I. Introduction
A land title is one of the most important documents in Philippine property transactions. It is the official evidence of ownership or registered interest over real property under the Torrens system. Because original owner’s duplicate certificates of title may be kept by owners, banks, heirs, courts, or government offices, parties often need a Certified True Copy of a title to verify ownership, encumbrances, technical descriptions, annotations, and the status of the property.
In the Philippines, a Certified True Copy of a land title may generally be requested from the Registry of Deeds or through authorized Land Registration Authority channels. While the registered owner may personally request it, another person may also obtain it on the owner’s behalf through a written authorization, commonly called an Authorization Letter, Special Power of Attorney, or similar written authority.
This article discusses the legal and practical aspects of authorizing another person to obtain a Certified True Copy of a land title in the Philippines.
II. What Is a Certified True Copy of a Land Title?
A Certified True Copy is an official copy of a land title issued or certified by the appropriate government office as a faithful reproduction of the title appearing in its records.
It is commonly requested for:
- sale or purchase due diligence;
- loan or mortgage applications;
- estate settlement;
- extrajudicial settlement of estate;
- judicial proceedings;
- tax declaration updates;
- transfer of title;
- property verification;
- boundary or technical description review;
- checking liens, mortgages, adverse claims, notices of lis pendens, attachments, levies, restrictions, or other annotations.
A Certified True Copy is different from a mere photocopy. A photocopy only reproduces the document, while a Certified True Copy bears official certification that it corresponds to the record on file.
III. Types of Land Titles Commonly Involved
An authorization to obtain a Certified True Copy may refer to different kinds of land title documents, including:
1. Original Certificate of Title
An Original Certificate of Title, or OCT, is the first title issued over a parcel of land after original registration or patent registration.
2. Transfer Certificate of Title
A Transfer Certificate of Title, or TCT, is issued when ownership of registered land is transferred from one person to another, such as through sale, donation, inheritance, or other conveyance.
3. Condominium Certificate of Title
A Condominium Certificate of Title, or CCT, covers ownership of a condominium unit and the related rights attached to it.
4. Electronic Title
Many titles are now stored or processed through computerized land registration systems. A Certified True Copy may be issued based on electronic records, depending on the office and the status of digitization.
IV. Why Authorization Is Needed
Although land titles are public records in the sense that they are recorded with the Registry of Deeds, government offices still require identification, request forms, and sometimes proof of authority when a person is acting for someone else.
Authorization is needed because the person requesting the copy may not be the registered owner, buyer, heir, lawyer, broker, representative, or other interested party appearing on the records. The written authority protects:
- the registered owner;
- the government office issuing the copy;
- the authorized representative;
- third parties relying on the document.
A properly written authorization helps prevent unauthorized access, fraud, impersonation, or misuse of property documents.
V. Who May Authorize Another Person?
The authority may come from a person who has a legitimate interest in the title, such as:
- the registered owner;
- a co-owner;
- an heir of a deceased registered owner;
- a buyer under a pending transaction;
- a seller;
- a corporate officer authorized by the corporation;
- an attorney-in-fact;
- a guardian, administrator, executor, or trustee;
- a court-appointed representative;
- a bank, lender, or mortgagee with proper authority;
- a lawyer representing a client.
Where the registered owner is deceased, the authority may require additional supporting documents, such as a death certificate, proof of heirship, special power of attorney from heirs, letters of administration, or court authority, depending on the purpose and circumstances.
VI. Who May Be Authorized?
The authorized representative may be:
- a family member;
- a lawyer;
- a paralegal or legal staff member;
- a real estate broker or salesperson;
- a liaison officer;
- a company employee;
- a trusted agent;
- a buyer’s representative;
- a bank representative;
- any competent person designated by the owner or interested party.
The authorized representative should have valid identification and should be named clearly in the authorization document.
VII. Authorization Letter vs. Special Power of Attorney
In practice, there are two common documents used to authorize another person to obtain a Certified True Copy of a title: an Authorization Letter and a Special Power of Attorney.
A. Authorization Letter
An Authorization Letter is a simple written document by which the owner or interested party allows another person to perform a specific act, such as requesting and receiving a Certified True Copy of a title.
It is usually sufficient for simple administrative requests, especially when the representative is merely obtaining a copy and not selling, mortgaging, transferring, encumbering, or otherwise disposing of the property.
B. Special Power of Attorney
A Special Power of Attorney, or SPA, is a more formal document authorizing an attorney-in-fact to perform specific acts on behalf of the principal.
An SPA is preferable or may be required when:
- the representative will do more than obtain a copy;
- the title copy is needed in connection with a sale, mortgage, transfer, settlement, or court filing;
- the principal is abroad;
- the representative will sign documents;
- the principal is a corporation or juridical entity;
- the Registry of Deeds or another office requires a notarized authority;
- the transaction involves banks, courts, or government agencies requiring formal authority.
For the limited act of requesting a Certified True Copy, a simple authorization letter may be accepted in many situations, but a notarized SPA provides stronger proof of authority.
VIII. Essential Contents of an Authorization to Obtain a Certified True Copy
A good authorization document should contain the following:
1. Title or Heading
Examples:
Authorization Letter
Special Authorization to Obtain Certified True Copy of Title
Special Power of Attorney
2. Date
The document should state the date of execution.
3. Name of the Principal
The principal is the person giving authority. Include:
- full legal name;
- nationality, if relevant;
- civil status, if relevant;
- address;
- government-issued ID details, if desired.
4. Name of the Authorized Representative
Include:
- full legal name;
- address;
- ID details;
- relationship to the principal, if relevant.
5. Specific Authority Granted
The authority should clearly state that the representative may request, process, claim, and receive a Certified True Copy of the title.
Example:
I hereby authorize [Name of Representative] to request, process, pay the necessary fees for, claim, and receive from the Registry of Deeds or other proper office a Certified True Copy of the land title described below.
6. Description of the Title
The title should be identified accurately. Include as many of the following as available:
- title number;
- type of title: OCT, TCT, or CCT;
- registered owner’s name;
- location of the property;
- lot number;
- block number;
- survey number;
- condominium unit number, if applicable;
- Registry of Deeds branch or city/province;
- tax declaration number, if helpful.
The most important identifier is the title number and the Registry of Deeds where the title is registered.
7. Scope and Limitations
The document should clarify that the authority is limited to obtaining the Certified True Copy and does not include authority to sell, transfer, mortgage, lease, encumber, or dispose of the property.
This is important to prevent misuse.
8. Validity Period
Although not always required, it is advisable to state a validity period.
Example:
This authorization shall be valid only for thirty days from the date hereof.
9. Signature of the Principal
The principal must sign the authorization.
10. Signature of the Representative
Some offices may require the representative’s signature or specimen signature.
11. Identification Documents
Attach photocopies of valid government-issued IDs of both the principal and representative.
12. Notarization
Notarization may not always be required for a simple authorization letter, but it is strongly recommended, especially where the principal is not personally appearing, the property is high-value, or the office requires stronger proof of authority.
IX. Sample Authorization Letter
AUTHORIZATION LETTER
Date: _____________
To Whom It May Concern:
I, [Name of Principal], of legal age, Filipino, and residing at [address], hereby authorize [Name of Authorized Representative], of legal age, and residing at [address], to request, process, pay the required fees for, claim, and receive on my behalf a Certified True Copy of the following land title:
Type of Title: Transfer Certificate of Title / Original Certificate of Title / Condominium Certificate of Title
Title No.: _____________
Registered Owner: _____________
Property Location: _____________
Registry of Deeds: _____________
This authority is limited solely to obtaining the Certified True Copy of the above-described title and does not include authority to sell, transfer, mortgage, lease, encumber, or otherwise dispose of the property.
This authorization shall be valid until _____________, unless earlier revoked in writing.
Attached are photocopies of my valid government-issued identification card and the valid government-issued identification card of my authorized representative.
Signed this ___ day of _____________ 20___ at _____________, Philippines.
[Name of Principal]
Principal
Accepted by:
[Name of Authorized Representative]
Authorized Representative
X. Sample Special Power of Attorney
SPECIAL POWER OF ATTORNEY
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS:
I, [Name of Principal], of legal age, Filipino, single/married/widowed, and residing at [address], do hereby name, constitute, and appoint [Name of Attorney-in-Fact], of legal age, Filipino, and residing at [address], to be my true and lawful attorney-in-fact, for me and in my name, place, and stead, to do and perform the following acts:
To request, process, follow up, pay the necessary fees for, claim, and receive from the Registry of Deeds or other appropriate government office a Certified True Copy of the land title described as follows:
Type of Title: _____________
Title No.: _____________
Registered Owner: _____________
Property Location: _____________
Registry of Deeds: _____________
To sign request forms, logbooks, receipts, acknowledgments, and other documents necessary or incidental to the foregoing limited purpose;
To do all acts necessary to carry out the authority herein granted, provided that this Special Power of Attorney shall not authorize the attorney-in-fact to sell, transfer, mortgage, lease, encumber, donate, or otherwise dispose of the property.
HEREBY GIVING AND GRANTING unto my said attorney-in-fact full power and authority to do and perform every act necessary to accomplish the foregoing limited purpose, hereby ratifying and confirming all that my said attorney-in-fact shall lawfully do by virtue hereof.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this ___ day of _____________ 20___ at _____________, Philippines.
[Name of Principal]
Principal
Signed in the presence of:
Witness
Witness
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Republic of the Philippines )
City/Municipality of ______ ) S.S.
BEFORE ME, a Notary Public for and in the above jurisdiction, personally appeared:
Name: __________________
Government ID: __________________
Date/Place Issued: __________________
known to me and to me known to be the same person who executed the foregoing instrument and acknowledged that the same is his/her free and voluntary act and deed.
This instrument consists of ___ pages, including this page on which this acknowledgment is written, and has been signed by the party and witnesses on each and every page.
WITNESS MY HAND AND SEAL this ___ day of _____________ 20___ at _____________, Philippines.
Doc. No. ___;
Page No. ___;
Book No. ;
Series of 20.
Notary Public
XI. Requirements Commonly Requested
The specific requirements may vary by Registry of Deeds office or service channel, but the following are commonly requested:
- duly accomplished request form;
- title number;
- name of registered owner;
- location of property;
- valid government-issued ID of requester;
- authorization letter or SPA, if requester is a representative;
- photocopy of principal’s valid ID;
- photocopy of representative’s valid ID;
- payment of prescribed fees;
- claim stub or official receipt.
For corporate owners or representatives, additional documents may be required, such as:
- secretary’s certificate;
- board resolution;
- articles of incorporation or registration documents;
- company ID of representative;
- authorization letter signed by an authorized officer.
For heirs or estate matters, possible additional documents include:
- death certificate of the registered owner;
- proof of relationship;
- extrajudicial settlement documents;
- special power of attorney from co-heirs;
- court appointment as administrator or executor;
- tax documents, where relevant.
XII. Valid Government-Issued IDs
Commonly accepted IDs may include:
- Philippine Passport;
- Driver’s License;
- UMID;
- SSS ID;
- GSIS ID;
- PRC ID;
- Voter’s ID or voter certification;
- Postal ID;
- PhilHealth ID, where accepted;
- Philippine Identification Card;
- Senior Citizen ID;
- OFW ID;
- government office or employee ID, where accepted.
The ID should be valid, legible, and contain the name, photograph, and signature of the holder.
XIII. Importance of the Title Number
The title number is crucial. Without it, obtaining a Certified True Copy may be more difficult because the Registry of Deeds indexes titles according to official records.
A person requesting a copy should ideally know:
- the title number;
- the registered owner’s name;
- the property location;
- the Registry of Deeds office where the title is registered.
If the title number is unknown, a person may need to conduct additional verification using tax declarations, deeds, prior documents, subdivision plans, survey data, or records from the assessor’s office. However, a tax declaration is not the same as a land title and does not prove registered ownership in the same way.
XIV. Where to Obtain a Certified True Copy
A Certified True Copy may generally be obtained from the Registry of Deeds having custody of the title records. In many areas, requests may also be processed through computerized or centralized channels connected with the Land Registration Authority.
The proper Registry of Deeds is usually based on the location of the property. For example, land located in Quezon City is registered with the Registry of Deeds for Quezon City; land located in Cebu City is registered with the Registry of Deeds for Cebu City; and land located in a province is registered with the appropriate provincial or city registry.
XV. Procedure for an Authorized Representative
The usual procedure is as follows:
Step 1: Prepare the Authorization
The principal prepares and signs an authorization letter or SPA identifying the representative and the title to be requested.
Step 2: Attach IDs
Photocopies of valid IDs of the principal and representative should be attached. The representative should bring the original ID for verification.
Step 3: Complete the Request Form
The representative fills out the request form, stating the title number, title type, registered owner, and Registry of Deeds.
Step 4: Submit the Documents
The representative submits the request form, authorization, IDs, and other supporting documents.
Step 5: Pay Fees
The representative pays the required government fees and keeps the official receipt or claim stub.
Step 6: Claim the Certified True Copy
The representative claims the Certified True Copy once available.
Step 7: Review the Copy
The copy should be checked for:
- correct title number;
- correct registered owner;
- correct property description;
- complete annotations;
- readable certification;
- correct Registry of Deeds;
- issuance date.
XVI. Legal Effect of a Certified True Copy
A Certified True Copy is generally used as official proof of the contents of the title record at the time it was issued. It reflects the title as recorded in the Registry of Deeds, including annotations existing on the title.
However, it does not by itself transfer ownership. It is evidence of what appears in the registry. Transfers of ownership require proper deeds, taxes, clearances, registration, and issuance of a new title or annotation, depending on the transaction.
A Certified True Copy also does not guarantee that no off-title issues exist. For example, there may be possession disputes, boundary disputes, unpaid taxes, estate claims, zoning restrictions, homeowners’ association restrictions, tenancy issues, litigation not yet annotated, or forged prior documents that require separate investigation.
XVII. Common Annotations Found on Titles
When obtaining a Certified True Copy, it is important to check the memorandum of encumbrances or annotations. These may include:
- real estate mortgage;
- cancellation of mortgage;
- adverse claim;
- notice of lis pendens;
- levy on execution;
- attachment;
- restrictions;
- easements;
- right of way;
- notice of tax lien;
- pacto de retro sale;
- lease;
- affidavit of self-adjudication;
- extrajudicial settlement;
- court orders;
- subdivision or consolidation entries;
- technical descriptions;
- restrictions under subdivision or condominium projects.
Annotations may affect marketability, financing, transferability, or possession of the property.
XVIII. When a Simple Authorization May Be Insufficient
A simple authorization letter may not be enough in certain cases, such as:
- when the principal is abroad;
- when the title is involved in litigation;
- when the representative will sign sworn statements;
- when the title copy will be used for transfer of ownership;
- when the requesting party is a corporation;
- when the owner is deceased;
- when multiple co-owners are involved;
- when the Registry of Deeds requires notarized authority;
- when a bank, court, or government office requires an SPA;
- when there is suspicion of fraud or conflicting claims.
In such cases, a notarized SPA or additional proof of authority is advisable.
XIX. If the Principal Is Abroad
If the principal is outside the Philippines, the authorization may need to be executed abroad and properly authenticated for use in the Philippines.
Depending on the country, this may involve:
- notarization before a foreign notary;
- apostille under the Apostille Convention, if applicable;
- consular acknowledgment, if required or if the country is not covered by apostille processes;
- presentation of valid passport or government ID;
- mailing the original document to the Philippines.
For important property transactions, an SPA executed abroad should be carefully prepared and authenticated because Philippine offices, banks, and registries often scrutinize foreign-executed documents.
XX. If the Owner Is a Corporation
When the registered owner is a corporation, partnership, association, or other juridical entity, the authority should come from the entity through its authorized officer.
Common documents include:
- board resolution;
- secretary’s certificate;
- authorization letter on company letterhead;
- valid ID of signing officer;
- valid ID of representative;
- SEC registration documents, if required;
- notarized SPA, if needed.
A corporate officer should not assume that his or her position alone is enough. The Registry of Deeds or requesting office may ask for proof that the officer has authority to act for the corporation.
XXI. If There Are Co-Owners
If the title is registered in the names of multiple co-owners, one co-owner may request a copy for legitimate purposes. However, if the representative claims to act for all co-owners, the authorization should ideally be signed by all concerned co-owners or by a person with authority from them.
If the copy is needed for sale, partition, mortgage, or settlement, the authority of each co-owner becomes more important.
XXII. If the Registered Owner Is Deceased
When the registered owner is deceased, no ordinary authorization can be signed by the deceased owner. Authority must come from living persons legally entitled to act, such as:
- heirs;
- estate administrator;
- executor;
- court-appointed representative;
- attorney-in-fact of heirs.
Documents may include:
- death certificate;
- proof of relationship;
- extrajudicial settlement of estate;
- special power of attorney from heirs;
- letters of administration;
- court order;
- valid IDs of heirs and representatives.
The proper document depends on whether the estate has been settled, whether there is a pending court case, and whether all heirs agree.
XXIII. If the Title Is in the Possession of a Bank
If the owner’s duplicate title is held by a bank because of a mortgage, the Registry of Deeds may still have the registered title record. A Certified True Copy may be requested from the registry, but the copy will likely show the mortgage annotation if the mortgage was registered.
If the representative also needs bank records or release documents, separate authority addressed to the bank may be required. Banks usually require strict identity verification and often demand a notarized SPA.
XXIV. If the Title Is Lost
An authorization to obtain a Certified True Copy may be used to verify the title details when the owner’s duplicate title is lost. However, obtaining a Certified True Copy is not the same as replacing a lost owner’s duplicate title.
Replacement of a lost owner’s duplicate certificate of title usually involves a judicial or administrative process, depending on the circumstances and applicable rules. A Certified True Copy may be one of the documents needed, but it does not itself replace the lost title.
XXV. If the Title Contains Errors
A Certified True Copy may reveal typographical errors, name discrepancies, incorrect civil status, technical description issues, or annotation problems.
Common title errors include:
- misspelled names;
- incorrect middle names;
- wrong civil status;
- incorrect lot area;
- inconsistent technical description;
- erroneous annotations;
- uncancelled mortgages;
- missing cancellation entries;
- wrong title references;
- duplicate or conflicting entries.
Correction may require administrative action, court action, or registration of corrective instruments, depending on the nature of the error.
XXVI. Authority Must Be Specific
A vague authorization can cause delays. The authority should not merely say:
I authorize my representative to transact with the Registry of Deeds.
A better wording is:
I authorize my representative to request, process, pay the required fees for, claim, and receive a Certified True Copy of Transfer Certificate of Title No. ______ registered in the name of ______ covering property located at ______ from the Registry of Deeds of ______.
Specificity reduces the risk that the document will be rejected or misused.
XXVII. Authority Should Be Limited
The authorization should expressly limit the representative’s power. A representative who is only supposed to get a Certified True Copy should not be given broad authority to sell, transfer, mortgage, or sign documents.
A protective clause may state:
This authority is strictly limited to obtaining a Certified True Copy of the above-described title and shall not be construed as authority to sell, convey, mortgage, lease, encumber, waive rights over, or otherwise dispose of the property.
This protects the principal and helps clarify the representative’s role.
XXVIII. Notarization
Notarization converts a private document into a public document and provides stronger evidence of its due execution. A notarized document is generally more readily accepted by government offices, banks, courts, and private institutions.
For a simple title copy request, notarization may or may not be required, depending on the office. However, notarization is advisable when:
- the principal cannot appear personally;
- the representative is not an immediate family member;
- the title is valuable;
- the authorization will be used repeatedly;
- the document is an SPA;
- the principal is abroad;
- the requesting office requires it;
- the transaction may lead to sale, mortgage, or transfer.
The notary public will usually require the personal appearance of the principal and presentation of competent evidence of identity.
XXIX. Data Privacy Considerations
A land title contains personal and property information. While land registration records serve public notice functions, a representative should use the Certified True Copy only for the authorized purpose.
The principal should avoid giving unnecessary personal documents. The representative should not disclose, reproduce, or circulate the title copy beyond the transaction or purpose stated in the authorization.
Where companies, brokers, law firms, banks, or agents handle title copies, they should protect personal data and property records from unauthorized access or misuse.
XXX. Risks of Misuse
An authorization to obtain a Certified True Copy may seem harmless, but title information can be misused. Risks include:
- fraudulent sale attempts;
- forged deeds;
- fake mortgage applications;
- impersonation of owners;
- property scams;
- unauthorized listings;
- false claims of authority;
- identity theft;
- targeting of absentee owners;
- preparation of fraudulent documents.
Because of these risks, the principal should authorize only trusted persons, limit the authority, include an expiration date, attach ID copies carefully, and avoid giving original owner’s duplicate titles unless absolutely necessary.
XXXI. Practical Safeguards for Owners
Owners should observe the following safeguards:
- Use a specific and limited authorization.
- State the exact title number.
- Indicate the Registry of Deeds office.
- Include a short validity period.
- Write “for title copy request only.”
- Avoid signing blank forms.
- Give photocopies only, unless originals are required for verification.
- Keep a copy of the signed authorization.
- Ask for the official receipt and copy obtained.
- Revoke the authority in writing if necessary.
- Use an SPA for higher-risk transactions.
- Consult counsel for estate, corporate, or disputed properties.
XXXII. Practical Safeguards for Representatives
Representatives should also protect themselves by:
- carrying valid ID;
- keeping the original authorization or SPA;
- bringing photocopies of required IDs;
- confirming the correct title number;
- paying only official fees;
- keeping receipts;
- avoiding unauthorized acts;
- not signing documents outside the authority given;
- returning the Certified True Copy to the principal;
- documenting the turnover of documents.
XXXIII. Common Reasons for Rejection or Delay
A request may be delayed or rejected because of:
- wrong title number;
- wrong Registry of Deeds office;
- illegible authorization;
- unsigned authorization;
- expired authorization;
- lack of valid ID;
- ID mismatch;
- absence of notarization where required;
- incomplete title details;
- inconsistent names;
- deceased owner without estate documents;
- corporate owner without secretary’s certificate;
- representative not named clearly;
- title record not found;
- technical system issues;
- pending verification by the registry.
To avoid delay, the authorization should be complete, specific, and supported by proper identification.
XXXIV. Difference Between Certified True Copy and Owner’s Duplicate Title
A Certified True Copy is an official copy issued from the registry record. It is used for verification and documentation.
An Owner’s Duplicate Certificate of Title is the duplicate original issued to the registered owner. It is often required in transactions that result in registration of voluntary dealings, such as sale, mortgage, or cancellation of mortgage.
A representative authorized only to obtain a Certified True Copy does not automatically have authority to possess, surrender, or use the owner’s duplicate title.
XXXV. Difference Between Title and Tax Declaration
A land title and a tax declaration are often confused.
A land title is evidence of registered ownership under the Torrens system.
A tax declaration is a document issued for real property tax assessment purposes. It may indicate who is declared for tax purposes, but it is not the same as a certificate of title and does not by itself prove ownership of registered land.
A person conducting due diligence should obtain both the Certified True Copy of the title and the latest tax declaration, but the title carries a different legal significance.
XXXVI. Due Diligence After Obtaining a Certified True Copy
After receiving the Certified True Copy, the requesting party should verify:
- whether the title is clean or annotated;
- whether the seller is the registered owner;
- whether the title number matches the deed or documents;
- whether the property description matches the actual property;
- whether the title contains mortgages or adverse claims;
- whether there is a lis pendens or court case annotation;
- whether the title is subject to restrictions;
- whether the lot area matches survey and tax records;
- whether the title is a mother title, subdivision title, or condominium title;
- whether there are signs of irregularity.
For purchase transactions, a Certified True Copy should be recent. Buyers typically prefer a newly issued copy to ensure that the annotations are current.
XXXVII. Authorization in Real Estate Sales
In a sale transaction, buyers or brokers often request authority to obtain a Certified True Copy to verify the property before payment.
Sellers may allow this, but they should not give broad authority unless necessary. A limited authorization to obtain a Certified True Copy is safer than an SPA authorizing negotiation, sale, receipt of money, or execution of deeds.
Where a broker is involved, the broker’s authority to market the property should be separate from authority to obtain title documents. A broker’s authority to sell or market should not be confused with authority to transfer ownership.
XXXVIII. Authorization in Loan or Mortgage Transactions
Banks and lenders often require Certified True Copies to evaluate collateral. The borrower or owner may authorize a bank representative, loan officer, or liaison to obtain title copies.
However, authority to obtain a Certified True Copy is not the same as authority to mortgage the property. A mortgage requires a separate real estate mortgage document signed by the owner or duly authorized attorney-in-fact.
For corporate borrowers, a board resolution and secretary’s certificate may be required.
XXXIX. Authorization in Estate Settlement
Heirs often need Certified True Copies of titles to settle the estate of a deceased owner. One heir may be authorized by the others to obtain copies.
The authorization should identify the deceased registered owner, title numbers, and purpose. If the titles are numerous, an attached schedule may be used.
Example:
Attached as Annex “A” is the list of titles covered by this authorization.
For estates with disputes, pending court proceedings, or absent heirs, a lawyer should prepare the authority and supporting documents.
XL. Authorization in Litigation
A Certified True Copy of title may be needed for court cases involving ownership, possession, partition, annulment of title, quieting of title, foreclosure, recovery of property, ejectment, or estate proceedings.
Lawyers often request certified copies through their staff. The lawyer’s authority may come from a client engagement, SPA, court appearance, or written authorization. Courts may require certified documents rather than ordinary photocopies.
Where litigation is involved, it is important to obtain a recent copy and examine annotations such as notice of lis pendens, attachments, levies, and adverse claims.
XLI. Revocation of Authorization
The principal may revoke the authorization unless it is coupled with an interest or otherwise governed by a specific legal arrangement. Revocation should be in writing.
A revocation letter should state:
- name of principal;
- name of former representative;
- date of authorization;
- title number involved;
- statement of revocation;
- effective date;
- signature of principal.
If the original authorization was submitted to an office and the transaction is pending, the principal may notify the office in writing.
XLII. Validity Period and Expiration
An authorization without a stated expiry may still be questioned if it appears stale. For practical purposes, it is better to set a short validity period, such as:
- 15 days;
- 30 days;
- 60 days;
- until completion of the title copy request.
A short validity period reduces risk and reassures the government office that the authority is current.
XLIII. Multiple Titles
If several titles are involved, the authorization should list all title numbers. The list may be included in the body of the document or attached as an annex.
Example:
This authorization covers the titles listed in Annex “A,” consisting of TCT Nos. ______, ______, and ______, all registered with the Registry of Deeds of ______.
The principal should sign or initial each page of the annex.
XLIV. Multiple Representatives
A principal may authorize more than one representative. The document should specify whether they may act jointly or separately.
Example:
I authorize [Name 1] and [Name 2], acting jointly or separately, to request and receive the Certified True Copy.
If the principal wants stricter control, require joint action.
Example:
The above representatives must act jointly, and neither may act alone.
XLV. Authority to Pay Fees and Sign Forms
The representative should be expressly authorized to pay fees and sign forms related to the request.
Without this language, the office may still allow the request, but including it avoids doubt.
Recommended wording:
The representative is authorized to sign request forms, logbooks, acknowledgments, receipts, and other documents necessary solely for the processing and release of the Certified True Copy.
XLVI. Authority to Receive the Document
The authority should expressly include the right to receive or claim the Certified True Copy. Some letters authorize only “processing” but not “claiming,” which may create inconvenience.
Use complete wording:
request, process, follow up, pay for, claim, and receive.
XLVII. Use of the Certified True Copy
The authorization may state the purpose of the request, such as:
- for personal records;
- for bank loan application;
- for estate settlement;
- for due diligence;
- for court filing;
- for property sale verification;
- for tax declaration update.
Stating the purpose may help limit misuse. However, avoid stating a purpose that is broader than intended.
XLVIII. Red Flags in Authorization Documents
A principal should be cautious if asked to sign an authorization that:
- contains blank spaces;
- does not identify the representative;
- does not identify the title;
- includes authority to sell or mortgage when only a copy is needed;
- has no expiry date;
- authorizes receipt of money;
- includes power to sign deeds;
- includes power to surrender the owner’s duplicate title;
- uses vague phrases such as “to do any and all acts” without limitation;
- is prepared by an unknown buyer or agent without explanation.
XLIX. Special Considerations for Condominium Titles
For condominium units, the authorization should identify:
- CCT number;
- condominium project name;
- unit number;
- floor number;
- parking slot title, if separate;
- Registry of Deeds;
- registered owner.
Parking slots may have separate titles or may be covered by separate documents, depending on the development. If a parking slot has its own CCT, it should be separately listed.
L. Special Considerations for Subdivision Lots
For subdivision lots, the authorization should identify:
- TCT number;
- lot number;
- block number;
- subdivision name;
- phase, if any;
- Registry of Deeds;
- registered owner.
Subdivision restrictions may be annotated on the title or contained in separate deeds of restrictions. A Certified True Copy may show some restrictions, but the buyer should also check homeowners’ association documents and development restrictions.
LI. Special Considerations for Agricultural Land
For agricultural land, title verification may involve additional issues, such as:
- agrarian reform coverage;
- emancipation patents;
- certificates of land ownership award;
- retention limits;
- tenancy claims;
- restrictions on transfer;
- conversion requirements;
- annotations relating to agrarian laws.
A Certified True Copy may show some restrictions, but separate checks with relevant agencies may be necessary.
LII. Special Considerations for Mother Titles
A mother title covers a larger parcel from which smaller lots may later be subdivided. If the property being checked is supposedly a subdivided lot, the requesting party should determine whether an individual title has already been issued.
An authorization to obtain a Certified True Copy of a mother title may not be enough to prove that a particular subdivided lot has a separate title. The buyer should verify the subdivision plan, individual title, technical description, and approved survey records.
LIII. Special Considerations for Untitled Land
If land is untitled, there may be no OCT, TCT, or CCT to obtain. Documents may instead include:
- tax declarations;
- deeds of sale;
- survey plans;
- possessory documents;
- free patent applications;
- cadastral records;
- DENR records;
- court decrees;
- ancestral domain or other special records.
An authorization to obtain a Certified True Copy of title is meaningful only if a registered title exists.
LIV. Relationship With the Torrens System
The Philippine land registration system is based on the Torrens system, which aims to provide certainty and stability in land ownership by registering title to land. The Registry of Deeds is the public repository of registered land records.
A Certified True Copy helps parties rely on the registry record. However, prudence requires checking not only the face of the title but also the circumstances surrounding the property, especially in transactions involving possession, heirs, long-unregistered deeds, or informal arrangements.
LV. Can Anyone Obtain a Certified True Copy?
In practice, many title records may be requested by persons who can provide the title number and pay the required fees. However, offices may still require valid identification, purpose, and authorization, especially where the requester claims to represent the owner or where internal procedures require proof of authority.
Therefore, even if title records have a public notice function, a representative should not assume that he or she can obtain copies without proper documentation.
LVI. Is an Authorization Required From the Registered Owner?
For a representative acting on behalf of the owner, yes, authority should come from the owner or a person legally authorized to act for the owner.
For a person requesting for his or her own due diligence, such as a buyer who already has the title number, the office’s requirements may differ. Still, if the buyer claims to act for the seller or needs documents from the seller, written authority is prudent.
LVII. Does the Authorization Need to Be Notarized?
Not always, but notarization is often advisable. Some offices may accept a simple signed authorization letter with IDs, while others may require a notarized SPA depending on the circumstances.
A notarized SPA is best for:
- transactions involving high-value property;
- principals abroad;
- corporate owners;
- estate matters;
- representatives who are not close relatives;
- bank transactions;
- documents to be used in court or formal registration proceedings.
LVIII. Does a Certified True Copy Expire?
A Certified True Copy does not “expire” in the sense that it becomes invalid after a fixed period. However, it reflects the title record only as of the date of issuance. New annotations may be entered later.
For transactions, banks, buyers, lawyers, and government offices often require a recently issued copy, commonly within a recent period acceptable to them.
LIX. Can the Representative Use the Copy for Another Purpose?
The representative should use the copy only for the purpose authorized. If the authorization states that the copy is for personal records or due diligence, the representative should not use it to support unrelated transactions.
A principal may include a purpose limitation in the authorization to prevent misuse.
LX. Can the Representative Obtain Multiple Copies?
The authorization should state whether the representative may obtain one or more copies.
Example:
The representative is authorized to obtain one Certified True Copy.
Or:
The representative is authorized to obtain such number of Certified True Copies as may be necessary for the stated purpose.
For tighter control, specify the number of copies.
LXI. Can the Representative Request Other Documents?
Not unless the authorization says so. If the representative also needs certified copies of deeds, encumbrances, subdivision plans, condominium documents, or other registry records, the authorization should expressly include them.
Example:
The representative is also authorized to request certified copies of related documents, including the deed of sale, real estate mortgage, cancellation of mortgage, or other documents annotated on the title, solely for verification purposes.
LXII. Authority to Obtain Title vs. Authority to Transact With Property
A narrow authorization to obtain a Certified True Copy does not authorize the representative to:
- sell the property;
- negotiate final terms;
- receive purchase money;
- sign a deed of sale;
- mortgage the property;
- lease the property;
- donate the property;
- waive rights;
- file cases;
- surrender the owner’s duplicate title;
- execute affidavits of loss;
- transfer tax declarations;
- register deeds.
Those acts require separate and specific authority.
LXIII. Fraud Prevention Language
A useful protective clause is:
For avoidance of doubt, this authorization does not grant any power to negotiate, sell, convey, transfer, mortgage, lease, encumber, receive payment for, surrender documents relating to, or otherwise dispose of the above-described property.
Another protective clause is:
Any act beyond the limited authority stated herein shall be unauthorized and void as against me.
LXIV. Best Form for Most Situations
For simple title verification by a trusted representative, a signed authorization letter with ID copies may be sufficient.
For more formal or sensitive cases, use a notarized SPA.
Recommended minimum:
- specific title number;
- name of representative;
- authority to request, pay, claim, and receive;
- limitation clause;
- validity period;
- principal’s signature;
- photocopy of principal’s valid ID;
- representative’s valid ID.
Recommended stronger form:
- notarized SPA;
- witnesses;
- ID details;
- purpose clause;
- title schedule;
- express limitation;
- corporate or estate documents, if applicable.
LXV. Example of a Short Protective Authorization
AUTHORIZATION
I, [Name], authorize [Representative] to request, process, pay for, claim, and receive from the Registry of Deeds of [place] one Certified True Copy of TCT/OCT/CCT No. [number], registered in the name of [registered owner], covering property located at [location].
This authority is limited solely to obtaining the Certified True Copy and does not authorize the representative to sell, transfer, mortgage, lease, encumber, surrender title documents, receive money, or otherwise transact concerning the property.
This authorization is valid until [date] only.
Signed this ___ day of __________ 20___ at __________.
Principal
ID No.: _____________
Authorized Representative
ID No.: _____________
LXVI. Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is a Certified True Copy the same as a title?
It is an official certified copy of the title record, not the owner’s duplicate certificate itself.
2. Can a representative obtain it?
Yes, provided the representative complies with the requirements and presents proper authority when required.
3. Is a notarized SPA always required?
Not always, but it is safer and may be required depending on the office, transaction, or circumstances.
4. Can the representative sell the property using the authorization?
No, not if the authorization is limited to obtaining a Certified True Copy. Sale requires specific authority.
5. What if the title number is unknown?
The requester may need to conduct additional verification using available property records, tax declarations, deeds, survey details, or assessor’s records.
6. Can a buyer request a Certified True Copy?
A buyer conducting due diligence may request one if the necessary title details are available and office requirements are met. If acting through the seller, written authority is advisable.
7. How recent should the Certified True Copy be?
For transactions, it should be recent enough to reflect current annotations. Many buyers, banks, and lawyers prefer a newly issued copy.
8. Can an authorization be revoked?
Yes, generally by written revocation, subject to the nature of the authority and any legal obligations involved.
9. Can an authorization cover several titles?
Yes. List all titles clearly, preferably in an attached schedule signed or initialed by the principal.
10. Should the representative keep the copy?
The representative should turn over the copy to the principal or use it only for the authorized purpose.
LXVII. Checklist for an Authorization to Obtain a Certified True Copy
Before signing or submitting the authorization, check the following:
- Is the principal’s full name stated?
- Is the representative’s full name stated?
- Is the title number correct?
- Is the type of title identified?
- Is the Registry of Deeds identified?
- Is the property location stated?
- Is the authority specific?
- Does it include authority to pay, process, claim, and receive?
- Is there a limitation clause?
- Is there an expiry date?
- Is the document signed?
- Are ID copies attached?
- Is notarization needed?
- Are corporate or estate documents needed?
- Are all pages complete and unaltered?
LXVIII. Conclusion
An authorization to obtain a Certified True Copy of a land title in the Philippines is a practical document that allows a representative to secure an official copy of a registered title from the proper land registration office. While the act appears simple, it has legal and practical importance because land titles contain sensitive property information and may be used in transactions involving ownership, loans, estates, litigation, and transfers.
The best authorization is specific, limited, current, and supported by proper identification. It should name the representative, identify the exact title, state the Registry of Deeds, authorize the acts of requesting and receiving the copy, and expressly prohibit unauthorized dealings with the property. For ordinary requests, a simple authorization letter may be enough; for formal, high-value, corporate, estate, foreign-executed, or transaction-related matters, a notarized Special Power of Attorney is safer and often more appropriate.