Deed
WarnAudited by ClawScan on May 18, 2026.
Overview
This instruction-only skill describes real-world deed issuance, asset transfer, and self-executing title dispute resolution without clear human approval or legal-review safeguards.
Review carefully before installing. Treat this skill as conceptual only; do not let an agent use it to file deeds, transfer assets, resolve ownership disputes, or make legal title determinations without explicit user approval and qualified legal counsel.
Findings (3)
Artifact-based informational review of SKILL.md, metadata, install specs, static scan signals, and capability signals. ClawScan does not execute the skill or run runtime probes.
An agent with access to relevant tools could try to initiate property-title or filing workflows with real legal consequences.
This directs the agent toward legal filings and deed issuance, which can affect real property rights, but the skill does not specify mandatory user approval, legal review, jurisdictional limits, dry-run behavior, or reversibility.
Execution Phase: Orchestrating the "Deed of Trust" or "Grant Deed" issuance, ensuring compliance with local statutory requirements (e.g., UCC filings, land registry APIs).
Use this only as a research or drafting aid unless explicit confirmations, legal-professional review, jurisdiction-specific checks, and safe no-action defaults are added.
A user might rely on the agent as if it can definitively validate property title or legal compliance.
The wording presents the skill as able to ensure legal title quality, which may lead users to over-trust an agent's conclusions in a legally sensitive domain without stated caveats or human legal review.
Deep-reasoning across historical case law to ensure the title is "Clear and Marketable."
Add clear limitations that outputs are not legal determinations, require qualified legal review, and present uncertainty rather than guaranteed title status.
The agent could treat disputed ownership questions as something it can autonomously resolve, creating unsafe expectations or actions around title disputes.
The skill describes autonomous dispute-resolution behavior between agents over ownership claims, without explaining governance, identity validation, user consent, or how decisions are contained.
The Deed skill includes a self-executing arbitration layer. If two agents claim the same UID, the system triggers a recursive audit ... to determine the "Superior Title."
Remove self-executing dispute resolution language or require explicit human initiation, verified identities, documented evidence standards, and final human/legal approval.
