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Articles · The Real Law Journal

The Recording Acts in Comparative Perspective

Race, notice, and race-notice statutes compared.

ForthcomingVol. II · No. 1pp. 35–62

§ I

Authorship

The author or authors of the work.

Author
Faculty of the School of Property Law

Real Law Society Academy

§ II

Abstract

On the scope of the work.

The article compares the three principal models of state recording statutes — race, notice, and race-notice — and surveys the doctrinal consequences of each in the context of competing interests.

§ III

Keywords

Subjects of the article.

  • recording acts
  • race statutes
  • notice statutes
  • priority

§ IV

The Article

The text.

The recording acts are usually classified into three families. The article reads each family in its received form, with attention to the cases that have applied it.

Part I addresses the race statute and the cases that treat priority as a matter of the order of recording.

Part II addresses the notice statute and the cases that condition priority on the knowledge of a subsequent taker.

Part III addresses the race-notice statute and treats the hybrid as a substantive choice rather than a compromise.

§ V

Preferred Citation

On citing this article.

Faculty of the Sch. of Prop. Law, The Recording Acts in Comparative Perspective, 2 Real Law J. 35 (MMXXVI).
DOI · 10.00000/rlj.ii.1.002

§ VII

Editorial History

On the manuscript's passage to print.

  1. MMXXVI — Spring

    Manuscript received.

  2. MMXXVI — Summer

    In editorial review.

§ VIII

Revision History

On subsequent revisions.

No revisions have been issued. Substantive revisions, when issued, are recorded here and retained in the institutional archive.

The Real Law JournalVol. II — No. 1Articles

The Journal

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The article belongs to a single issue. Read the table of contents and the editor's introduction in their proper place.

The Real Law Society · Est. MMXXVRead Law. Not Lore.Vol. I — Folio I