Final answer:
Recording gives constructive notice and priority of the interest in real property law but does not provide a presumption of delivery, which refers to the intentional transfer of the document to the grantee.
Step-by-step explanation:
The question relates to the legal concept of notice in the context of recording documents, such as deeds or mortgages, in public land records.
When asking if recording does NOT give one of the following: a. Actual Notice b. Constructive Notice c. Priority as to the interest d. A presumption of delivery, the correct answer is a presumption of delivery.
Actual notice means that the parties are actually aware of the recording, whereas constructive notice is notice implied by law to everyone that such documents have been recorded.
Priority refers to the order of rights in time, where those who record first have higher priority over others in many jurisdictions.
However, recording does not create a presumption of delivery. Delivery refers to the actual, intentional transfer of the document to the grantee, and the act of recording alone does not prove that such delivery occurred.