The information provided below is presented for
informational purposes only.
If you have specific questions concerning real estate you should consult an
attorney.
2. HOW DO I OBTAIN A COPY OF MY DEED?
3. WHAT DO I NEED TO DO AFTER I HAVE PAID OFF MY MORTGAGE?
4. HOW DO I CHANGE TITLE TO REGISTERED LAND?
5. HOW DO I CHANGE TITLE TO RECORDED LAND?
6. HOW MUCH DOES IT COST TO RECORD A DOCUMENT AT THE REGISTRY OF DEEDS?
7. WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN RECORDED LAND AND REGISTERED LAND?
8. MY SPOUSE DIED, HOW DO I TAKE HIS/HER NAME OFF THE DEED?
9. I INHERITED PROPERTY, DO I GET A DEED FROM THE REGISTRY OF DEEDS?
10. I OWN PROPERTY WITH A FRIEND WHO JUST DIED. WHO OWNS IT NOW?
11. I CAN'T FIND MY DEED. IS THAT A PROBLEM?
12. WHAT IS A DECLARATION OF HOMESTEAD?
14. SOMEONE PUT A LIEN ON MY PROPERTY. HOW DO I REMOVE IT?
15. SOMEONE OWES ME MONEY. HOW DO I PUT A LIEN ON HIS PROPERTY?
16. WHERE DO I GET A COPY OF MY PLOT PLAN?
17. ARE THE RULES DIFFERENT FOR RECORDING TIMESHARE DOCUMENTS THAN FOR OTHER PROPERTY DOCUMENTS?
18. HOW ARE NAMES INDEXED IN THE COMPUTER?
19. HOW DO I BEST USE THE COMPUTER SYSTEM?
1. WHAT
KIND OF ADVICE CAN I GET FROM THE REGISTRY OF DEEDS ABOUT PREPARING DOCUMENTS OR
THE STATUS OF MY TITLE??
The Barnstable Registry of Deeds in an “office of record.”
That means we accept documents for recording that meet the minimal legal
requirements for recording as set out in the Massachusetts General Laws, the
rules of the Land Court (for registered land documents) and the rules of the
Barnstable Registry, all as interpreted by the Register of Deeds.
Documents are placed on “record” at the appropriate Registry of Deeds
in order to be valid against and give notice to any persons who have an interest
in the property affected by the document. Recording
a document at the appropriate Registry of Deeds puts the “world on notice”
of that document.
Essentially, a Registry of Deeds is a “library” of
recordings. The person presenting
the document for recording assumes the status of author and the Registry Staff
are the librarians who catalog it and put it on the shelf.
Just as with a library, the Registry does not act as an editor or
“ghost-writer” for the “author.”
With that preamble, the answer to the question posed above
is as follows: Aside from examining a document to see if it meets the minimal
legal requirements for recording, the Registry Staff is prohibited by law from
giving “legal advice” concerning the document.
The prohibition against giving “legal advice” includes a prohibition
against advising or offering opinions on matters such as:
1.
How to prepare a document;
2.
Whether a “recordable document is otherwise legally correct, or if it
will “do” what the “author” is hoping it will do;
3.
The order documents should be placed on record;
4.
Whether an individual has “good” or “clear’ title;
5.
Whether a mortgage or lien has been effectively
discharged; and
6.
Whether an individual should or should not record an otherwise
legally recordable document;
Our advice to anyone who has any of the above questions
or issues is to consult with an attorney.
Documents that are accepted for recording at a Registry become permanent
public records and are not alterable once they are accepted for recording.
The likelihood that the document you are recording will affect your most
valuable asset, your home, should give you pause before recording anything you
have not previously run past your attorney.
We want to help you in any way we legally can in your dealings with the Barnstable Registry of Deeds, so please do not hesitate to ask us questions if you have any. Please understand, however, that if your question calls on us to give you “legal advice,” as we define the term, we may not be able to be as much help to you as you may hope or expect. Thank you.
[TOP]
2. HOW
DO I OBTAIN A COPY OF MY DEED?
To obtain a copy of your deed please send $2.50 together
with the book and page reference or document number reference of the deed you
are looking for to P.O. Box 368, Barnstable, MA 02630. If you do not
know the title reference please list the owners name, street address and town
where the property is located. Do not forget to note your return address
on your request. All requests for copies or must be prepaid.
3. WHAT
DO I NEED TO DO AFTER I HAVE PAID OFF MY MORTGAGE?
Congratulations! You have
paid off your mortgage. In order to
clear your property title of the mortgage you need to record the discharge of
mortgage document you received from the bank with the Registry of Deeds.
After
paying off your mortgage you should have received a one or two-page document
from the mortgagee (bank) entitled “Discharge of Mortgage” or
“Satisfaction of Mortgage.” That
discharge document needs to be recorded with the Registry of Deeds in order to
clear your title of the mortgage. We
cannot accept a copy of the discharge; we must have the original.
You can mail in the discharge or come in person to record the document.
Our mailing address is Barnstable County Registry of Deeds, P.O. Box 368,
Barnstable, MA 02630. There will be
a recording fee to file the discharge.
If your discharge refers to a book and page number
(recorded land) the recording fee will be $75.50. Before mailing in the discharge write your name and return
address on the back of the discharge and the original will be returned to you in
four to six weeks. Also, if the
discharge does not already refer to the street address of the property being
discharged you should write the street address and the town in the left-hand
margin of the discharge.
If
your discharge refers to a six-digit document number (registered land) the
recording fee will be $75.00. We keep the original document as a permanent
record so if you want a copy of the registered document, you should include an
additional $1.00 per page and self addressed stamped return envelope. Also, if
the discharge does not already refer to the street address of the property being
discharged you should write the street address and the town in the left-hand
margin of the discharge. Please
note that if your mortgage was noted on more than one certificate of title the
fee will be $75.00 for each certificate.
4. HOW
DO I CHANGE TITLE TO REGISTERED LAND?
If you own property and you want to
transfer ownership to someone else or if you want to retain an ownership
interest and grant a part ownership to someone else you need to do that by
preparing and executing a new deed. You
cannot do this through a phone call to us or by a letter or by crossing out
and/or adding names to your old deed. We
at the Barnstable County Land Court cannot prepare the deed for you, we do not
have deed forms, nor can we advise you as to whether the deed you present to us
will have the effect of doing what you tell us you want it to do.
All we can do is to examine the deed to determine if it meets the legal
requirements for registration. If a deed meets the basic legal requirements for registration
and the proper fee is presented a deed will be accepted for registration.
Please be advised that once a deed is accepted for registration it cannot
be removed from the public record. We
urge you to seek the advice of an attorney before registering a deed because the
consequences of a mistake can be significant.
Under Massachusetts law a deed conveying registered land (land court
land), in order to be accepted for registration, must include the following:
(See M.G.L. Ch. 185 Sec. 61, 61A and M.G.L. Ch.183 Sec. 6 and 29).
The
name(s) of the grantor(s).
The
name(s) of the grantee(s).
The
residence and post office address of at least one grantee.
A
recital of the amount of the full consideration in dollars or the nature of
the other consideration therefor, if not delivered for a specific monetary
sum. Full consideration shall
mean the total price for the conveyance without deduction for any liens or
encumbrances assumed by the grantee or remaining thereon.
Acceptable examples
of statements of consideration if not for a specific dollar amount are: Nominal
non-monetary; Less than $100.00; Love and affection; Estate planning;
Dissolution of a business or marriage; No consideration.
Unacceptable examples
of statements of consideration if not for a specific dollar
amount are: No monetary consideration; Good and valuable consideration;
Such that no documentary stamps are required; For consideration paid.
A
property description that states the lot number, the Land Court Plan the lot
is shown on and the grantor’s certificate of title number.
The
street address of the property, where applicable.
Time-share deeds do not need a street address noted.
Signatures
of all of the grantors. At
least one signature must be acknowledged (notarized).
See the recording fee
section of this web site for information on fees and calculating excise taxes.
REMEMBER:
A DEED IS A LEGAL DOCUMENT, CONSULT AN ATTORNEY BEFORE RECORDING A DEED.
5. HOW
DO I CHANGE TITLE TO RECORDED LAND?
If you own property and you want to
transfer ownership to someone else or if you want to retain an ownership
interest and grant a part ownership to someone else you need to do that by
preparing and executing a new deed. You
cannot do this through a phone call to us or by a letter or by crossing out
and/or adding names to your old deed. We
at the Barnstable County Registry of Deeds cannot prepare the deed for you, we
do not have deed forms, nor can we advise you as to whether the deed you present
to us will have the effect of doing what you tell us you want it to do.
All we can do is to examine the deed to
determine if it meets the legal requirements for recording.
If a deed meets the basic legal requirements for recording and the proper
fee is presented a deed will be accepted for recording.
Please be advised that once a deed is accepted for recording it cannot be
removed from the public record. We
urge you to seek the advice of an attorney before recording a deed because the
consequences of a mistake can be significant.
Under Massachusetts law a deed conveying recorded land, in order to be accepted for recording, must include the following: (See
M.G.L. Ch. 183 Sec. 6, 6A, 6B and 29).
The
name(s) of the grantor(s).
The
name(s) of the grantee(s).
The residence and post office address of at least one grantee.
Acceptable examples
of statements of consideration if not for a specific dollar amount are: Nominal
non-monetary; Less than $100.00; Love and affection; Estate planning;
Dissolution of a business or marriage; No consideration.
Unacceptable examples
of statements of consideration if not for a specific dollar
amount are: No monetary consideration; Good and valuable consideration;
Such that no documentary stamps are required; For consideration paid.
See
the recording fee section of this web site for information on fees and
calculating excise taxes.
REMEMBER: A DEED IS A LEGAL DOCUMENT, CONSULT AN ATTORNEY BEFORE RECORDING A DEED.
6. HOW
MUCH DOES IT COST TO RECORD A DOCUMENT AT THE REGISTRY OF DEEDS?
The cost of recording a document depends on the document type and whether
it is to be recorded in the Recorded Land Section or the Registered Land
Section. For a detailed listing check out our recording
fee page.
7. WHAT
IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN RECORDED LAND AND REGISTERED LAND?
Recorded land is the most common form of land recording in
Massachusetts. In Barnstable County it represents about 73% of all
recordings. You know you are dealing with Recorded Land if there is a
reference to a Book and Page number in the document description or there is a
reference to a Book and Page Plan number. Dealings with Recorded land are
based on the concept of caveat emptor, let the buyer beware. Registry
personnel accept or reject a document for recording on the basis of whether it
meets the minimum requirements for recording and not whether the document(s)
properly relate to a particular property. For example: A deed from John
Doe to Jane Doe for the Bourne Bridge would be accepted for recording if John
Doe's signature was notarized and the deed otherwise met the minimum
requirements for recording (see FAQ #4 "Requirements for a
Deed"). It would not be the Registry's responsibility to inform Jane
Doe that John Doe does not own the Bourne Bridge. It would be up to Jane
Doe to check the property history of the Bourne Bridge to determine who is the
legal owner is and from whom she should be getting a deed if she were to buy the
property. The recording of the "Doe deed" would not give Jane
Doe title to the Bourne Bridge because John Doe never owned it in the first
place. The recording of a deed or other instruments in the Recorded land
section of the Registry does not guaranty that the real estate is free from all
liens, encumbrances and other legal problems that would cloud the ownership of
the property. It is generally necessary to have a title search done by a
qualified attorney or title examiner to determine the status of a Recorded land
title/property.
Registered land is a more complex form of land ownership. Land that has
gone through a Land Court Registration and Decree process is termed Registered
land. You know you are dealing with Registered land if there is a
reference to a document number or certificate of title number in the property
description. The "Land Court" or "Registry District"
is a separate unit from the regular or "recorded land" section of the
Registry of Deeds. It is an adjunct of the Land Court, which has its main
office in Boston. The land Court is a Department of the Trial Court and
has exclusive jurisdiction over Registered Land. Generally, Registered
land is land that at some point in time had been the subject of an ownership or
boundary dispute. After the Land Court renders a decision as to the
ownership and boundary lines of real property, those issues can never again be
disputed as to that property. All subsequent documents effecting that
property have to be registered with the appropriate registry district. A
Certificate of Title is issued for each new owner of Registered land. The
Certificate of Title lists all of the liens, mortgages, encumbrances and rights
that go with the property. Registry districts will not accept documents
for registration unless they meet the strict requirements set out by the Land
Court. As with recorded land, it is generally necessary to have a title
search done by a qualified attorney or title examiner to determine the status of
a Registered title/property.
8. MY
SPOUSE DIED, HOW DO I TAKE HIS/HER NAME OFF THE DEED?
You don't literally take the name off the deed. Most married
couples who own real estate hold title as "husband and wife, tenants by the
entirety." This type of ownership has a right of survivorship.
When one spouse dies, the interest that spouse had in the property is legally
extinguished leaving the surviving spouse as the sole owner of the
property. A new deed is not prepared or issued, rather the surviving
spouse should record a certified copy of the death certificate for the deceased
spouse noting in the left hand margin of the death certificate the street
address/town and title reference of the property owned by the decedent.
That recorded death certificate will be forwarded to the town assessors office
and the property tax records and bills will be changed accordingly. The
surviving spouse's title will still be the original deed by which the spouses
became owners of the property. That deed together with the recorded death
certificate would show that the surviving spouse is the sole owner of the
property. It may also be necessary to record an estate
tax lien release for the deceased spouse (click
on this link for more information about estate tax liens).
9. I
INHERITED PROPERTY, DO I GET A DEED FROM THE REGISTRY OF DEEDS?
One does not necessarily receive a deed when a property is inherited.
Property can be inherited either as a result of a devise in a Will of the
deceased property owner or, in the absence of a Will, via intestacy. In
either case it is possible, if not probable, that no “deed” will be recorded
with the Registry of Deeds to reflect the inheritance.
Rather, the person(s) who inherited the property will have title to the
property through a Massachusetts Probate Court and the Probate Court Docket
Number of the Estate will be the identifying reference for the title.
A title acquired in this manner is just as legitimate and acceptable as a
title acquired by a deed recorded in the Registry of Deeds.
If the heir(s) wish(es) to
subsequently sell or mortgage the property then the title reference on the deed
or mortgage prepared for that transaction will likely read something like this:
“For grantor’s title see the Estate of______________,_______________Probate
(name of decedent) (name of
county)
Court Docket Number ____________. The
title reference of the deed into the decedent will also likely be noted.
If the property involved is
In any case, when you inherit property the Registry of Deeds is not the party that issues a “deed” or is responsible for “clearing your title”. Asking Registry personnel what to do in order to get a “deed” in this type of situation is asking us for legal advice and we cannot give legal advice. If you have questions about real estate issues related to inheritance you should consult an attorney.
10. I
OWN PROPERTY WITH A FRIEND WHO JUST DIED. WHO OWNS IT NOW?
It depends. Look at the deed by which you became owners of the
property. Right after your name and the name of the deceased co-owner it
should say either "as joint tenants" or "as tenants in
common".
Joint tenants means there is a right of survivorship so when one tenant dies the survivor automatically becomes the sole owner of the property. A new deed is not prepared or issued, rather the surviving tenant should record a certified copy of the death certificate for the deceased tenant noting in the left hand margin of the death certificate the street address/town and title reference of the property owned by the decedent. That recorded death certificate will be forwarded to the town assessors office and the property tax records and bills will be changed accordingly. The surviving tenant's title will still be the original deed by which you and your friend became owners of the property. That deed together with the recorded death certificate would show that the surviving tenant is the sole owner of the property. It may also be necessary to record an estate tax lien release for the deceased spouse (click on this link for more information about estate tax liens).
"Tenants in common" means the interest of the decedent passes to his/her estate and not automatically to the surviving tenant. In the case where two persons own a property as tenants in common and one dies, the survivor has a one-half interest in the property and the heirs at law of the decedent (determined by probate) own the other one-half interest.
11. I
CAN'T FIND MY DEED. IS THAT A PROBLEM?
It shouldn't be an issue as you do not need to present the original deed
to sell or mortgage your property. Also, a certified copy of your deed
obtained from the Registry of Deeds has the same effect as the original.
12. WHAT
IS A DECLARATION OF HOMESTEAD?
We have a separate link devoted to Homestead
issues. Please click here.
13. WHAT
IS A LIFE ESTATE?
A "life estate" is a type of property tenancy that lasts for
the life of the named life tenant. For example, the grantee clause of a
deed may read "to B__ during his life and then to C__". This
would give "B__" ownership of the property during his lifetime and
upon his death the property would go to "C__". "B__"
could sell his interest in the property to "D__" but "D__"
would only own the property for as long as "B__" lives.
14. SOMEONE
PUT A LIEN ON MY PROPERTY. HOW DO I REMOVE IT?
A document that is recorded at the Registry of Deeds is never removed
from the official records. Instead, another document that discharges or
releases the first one is recorded. The two taken together show that the
lien is no longer in effect. Generally, the party that issued the lien
must issue a release of the lien which would then be recorded at the Registry of
Deeds.
15. SOMEONE
OWES ME MONEY. HOW DO I PUT A LIEN ON HIS PROPERTY?
Generally, the only way to put a "lien" on a property is to
file a lawsuit and get a Writ of Attachment or an Execution issued by a Court,
which you would have recorded at the Registry of Deeds by the Sheriff's Office.
If the money is owed to you as payment for goods and services performed on a building or real estate, you may be able to create a "mechanic's lien". The procedure for doing this is set out in Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 254. The "mechanics lien" law has some strict procedural deadlines, so read it carefully. Registry personnel cannot help you with this so you are advised to seek the help of an attorney.
16. WHERE
DO I GET A COPY OF MY PLOT PLAN?
A "plot plan" shows the footprint of a building on a lot of
land. It is generally required by the bank or mortgage company when you
are buying and/or mortgaging a house to certify that the building meets all
zoning requirements regarding setbacks, etc. Plot plans are not
recorded with the Registry of Deeds. Plans that are recorded at the
Registry of Deeds are usually "subdivision plans" that show how a
large parcel of land is divided into lots. Subdivision plans only show the
boundaries of a lot and not the buildings on the lot.
17. ARE
THE RULES DIFFERENT FOR RECORDING TIMESHARE DOCUMENTS THAN FOR OTHER PROPERTY
DOCUMENTS?
No. Timeshare interests are considered real property interests in
Massachusetts and are subject to the same recording fees and rules as any other
real property interest in Massachusetts. The answers to the questions
above generally apply to timeshares as well as to non-timeshare property.
18. HOW
ARE NAMES INDEXED IN THE COMPUTER?
This is a general guide as to how the Registry creates the indexes and
how you can best use the computer to search the indexes.
The Registry enters names in the computer as they appear on the original
instrument, surname first, given
name second, without alternate spellings or corrections except as indicated
below:
Obvious misspellings and/or obvious differences between the printed name and the signature may be cross indexed.
Mt.(Mount), St.(Saint) will be spelled out in full.
Numbers will be
spelled out in full using "hundred" for 3 and 4 digit numbers but
not using "and". Hyphens
are not used. Exception:
four digit number the last three digits of which are zeros, the word
"thousand" is substituted for "hundred".
Example: 1100 Main
Street Trust = Eleven Hundred Main Street Trust.
4000 Main Street Trust = Four Thousand Main Street Trust
Roman numerals will be spelled out according to their use. (Example: II as "two" or "second").
Hyphenated single words will be typed without a hyphen or space. (Example: "Co-operative" will be typed as "Cooperative").
Hyphenated names will be typed with a space in place of the hyphen. (Example: "Smith-Jones" will be typed as "Smith Jones").
An ampersand will be used for the word "and" and will be typed with a space before and after the ampersand.
Terms such as
"as Trustee", "Estate of", "Administrator",
"Conservator", "by Attorney", do not affect the position
of the name. The name will be
indexed first, with the title to follow.
(Example: A deed with the Grantor clause reading "John Jones as
Executor of the Estate of Mary Smith"
will be typed "Jones, John (as EX")
"Smith, Mary (by EX")*
*You cannot enter words that are in parentheses when doing a search,
nothing will appear.
Just enter the name, if they have a title it will appear on the screen.
Initials will be
typed both with a space between each initial and without a space between
each initial. Periods are not used. (Example:
"A.B.C. Corporation" = "ABC Corp." and "A B C
Corp."
Exception: If there is a hyphen
between initials then the initials will be typed only with a space.
(Example:"A-B-C Corporation" = "A B C Corp."
Human surnames such as O'Brien, La France, Del Rio and Van Otto will be entered as one word. (Example: Obrien, Lafrance, Delrio, Vanotto).
Name endings such as "Jr." "Sr.", "Third", are considered part of the given name. "Jr." and "Sr." will be typed in their abbreviated form. (Example: "John Jones, Senior" = "Jones, John Sr."
Where there is more than one letter for one initial the first letter only is entered. (Example: "John McC. Jones" = "Jones, John M.")
Corporations, companies, towns, trusts, clubs, associations are treated in their entirety as surnames.
The words Company, Companies, Corporation, Incorporated, will be abbreviated as Co., Cos., Corp., Inc., when they appear as the last word in a company name.
The County of Barnstable or Barnstable County will be indexed as Barnstable County and will not use the word "of".
When a company name has repeatedly and consistently been treated in one particular way so as to have acquired an accepted and established written form, an unusual and dissimilar treatment of the name, one which is immediately recognized as differing from the established form, will, generally, be cross indexed so as to include the established usage.
The word
"The" is not used when it begins a name.
(Example: "The Bank of
Boston" = "Bank of Boston".
Agencies, divisions,
departments of a Town, County, State or the United States will be indexed
only by the Town, County, State or the United States of America, not by the
agency, division or department. Any
reference to the agency, division, department will be in parentheses. (Example: "Town
of Falmouth Planning Board" = "Falmouth Town of (Planning).*
Exception: United States
Internal Revenue Service will be indexed as "United States Internal
Revenue" and Cape Cod Commission is indexed as "Cape Cod
Commission" not "Barnstable County of (Cape Cod Commission)".
*You cannot enter words that are in parentheses when doing a search,
nothing will appear.
(Example:
Enter "Falmouth Town of (Planning Board)" and no entries
will appear. You can only enter
"Falmouth Town of" and then look at the screen to determine which
entries are Planning Board entries.
19. HOW
DO I BEST USE THE COMPUTER SYSTEM?
This is general guide as to how to best use the Barnstable Registry of
Deeds computer. This guide, used
along with our "Guide To How Names Are Indexed In The Computer",
should help you effectively and accurately use our computer system for your
title searches.
There is no substitute for reading the directions on the screen of the computer. We attempt to highlight all recent changes and additions to our program, but, a periodic review of the instructions on the screen can save even the most experienced computer user a lot of frustration. This guide will not repeat the instructions on the screens. Its purpose is to give you hints and methods to enable you to use the computer most efficiently and effectively.
When searching for
an individual enter the last
name(surname) first. Then press the TAB key.
Then enter the first name(given name).
When searching for a corporation,
company, town, state, county, trust, club or association treat it as one
last name(surname). Do not
enter anything in the given name field.
When searching by
name, the less information entered the broader the search.
The more information entered the narrower the search.
I suggest beginning a name search by entering the LAST NAME ONLY.
If you are entering an uncommon name, a long name, or an unusually
spelled name I suggest entering just the first few letters of the name to
start the search. By doing this
initially you can make sure you will get all the possible listings for your
subject. After you scan through
the broad list you can then reset the screen and narrow your search by
adding a given name.
EXAMPLE: You want to do
an index search for John F. Meade.
First enter: MEADE
With that entry you get a list of every person or company that has
MEADE in first five letters of his/her/its name.
If you first
entered: MEADE
tab JOHN
F
You would only get
a listing of people with that exact name and you would miss any entries that
did not include a middle initial.
*Reminder: The Registry
enters names in the computer as they appear on the original instrument.
If the original instrument has a typo, a misspelling, is missing a
middle initial, etc., you could miss an important recording if you make your
search too specific. Check the Indexing
Guide to see how we treat special cases and...Let's be careful out
there!
When you do want to enter a middle initial for a name just enter it one space after the given name and do not use a period.
Do not enter titles, such as Trustee, Attorney, Conservator, Administrator, Doctor, Mr., Ms., Mrs., Executor, etc. when searching a name. Just enter the name without a title.
Agencies, divisions, departments of a Town, County, State or the United States are not indexed separately. Example: If you are looking for something from the Falmouth Planning Board you enter "Falmouth Town of". You cannot specify the particular board, agency or division of a government. Exception: Cape Cod Commission is indexed as Cape Cod Commission and not under Barnstable County.
If you only know
part of the last name(surname) but all of the first(given) name, you can
enter the first few letters of the last name and enter a *
and then press the tab key and enter the first name.
By putting a * entry at the end of your surname entry the computer
will search for all possible names that start with the letters you entered
in the surname field that also have the given name you entered.
Example: Anthony Armstrong-Jones. You
are looking Anthony Armstrong-Jones but you can only remember the first part
of the hyphenated last name and the first name.
Type Armstrong* in the surname field, press the Tab Key and
then type Anthony in the given name field.
Do not assume that
you have seen all of the information for your specific search request until
you see a message at the bottom of the screen that says:
Last available entry displayed.
When searching for a street address you should enter the number of the property first (Arabic Numerals), then one space, then the street name. You may not want to enter any number at all so as to get the broadest possible list.
When searching via book and page or document number you can advance to the next page or document number simply by pressing the CMD 9 key again. You do not need to clear the screen to see the next entry.