When any real property is conveyed by deed of trust, or other trust instrument, whether heretofore or hereafter made, to a trustee and there is no provision authorizing the trustee to convey the property or any part thereof, which is the subject of such deed of trust, and the trustee conveys said property or any part thereof, such conveyance shall be valid after a period of thirty years from the date of such conveyance, provided there have been no adverse claims against the property so conveyed in the interim, and provided that such conveyances to and from said trustee were properly recorded and indexed at the time of the conveyance, in the appropriate clerk’s office wherein deeds are recorded in the county or city wherein the property lies.
History
1962, c. 350.