are these precious? Should I put them in a safe? Or are deeds an anachronism now we have the Land Registry computerised thingummy?
are these precious? Should I put them in a safe? Or are deeds an anachronism now we have the Land Registry computerised thingummy?
You're being robbed, OTH - it's £4.Only costs £6 for an up to date copy of the title to confirm this. You just order "Official Copies" of the title.
wowser! In 2000 my deeds were with the Abbey! I shall inspect for scorch marks!You're being robbed, OTH - it's £4.
Dellzegg, by all means keep the stuff if you want but you can line the budgie's cage with them if you prefer. As OTH says, it is now the entry at HMLR which is definitive. That change was introduced by the Land Registration Act 2000 and known as 'dematerialisation' - who says that lawyers have no soul?
In fact it was driven by the Halifax saying they didn't want to build any more deeds depositories and the Abbey having their biggest one burned down.
Well if you want to be pedantic then it is not HMLR as they dropped the HM a while back!You're being robbed, OTH - it's £4.
Dellzegg, by all means keep the stuff if you want but you can line the budgie's cage with them if you prefer. As OTH says, it is now the entry at HMLR which is definitive. That change was introduced by the Land Registration Act 2000 and known as 'dematerialisation' - who says that lawyers have no soul?
In fact it was driven by the Halifax saying they didn't want to build any more deeds depositories and the Abbey having their biggest one burned down.

I was sent a bundle of documents when I remortgaged my property about 10 years ago and I had been wondering what the legal status of them is now.
I just had a quick look at the Land Registry website but can go no further without registering which I don't to do just now. There appear to be fees for doing most of the searches and the rules changed on 22nd October - from what, to what, I don't know!
I'm afraid it went well beyond scorch marks.The whole building went up. It wasn't so bad with the registered titles - although in those days pre-registered deeds still mattered - but several thousand Abbey borrowers up and down the country were not in areas of compulsory registration and had to reconstitute their deeds from scratch. I only did a couple of them, but IIRC the Land Registry had to introduce a special procedure for those poor sods who were mid-sale. It cost the Abbey and their insurers £squillions.wowser! In 2000 my deeds were with the Abbey! I shall inspect for scorch marks!
Ha! Our 'cupboard' was a whole floor of our building, and that was just my office. There again, we had been in it since 1795.Dematerialisation has not stopped many law firms still charging clients £30 to stick some photocopies in the "Deed Store" (cupboard).
Old habits...