This analytical paper examines the legal and operational consequences of the time gap between a legally effective transaction and its subsequent reflection in a public registry. It argues that this “registration gap” or “limbo” period is not a marginal procedural inconvenience, but a structurally significant risk zone in which legal reality, public registry status, and institutional decision-making diverge. The paper compares declaratory and constitutive registration systems across selected European jurisdictions, with particular attention to Poland, Germany, the United Kingdom, Spain, and the Czech Republic. It shows that banks, compliance departments, counterparties, and enforcement authorities frequently rely on registry data more rigidly than on underlying legal documents, which can result in blocked mortgage disbursement, paralysis of corporate authority, competing creditor actions, and cascading transactional failure. The paper further identifies the main procedural bottlenecks, typical failure points, and cross-border misunderstandings that aggravate these risks. Its core conclusion is that successful transaction structuring in Europe now requires not only knowledge of substantive civil law, but also deliberate anticipation of registry delay, compliance friction, and third-party intervention. Escrow structures, priority-protection mechanisms, corrected timing architecture, and documentary safeguards must therefore be treated as central elements of transaction design rather than optional protective tools. Project website
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Natallia Vasilyeva (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c37bd4b34aaaeb1a67ea59 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19183724
Natallia Vasilyeva
Istituto Nazionale di Documentazione Innovazione e Ricerca Educativa
Istituto Nazionale di Documentazione Innovazione e Ricerca Educativa
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