57-4a-1. Document recordable despite defects. Each document executed and acknowledged on or before July 1, 1988, may be recorded in the office of the county recorder regardless of any defect or irregularity in its execution, attestation, or acknowledgment. Enacted by Chapter 155, 1988 General Session
57-4a-2. Recorded document imparts notice of contents despite defects. A recorded document imparts notice of its contents regardless of any defect, irregularity, or omission in its execution, attestation, or acknowledgment. A certified copy of a recorded document is admissible as evidence to the same extent the original document would be admissible as evidence. Enacted by […]
57-4a-3. Document recordable without acknowledgment. A document or a certified copy of a document may be recorded without acknowledgment if: (1) it was executed under law existing at the time of execution; (2) it evidences or affects title to real property; and (3) it was issued under the authority of: (a) the United States, another […]
57-4a-4. Presumptions. (1) A recorded document creates the following presumptions regarding title to the real property affected: (a) the document is genuine and was executed voluntarily by the person purporting to execute it; (b) the person executing the document and the person on whose behalf it is executed are the persons they purport to be; […]