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I am working through some deed books and have crafted the following citation
Clarke County, Alabama, Deed Record B: 28-30, Stephen Noble to L.B.R. Noble et al., deed of trust, 9 March 1823; imaged, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSLX-SSTM-V: accessed 16 March 2024), Image Group Number 8193658 > images 295-296 of 922.
My question is whether to include more than the first name listed on the record before using et al. Interestingly, the corresponding index for this deed book lists one of the other grantees (Payton/Peyton).
mbcross, whether a citation…
mbcross, whether a citation should include any names of the parties to a deed is a judgment call. Basically, we have two situations:
Within this framework, if you need to identify a deed by names your judgment might be to cite just "Noble to Noble" as opposed to citing every Noble involved in the transaction. Remember:
A deed index will typically index the principal parties and only the principal parties. If there are six grantors and three grantees to a single deed, all would be the indexed. However, the deed index would not index someone cited as a neighbor, a witness, or a prior owner.