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Legal notes: A good deed for today

A validly executed deed must be “delivered” to bring it into effect. But this requirement is not be confused with the physical delivery of a document. A deed is delivered when a party’s words or actions indicate an intention to be bound by it, at which point the deed comes into effect and becomes irrevocable.

Parties who sign documents before completion of a transaction, but do not want them to take effect immediately, may choose to deliver them “in escrow” – ie subject to one or more conditions being fulfilled first. Alternatively, they can entrust their documents to an agent with instructions on when and how to deal with them, in which case section 1(5) of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 presumes, for the benefit of purchasers of land or interests in land, that conveyancers have authority to deliver them. 

Xenos v Wickham [1867] LR 2 HL 296 established that someone who signs a deed can deliver it without parting with physical possession of it. But it must be clear that the maker intended the deed to take effect and to become binding, however that intention was displayed. 

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