worded deed can undermine the most carefully drafted will or trust.
How We Locate a Deed in New York
When a client can’t find an original deed, we don’t panic. The original is important, but the controlling document—the one recorded with the government—is a public record.
The process for retrieving a copy depends on the property’s location. For the five boroughs of New York City—Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island—the first stop is the Office of the City Register. We can typically find what we need through their online database, known as ACRIS (Automated City Register Information System). For properties on Long Island or elsewhere in the state, the search is conducted at the County Clerk’s office in the county where the property is located.
To perform the search, we need specific information. A street address is a start, but the most reliable identifier is the property’s Block and Lot number. With this information, we can pull a certified copy of the recorded deed, which is legally sufficient for most purposes, including real estate transactions and estate administration.
Why a Recorded Deed Carries Legal Force
Simply signing a deed is not enough. The critical step is recording it with the appropriate county office. This act provides official notice to the world that you are the owner, protecting you—and your heirs—from later claims against the property.
New York’s Real Property Law § 291 establishes what is known as a “race-notice” system. In essence, this statute protects a subsequent buyer or lender who records their deed first, without knowledge of a prior, unrecorded deed. I have seen cases where an unrecorded deed from years ago created a “cloud on title,” a legal defect that had to be resolved in court before the property could be sold or passed to the next generation.
Ensuring your deed is properly recorded is not a mere formality. It is a fundamental act of asset protection and a key part of securing a generational asset for your family. It prevents ambiguity and defends your legacy against future challenges.
A deed is the final word on your real property. Its language can either simplify or complicate the transfer of your most valuable asset. A prudent step in any estate review is to locate and analyze the deeds for all real property you own. Our firm can perform a deed and title review to identify how your property is currently held and confirm that it aligns with your intentions for your legacy.




