What This Statute Says
An acknowledgment has two parts: the act of acknowledging, and the certificate that documents it. If the act happened correctly but the certificate has a problem, this statute provides a court-based fix.
When an acknowledgment is properly made, but defectively certified, any party interested may bring an action in the superior court to obtain a judgment correcting the certificate.
A.R.S. § 33-513The remedy is a judgment from the superior court that corrects the certificate. Once entered, the corrected certificate can be recorded alongside the original deed, restoring clean title.
When This Statute Comes Into Play
Defective certificates show up more often than people expect, usually only when title is being cleaned up for a sale or after a death:
- A notary used an out-of-state certificate form that omits an Arizona-required element.
- The certificate is missing a date, the notary's expiration, or the seal.
- The signature being acknowledged is the right person but the certificate names the wrong county.
Families running into one of these defects during probate or a planned sale do not need to redo the deed. They can ask the court to correct the certificate while the original signature stands.
What This Means for Arizona Families
If you are administering an estate or preparing to sell inherited property and the title company flags an old deed with a defective acknowledgment, the situation is fixable. This statute is the path. It assumes the underlying signing was real and that the only issue is paperwork.
The risk to watch is timing. A defective acknowledgment is harder to repair if the signer is no longer alive, because the proof that the signing was "properly made" may rely on witnesses or the notary's records. The cleaner the original signing, the easier the later correction. Our FAQ on handling a defective property deed walks through the broader options. A quitclaim deed is sometimes used as an alternative to a 33-513 action when all interested parties are alive and willing to cooperate. The court action exists for the cases where cooperation is not possible, where the original signer has died, or where the defect must be corrected on the record rather than papered over with a new deed.