New York Statutes
§ 301 — Conveyance and record as evidence
New York § 301
This text of New York § 301 (Conveyance and record as evidence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
N.Y. Real Property Actions & Proceedings § 301 (2026).
Text
§ 301. Conveyance and record as evidence.
1.The certificate of the\nacknowledgment or of the proof of a conveyance, or the record, or the\ntranscript of the record, of such a conveyance, is not conclusive, and\nit may be rebutted, and the effect thereof may be contested, by a party\naffected thereby.\n 2. If it appears that the acknowledgment or proof was taken upon the\noath of an interested or incompetent witness, the conveyance, or the\nrecord or transcript of the record thereof, shall not be received in\nevidence until its execution is established by other competent proof,\nexcept in a case where the title to the land conveyed or affected by\nsuch conveyance or instrument has passed to a subsequent purchaser for a\nvaluable consideration.\n
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Bluebook (online)
New York § 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/ny/RPA/301.