Navigation Menu

Our services

Property and Real Estate Division


It is a contract through which a person called the "donor" transfers to another called the "donee," free of charge, part or all of their current assets.

More information

It is a contract by which each of the contracting parties undertakes to give one thing in return for another.

More information

It is the legal act by which a judge certifies the transfer of ownership of real estate in favor of a person called the “awardee,” as a result of a legal proceeding against a third party known as the “debtor.”

More information

It is the act by which the union of two or more adjoining properties is formalized, subject to obtaining the corresponding permit.

More information

This is a legal act by which a person called the “mortgagee,” upon receiving payment from a person called the “debtor” for a previously incurred debt, cancels the mortgage guarantee granted in their favor.

More information

This is the act by which a person called the “creditor” agrees to make a sum of money available to another person called the “debtor,” who is then obligated to repay the “creditor” or timely fulfill the amount of the obligation incurred, and in any case, to pay the agreed-upon interest.

More information

It is a contract by which a person called the “seller” transfers ownership of an item or right to another person called the “buyer,” who agrees to pay a specific price in money for it.

More information

By virtue of the trust, the trustor transfers to a fiduciary institution the ownership or title of one or more assets or rights, as the case may be, to be used for lawful and specific purposes, entrusting the fiduciary institution with carrying out these purposes.

More information

Corporate Division


An act by which a company divides, either totally or partially, its assets, liabilities, and share capital into two or more parts, which are transferred as a whole to newly created companies; or when, without being dissolved, it contributes as a whole part of its assets, liabilities, and share capital to one or more newly created companies.

More information

An act by which a company, upon fulfilling one or more dissolution conditions established by law, enters into a state of liquidation, subsisting solely to fulfill the company’s obligations to its partners, third parties, and creditors.

More information

It is a unilateral act by which a person, called the principal, grants or revokes certain powers to another person, called the attorney-in-fact, so that they may act or cease to act on their behalf and representation.

More information

It is a contract entered into by two or more persons with the purpose of fulfilling a common interest, which may be non-economic in nature; predominantly economic in nature, without profit motive; or with the purpose of profit or commercial speculation.

More information

A legal act by which two or more commercial companies are constituted into a single company through the transfer in bulk of their assets, liabilities, and capital, delivering shares or participations of the resulting company to the partners of the merged companies.

More information

It refers to the incorporation into the notarial record (protocol book) of a principal deed or other document that requires such formality according to the law.

More information

General Civil Law Division


It is a unilateral and revocable declaration of will by which a person freely, consciously, seriously, and unequivocally expresses their refusal to undergo medical means, treatments, and/or procedures in the event of a terminal illness or when, due to medical reasons, unforeseen circumstances, or force majeure, it becomes impossible to sustain life naturally.

More information

It is a unilateral act by which a person, called the principal, grants or revokes certain powers to another person, called the attorney-in-fact, so that they may act or cease to act on their behalf and representation.

More information

This is the legal procedure followed when there is no will, the existing will is null or has lost its validity; when the testator did not dispose of all their assets; when the condition imposed on the heir is not fulfilled; or when the heir dies before the testator, refuses the inheritance, or is legally incapable of inheriting.

More information

It is a highly personal, revocable, and free act by which a person clearly and unequivocally expresses their will to a notary. The notary then drafts the clauses of the will in writing, strictly adhering to the testator’s wishes.

More information

This is the legal procedure carried out upon the death of a person who made a will, which, if necessary, has been formally declared valid. Through this process, the assets, rights, and obligations of the deceased are transferred to the individuals designated in the will.

More information

Other Notarial Acts


Document through which minors are authorized to travel abroad alone or accompanied by a third party who is an adult.

More information

It is a record made by the Notary in an official document, at the request of an interested party, of one or more facts or events that occur in their presence, at a specific place and time.

More information

This is the process carried out by the Notary Public in which a copy of a document is compared with the original document, thereby certifying that the signed and sealed copy is a true and exact reproduction of the original presented.

More information

An official act in which it is certified that the signatories acknowledge their signatures and the content of a given document.

More information