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An attachment is a legal process that allows a creditor to seize a debtor's property before a judgment is rendered to secure the debt. A writ of attachment is used to seize the debtor's property if a judgment is made in favor of the creditor. If notice of attachment is delivered to the Registry of Deeds and the appropriate fees are paid, the registering party has the right to assume the official will properly perform their duty to annotate the attachment on the title certificate. Entry of an involuntary transaction such as an attachment in the day book alone is considered sufficient notice, as it is the duty of the Registry to annotate the certificate of title.
An attachment is a legal process that allows a creditor to seize a debtor's property before a judgment is rendered to secure the debt. A writ of attachment is used to seize the debtor's property if a judgment is made in favor of the creditor. If notice of attachment is delivered to the Registry of Deeds and the appropriate fees are paid, the registering party has the right to assume the official will properly perform their duty to annotate the attachment on the title certificate. Entry of an involuntary transaction such as an attachment in the day book alone is considered sufficient notice, as it is the duty of the Registry to annotate the certificate of title.
An attachment is a legal process that allows a creditor to seize a debtor's property before a judgment is rendered to secure the debt. A writ of attachment is used to seize the debtor's property if a judgment is made in favor of the creditor. If notice of attachment is delivered to the Registry of Deeds and the appropriate fees are paid, the registering party has the right to assume the official will properly perform their duty to annotate the attachment on the title certificate. Entry of an involuntary transaction such as an attachment in the day book alone is considered sufficient notice, as it is the duty of the Registry to annotate the certificate of title.
> Legal process of seizing anothers property in accordance with a writ or
judicial order for the purpose of securing satisfaction of a judgment yet to be rendered > Writ of attachment is used primarily to seize the debtors property to seize the debtors property in order to secure the debt or claim of the creditor in the event that a judgment is rendered > Jurisprudence: a party who delivers a notice of attachment to the RD and pays the corresponding fees has a right to presume that the official would perform his duty properly > In involuntary registration, entry thereof in the day book is sufficient notice to all persons of such adverse claim. The notice of course has to be annotated at the back of the corresponding original certificate of title, but this is an official duty of the RD which may be presumed to have been regularly performed > DBP v. Acting Registry of Deeds: current doctrine thus seems to be that entry alone produces the effect of registration, whether the transaction entered is a voluntary or involuntary one, so long as the registrant has complied with all that is required of him for purposes of entry and annotation, and nothing more remains to be done but a duty incumbent solely on the Registry of Deeds > Section 69 states that an attachment or any writ, order or process intended to create or preserve any lien upon registered land shall be filed and registered in the RD and shall contain a reference to the number of the certificate of title to be affected, the registered owner thereof and a description of the land or interest therein