The problem that fecha cierta solves
Anyone can fabricate today a contract "signed" three years ago. That is why the law distinguishes between validity between the parties (from signing) and effectiveness against third parties: to assert the document against someone who did not sign it, you must prove indubitably since when it exists. That proof is the fecha cierta — and its absence is the classic Achilles' heel of loans between acquaintances.
The three routes (and what they cost)
- Public officer: the ratification of signatures before a notary (or public broker) leaves a record that the document existed on that day, with that content. It is a brief, low-cost procedure — the minimum standard of a serious loan.
- Public registry: registering the act — the mortgage in the Public Registry of Property, the movable collateral in the RUG — gives a certain date and, along the way, enforceability of the collateral.
- Death of a signatory: a residual route no one plans for; it exists because from that moment the document could no longer have been created.
The standard comes from binding precedent 2a./J. 161/2019 (10a.) of the Second Chamber, which settled the matter precisely in tax law: private documents submitted to the SAT must have a certain date to substantiate transactions.
Where it hurts not to have it
- Against the SAT: a debtor who received $2,000,000 "on loan" with a contract lacking a certain date may see it recharacterized as omitted income in a discrepancy audit; the lender may struggle to justify the outflow and return of the money.
- Against other creditors: in an insolvency or attachment, yesterday's contract dated the day before does not put you in line — unregistered collateral yields to registered collateral.
- Against the estate: once the debtor dies, the heirs do not recognize what is not shielded. (Ironically, death gives the document a certain date… but by then you are already in litigation.)
The 24-hour protocol
This is how a loan is shielded on the same day it is signed:
- A complete interest-bearing mutuo contract (parties, amount, rates, term, table attached).
- Ratification of signatures before a notary — instant certain date.
- Collateral formalized and registered (Public Registry of Property for a mortgage; RUG for a non-possessory pledge).
- Disbursement by transfer the same day, referenced to the contract.
Total cost: hours and modest fees. Alternative: years of evidentiary litigation. The advanced electronic signature and timestamping services (NOM-151) build valuable additional evidence in the digital world, but against the Court's criterion, the registry–officer–death triad remains the safe reference.