422.250 Reentering instrument -- Effect of.
157 words·~1 min read·
/ky/chapter-422/422-250A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
(1)If any record book, containing judgments, decrees, orders, executions, or
proceedings of a court, is lost, destroyed, or becomes illegible, and can be again
entered correctly by means of any writing, the court may order its clerk to have the
matter reentered. The reentered record, when approved by the court, shall have the
same effect as the original.
(2)If any record book of written instruments, or any such instrument, filed in any
clerk's office is lost, destroyed, or becomes illegible, the clerk shall upon the
production of any original paper which was recorded in the lost book, or an attested
copy from the record, or of anything else in said book, or of any paper so filed, on
the request of the person interested, rerecord the instrument and shall certify on the
record whether it was recorded from the original or a copy, and how it was
authenticated. Such record shall be prima facie evidence.