What Is a Deed of Assignment?
Deeds refer to contracts, papers, etc.
- [qì jù]
- English : deed [1]
- Refers to contract instruments.
- Zhou Suyuan's "The Pain History of the Guizhou People's Party" Chapter Three: "There is no cash available for the purchase of shares, and the property deed is allowed to be settled." From the crack of the wall, turned out all the deeds covering the fingerprints of the peasants' blood and piled them up in front of the peasant association.
- A British and American written instrument. Recorded on paper or in a similar manner to express written evidence of an individual's transfer or mortgage of another person's land, house, or other real property that he or she can inherit. Deeds are in principle necessary for any exchange, as written evidence is required to testify in equity. Deeds are divided into flat deeds and double deeds. A flat-edged deed is a deed made by one party that expresses the intention of the other party so that only the producer is bound by it. A dual deed is concluded by two or more people to prove that there is an act or agreement between them. In modern British and American life, deeds are often expressed in terms such as property disposal and mortgage to indicate the nature of the transaction. The deed must be signed. Except for the deed of identity, it does not require anyone to testify, but it must be stamped and delivered; meanwhile, the parties must do something to expressly or implicitly acknowledge that the seal belongs to him. In the presence of witnesses, the only formal procedure required is a signature. In Scottish law, a deed is generally any formal written instrument that takes effect in a legal ceremony. What is particularly different is that in Scottish law, deeds are not required to be stamped, now or for centuries, unless in the case of a company, it must be signed in front of two witnesses; in some cases the same is true for delivery .