Visit the City Register Office in the borough where the property is located. Visit the Queens City Register Office to view Brooklyn property record books. If you have the Liber/Reel and page, date recorded, type of document, and number of pages, you should visit the Brooklyn City Register Office for microfilm records.
For all boroughs except Staten Island, you can go to any Borough City Register Office. For Staten Island, you must go to the Richmond County Clerk office.
Property records are public. People may use these records for background information on purchases, mortgages, asset searches, and other legal and financial transactions. Reviewing these documents is not necessarily the same as a title search.
The Automated City Register Information System (ACRIS) allows you to search property records and view document images for Manhattan, Queens, Bronx, and Brooklyn from 1966 to the present.
Property records are public. People may use these records for background information on purchases, mortgages, asset searches, and other legal and financial transactions. Reviewing these documents is not necessarily the same as a title search.
The Automated City Register Information System (ACRIS) allows you to search property records and view document images for Manhattan, Queens, Bronx, and Brooklyn from 1966 to the present. Find a Property Borough, Block and Lot (BBL) or Address. Access Deeds and Other Recorded Documents.
To change a deed in New York City, you will need a deed signed and notarized by the grantor. The deed must also be filed and recorded with the Office of the City Register. Transfer documents identifying if any taxes are due must also be filed and recorded with the City Register.
These include vital records (birth and death certificates, marriage and divorce licenses), criminal records, court records, professional licenses (such as medical, law, and driver's licenses), tax and property records, reports on publicly-traded companies, and FOIA or FOIL-able documents related to the operations of ...
Leases are not public record. Deeds are. I believe some states have a way to request the record be redacted or made private but it's always tricky and usually inconvenient when you try to do something with the subject property.