Old Dominion Granite Co. v. Clarke

28 Gratt. 617
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 Gratt. 617 (Old Dominion Granite Co. v. Clarke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Old Dominion Granite Co. v. Clarke, 28 Gratt. 617 (Va. 1877).

Opinion

Staples, J.

The appellants purchased the land in controversy , from Nelson T. Pate. Before paying the purchase money they caused to be made a diligent search of the proper clerk’s office, to ascertain whether there were then any incumbraces upon the property. They did not search the judgment docket; but their counsel made a careful examination of the index to the docket,, and failed to discover any trace of a judgment against Pate. Thereupon the appellants paid the purchase money and recorded their deed. It now appears that the appellees had recovered judgments-*against D. B. Bridgford and N. Tinsley Pate, partners trading under the firm and style of Bridgford & Co., and in this form the judgments were docketed. The clerk, however, did not index the judgments in the individual name of Pate, as required by the statute, but only in the partnership name of Bridgford & Co.; and thus it was, the appellants, in making their search, failed to discover the judgments against Pate.

The question arising here is. whether the appellants are entitled to hold the land discharged of the lien of those judgments. In Beverley v. Ellis & Allen, 1 Rand. 102, this court held, that when a purchaser deposits his deed with the clerk for recognition, it is a full compliance on his part with the statute, although the deed is never recorded. A construction, said the court, could never be tolerated which would make the rights of a purchaser depend on the acts or omissions of the clerk, over whom he has no control, and with whom the law compels him to deposit his deed.

In the present case the chancellor, relying upon the principle as laid down in Beverley v. Ellis & Allen, was of opinion, that all the statute requires of the creditor to preserve his lien, is that he shall deliver to the clerk an authenicated abstract of his judgment and require him to docket it; that every other step must be taken by the clerk, over whom the creditor has no control, and for whose failure the creditor cannot be held responsible; and if the purchaser is misled by the failure to index, he must look to the clerk.

The learned counsel for the appellant has stK.ngly controverted this proposition. Pie insists that the statute under which Beverley v. Ellis & Allen was decided, is different in its phraseology from the statute relating to the docketing of judgments; and he has cited numerous decisions in other states, to show that *in cases of this character it is the duty of the creditor to see that his judgment is duly and properly docketed, and every requirement of the law fully complied with; otherwise the purchaser will hold the land discharged of the lien; and the creditor must look to the clerk.

In the view wc have taken of this case, it is unnecessary to decide this question. Conceding for the sake of the argument, it is the duty of the creditor to have his judgment docketed, the question still arises whether that has not been done in the case before us. As already stated, the abstract of the judgment was properly placed on the judgment docket, but it was not indexed in the individual name of the defendant Pate. The point presented is, whether “indexing” is a part and necessary part of the docketing. In other words, is the docketing incomplete until the judgment is also properly indexed in the name of the defendants. This ques[198]*198tion must of course be solved by the provisions of our statute exclusively.

The first act passed upon this subject was in April 1843. A recurrence to that act will very materially aid us in reaching a correct conclusion. The first section provides, it shall be the duty of the clerk of the county court to keep in well bound books a judgment docket, in which shall be regularly docketed all such unsatisfied final judgments, decrees, &c., as any person interested therein shall require him to docket. In such docket there shall be plainly set down in separate columns the date of such judgment or decree, the name, description and residence of the parties, the amount of the debt, costs, &c., appearing in each case, and the amount and date of the credits, if any. We have here plainly pointed out what constitutes a . docket, the manner and form in which it shall be made out, *and the facts it is required to set forth for the information of parties concerned. Having thus provided for a docket, the act makes provision for an index as follows: “And, for the purpose of more convenient reference, there shall be made and preserved in the same books a plain and accurate index of all judgments, decrees, &&, docketed, and every judgment, &c:, in the said index shall be set down in alphabetical order, the names of the debtors, and each of them.”

The second section provides, that “if any clerk shall fail to docket without _ delay, in the manner herein prescribed, any judgment, &c., which he shall be required to docket, or shall fail to. make and preserve the index hereby required of him, he shall be liable to the action of the party aggrieved for such damages as he may sustain thereby.” It will thus be seen that the docket is one thing, and the index another, and quite a different thing. Nothing can more strongly enforce this distinction than the language of the second section just quoted. The clerk is required to docket only when requested, but it is his duty to index, whether requested or not. While the statute imposes upon the creditor the duty of requiring the clerk to docket the judgment, it imposes no duty upon him with respect to the indexing. With that the creditor need not concern himself. Certainly he is not compelled to make any demand upon the clerk by the express terms of the provision. The sole object of the . indexing, as disclosed in the statute, is “for the purpose of a more convenient reference, to facilitate the search, to enable parties more readily to find that which is contained in the docket.” The index is a guide to the docket; it saves labor and trouble in examining the docket, but it is not the docket itself, nor a part of it. We come then to the fourth section, which provides that “no ^judgment or decree shall bind the land against a bona fide purchaser for valuable consideration without notice, unless the same shall be docketed in 'the manner prescribed in the first section.”

Now if this section had provided that the judgment shall not constitute a lien unless docketed and indexed according to the first section, the question would be free from difficulty. But-it does not say so. The forfeiture results only from a failure to docket; and as we have seen, the docketing is complete without the indexing. If the clerk fails to make the index as prescribed by the statute and the purchaser is misled, the latter doubtless _ may have his action for damages. But this is no concern of the creditor. Having docketed his judgment, he may safely leave the rest to the clerk, whose duty as to the index does not depend upon any act or request of the creditor. The provisions found in the revisal of 1849 are substantially the same as the act of 1843. The only difference is, that in the former the revisors omitted the phrase “for the purpose of a more convenient reference.” It is certain that no material change was thereby intended. It was probably thought those words were unnecessary, and consequently they were left out in conformity with the plan of condensing all the statutes.

In the decision of questions of this character little aid is to be derived from the decisions of other states, unless their laws substantially correspond with ours.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Gratt. 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-dominion-granite-co-v-clarke-va-1877.