A client recently came to our Manhattan office after his mother passed away. As executor, he was settling her affairs and distributing assets according to her will. The main asset was the family home in Queens, owned free and clear for forty years. But when he went to find the deed—the document proving ownership—it was gone. He checked the safe deposit box and the file cabinets. The paper representing his family’s largest asset had vanished.
This happens more often than you might think. Documents get lost, misplaced during a move, or discarded by mistake. A lost deed is unsettling, but it does not mean you have lost the property. It means you need an official copy from the public record. In my practice, I see the deed as more than a formality; it is the cornerstone of a family’s legacy, the legal instrument that allows for the stewardship of property from one generation to the next.
The Official Record: Where Deeds Live
When you buy real estate, you receive the original executed deed at closing. The critical step, however, is what your real estate attorney does next: recording a copy with the appropriate county office. In New York City, this is the Office of the City Register. Elsewhere in the state, it is the County Clerk’s office. This act of recording makes the ownership transfer a matter of public record.
This public record is the final authority on property ownership. Banks, title insurance companies, and courts rely on it to determine who holds legal title. If your original paper deed is lost or destroyed, the recorded copy is your proof. For properties in the five boroughs, many records are digitized and accessible through the Automated City Register Information System (ACRIS), a useful starting point for a search.
Obtaining a copy is not always a simple online search. Older records may not be digitized, or the property description might be unclear. This is often where we step in—to locate the correct block and lot number, trace the property’s history, and secure a certified copy of the deed.
Why a Recorded Deed is Non-Negotiable Under Law
Recording a deed is not just good practice—it is a legal necessity for protecting ownership rights. New York’s Real Property Law (RPL) § 291 is clear on this point. The statute states that an unrecorded conveyance of property is void against a subsequent purchaser who buys the same property in good faith and records their deed first.
Imagine someone sells a property to Person A, who fails to record the deed. The seller then fraudulently sells the same property to Person B, who is unaware of the first sale and promptly records their deed. Under RPL § 291, Person B’s claim to the property would likely be superior. Recording your deed puts the world on notice of your ownership. It creates a clear chain of title that protects your family’s interest and is essential for any future sale or transfer.
For estate administration, this is paramount. When we present a will to the Surrogate’s Court, we must provide a clear accounting of the decedent’s assets. A certified copy of a deed is the definitive proof of real estate ownership, allowing an executor to legally transfer the property to a beneficiary or sell it to pay estate expenses.
Plain vs. Certified Copies: What You Need
When you request a copy of a deed, you can get two types: a plain copy and a certified copy.
- A plain copy is a photocopy of the document on file. It is useful for your personal records or for informational purposes.
- A certified copy is a photocopy that the County Clerk or City Register’s office has stamped and certified as a true and correct copy of the official record. This certification gives it legal weight.
You will almost always need a certified copy for official purposes. These include real estate sales, court proceedings like probate, and applying for a mortgage. An executor needs a certified copy to prove the estate’s ownership when preparing to sell or distribute a property. While it costs more and can take longer to procure, the certified copy is the only one accepted in a formal legal or financial context.
Securing these documents is a foundational part of prudent estate management. It is an administrative task, but one that carries significant legal weight, ensuring a generational asset is properly accounted for and protected.
If you are responsible for an estate and cannot locate a property deed, or if you need to confirm the chain of title for a family asset, the first step is a professional records search. Our firm can initiate this process to retrieve the official documents needed to settle the estate and secure your family’s legacy.



