Mutual Life Insurance v. Dake

1 Abb. N. Cas. 381
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Abb. N. Cas. 381 (Mutual Life Insurance v. Dake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Life Insurance v. Dake, 1 Abb. N. Cas. 381 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1876).

Opinion

James C. Smith, J. [After stating the above facts.]

—The claim of the defendant, just above stated, presents the principal question, if not the only one, in the case. It is a very important question, not .only to the parties, but to ail persons who may have occasion to record conveyances in the clerk’s office, or to search for conveyances recorded by others. It is not a little surprising to find that a question so likely to come up frequently has not arisen in any reported case in this State. I suppose the usual practice in searching the records in the clerk’s office, is to consult the index, and to rely upon it. That is obvivously the most convenient way; and if the index is full and accurate, it saves the necessity of going through the records themselves. But if the index is imperfect, and misleads the searcher, as appears to have been the case here, who is to suffer—the party who duly transcribed his mortgage in the record buok, or the party who, relying on the index, omitted to look at the record ? The question is to be answered by determining whether the index is an essential part of the record—that is to say, whether it is necessary to the completeness and efficiency of the record as a notice to after purchasers.

Whatever is essential to the validity of the record as a notice, is made so by positive law, and a solution of the question is to be found in an examination of the [385]*385statutes bearing upon it. The recording act novr in force in this State is a part of the revised statutes as originally adopted (1 R. S. 755, part 2, ch. 3). It is contained in a chapter entitled, “Of the proof and recording of conveyances of real estate, and the cancelling of mortgages.” Its provisions have the effect to make every conveyance of real estate, which is not recorded as therein prescribed, void as against any subsequent purchaser, in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, whose conveyance shall be first duly recorded (§ 1). The provisions respecting the manner of recording are, in substance, as follows : The clerk is to provide one set of books for deeds, and another for mortgages (§ 2). To entitle any conveyance to be recorded, it shall be acknowledged as prescribed in the-act (§ 4 et seq.).

Section 24 provides that “every conveyance entitled; by law to be recorded, shall be recorded in the order, and as of the time, when the same shall be delivered to-the clerk for that purpose, and shall be considered as recorded, from the time of such delivery.” Section 25, directs that “the recording officer shall make an entry-in the record immediately after the copy of every conveyance recorded, specifying the time of the day,, month and year, when the said conveyance was recorded, and shall indorse upon every conveyance-recorded by him, a certificate, stating the time as aforesaid, when, and the book and page where, the, same was recorded. ’ ’ The term ' ‘ conveyance, ” as used in the chapter, includes a mortgage (§ 38).

The general policy of these provisions prevailed: from an early day, anterior to the American revolution,, and was continued by successive enactments under the colonial and State governments of New York, down to-the time of the adoption of the revised statutes (Van Schaack's ed. of Laws of N. Y., 324 ; Const, off 1777,. § 35; Laws of 1788, c. 45, Jones & Varices ed. vol:. [386]*3862, p. 266 ; R. L. of 1801 [1 Kent & Radcliffe ed.], p. 480; 1 R. L. [1813], p. 372).

The policy of this legislation is to be found at a still earlier day in the English statute of 7th Anne, c. 20, which provided a local registry for the county of Middlesex. The object of that statute was very explicitly stated in the preamble, thus: “Whereas by the different and secret way of conveying lands,” &c., “ such as are ill-disposed have it in their power to commit frauds, and frequently do so by means whereof several persons . . . have been undone in their purchases and mortgages, by prior and secret conveyances and fraudulent incumbrances, ” &c. The provision which that early statute made to prevent the frauds against which it was aimed, was to require a “memorial” of every conveyance to be registered in the manner directed by the act. The New York statute of 1788 also provided for a registry. The register was to show the names of the mortgagors and mortgagees, the dates of the respective mortgages, the mortgage money, the time or times ■when payable, the description and boundaries of the Hands mortgaged, and the time when such mortgages were ■registered or recorded; to which register, all persons ■ whomsoever, at proper seasons, were to have recourse and • search, and the clerk was allowed a fee for every entry i in the register, and a fee for every search {Laws of 1788, c. 45, § 1). The act of 1801 was substantially the same as that of 1788. So, also, was the act of 1813, except that it required the clerk, when registering a mortgage, also to record at length the special power of sale, if any was contained therein. So far the legislation on the subject provided that mortgages should be registered, although, for a portion of the same time, at least, deeds were required to be recorded at length.

In 1822 an act was passed providing for the recording of mortgages at full length, in the order, and as of the time when the same should be delivered to any [387]*387clerk for that purpose (Laws of 1822, c. 245). It provided that every mortgage should be considered as recorded from the time it should be so delivered (§ 1), and that the mortgage first recorded as aforesaid should have preference according to the time of recording (§ 2). In 1823, the legislature provided that every deed, conveyance or other writing” affecting the title to real estate, except contracts for lands or leases for a term less than three years, should be recorded (Laws of 1823, c. 263, §§ 1, 2, 5).

The last two acts seem to have remained in force until the revised statutes took effect, and to have been substantially incorporated in them. It is to be observed that none of the acts above cited, whether providing for a record in full or a registry, required an index.

■The earliest statute in this State, which I have seen, authorizing or requiring clerks to make indices of records, was passed in 1826. It required them to make general indices in separate books, of all deeds and mortgages recorded or registered in their respective offices, whenever directed by the court of common pleas, and it provided that when the indices should be completed, the clerks should be paid by the boards of supervisors {Laws of 1826, c. 313, p. 359). It seems from the language of the proviso at the end of the act, that in some counties such indices had been theretofore in use, but they were probably gotten up by the clerks in those counties, at their own expense, for their convenience, as there does not appear to have been any legislation authorizing them before that time. In the next year the act of 1826 was amended by providing further compensation to the clerks for making the general indices (Laws of 1827, c. 204, § 3). The act of 1826, as amended in 1827, is yet in force (People v. Supervisors of Dutchess, 24 Wend. 181, per Beohsoh, J., p. 183; Laws of 1843, c. 199, p. 253), except so far as it was superseded by the act of 1843, above cited. [388]*388It was not repealed or superseded by the revised statutes, nor incorporated into them.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Abb. N. Cas. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-life-insurance-v-dake-nysupct-1876.