Philippines Notarial Records

From FamilySearch Wiki
Philippines Wiki Topics
Flag of Philippines
Philippines Beginning Research
Record Types
Philippines Background
Philippines Genealogical Word Lists
Cultural Groups
Local Research Resources
Geographylogo.png In other languages: Wikang Filipino | English

Philippines Notarial Records[edit | edit source]

The Family History Library has an excellent collection of notarial records from most provinces of the Philippines. Although difficult to use, they can provide valuable information.

Notarial records are written in English, Spanish, and various Philippine dialects. Some are indexed, but most are not. To use these records you need to know:

  • The date your ancestor used the services of a notary.
  • The notary’s name.
  • The province where your ancestor lived.
  • The place where the document was notarized.

Notarial records are in the Locality section of the FamilySearch Catalog under Notarial Records:

PHILIPPINES, AGUSAN DEL NORTE,

BUENAVISTA - NOTARIAL RECORDS

Sometimes you can find the name of the notary by looking in death registers. If you know the notary’s name, you can look for it in the Author/Title section of the catalog.

A few notarial records are from provinces (1900–70), but most are from Manila (1700–1970).

Notarial Records and Indexes (Protocolos e índices)[edit | edit source]

Notarial records are created at the courts and regarding wills, contracts, marriages, inheritance, sale and transfer of property, annuities, mortgages, inventories, orphans records. These records start in 1850.

  • Wills, codicils, probates: Testator’s names, heirs, witnesses, residences, dates, property descriptions, distributions, signatures. Marriage dowries, contracts: names, relatives, witnesses, dates, conditions, properties, signatures.
  • Divisions of estates and deeds: Heirs, sellers, buyers, witnesses, officials, residences, property descriptions, guardianship assignments for orphans, apprenticeships.
  • Orphans records: Will abstracts, authorizations, prospective guardians, acceptances, appointments, orphans’ names, parents, relatives, guardians, ages, residences.

These records are at the National Bureau of Records Management, provincial and municipality archives.