gldskr's post above just gave me an idea:
Quote:
gldskr
Notice is a statutory construct that only applies to entities. If you look at the history of real estate transfers before recordation, you will find that the abstract of the property (the originals of the chain of title) followed its new owner. It is part of the property. Today, what you get are certified copies from the recorders office. Not from the de jure recorder, but from the de facto real estate division that has been established to handle statutory transactions.
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How about record the transfer this way- a default judgment in court! Make the contract, sue on it, get judgment, record the notice...but not a new deed.
There is still "how to eliminate property taxes"- the problem as I see it is that the current registration is 'presumptive'. So short of a method that causes the record to be eliminated or canceled: it's a question of establishing "foreign" property vs "subject" property.
Having once endorsed a
de facto status, how to redeem to
de jure...