The Registry shall be available to the public that is interested in ascertaining the legal status of real property or real rights registered therein. The Registrars shall open the books or the contents of the information systems at the Registry, to those persons who are interest[ed] in perusing them, without removing said books from the office, and taking the appropriate precautions to ensure their preservation and prevent their tainting or loss. The Secretary shall provide, through regulations, when, and under what conditions, the access of notaries to the Registry’s information systems maybe permitted, provided that the integrity and contents of the systems are guaranteed. Once the operations of the Property Registry are fully mechanized, the users and the public in general shall only have access to the contents and the records of the Registry through the simple explanatory note, which shall be provided to the user upon their [sic] request, and payment of the corresponding fees.
The perusal, carried out in person shall take place during the hours that the Registry is open to the public, without disrupting its services, and in the form and manner provided by regulations.
History —Mortgage Law, 1979, § 23; Feb. 17, 2000, No. 48, § 2, eff. 90 days after Feb. 17, 2000.