Opinion No. 75-125 (1975) Ag

CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedOctober 2, 1975
StatusPublished

This text of Opinion No. 75-125 (1975) Ag (Opinion No. 75-125 (1975) Ag) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. 75-125 (1975) Ag, (Okla. Super. Ct. 1975).

Opinion

ABSTRACTING — TERMS An " abstract book " would appear to be a written or printed volume, bound or unbound, containing an abridgement, compendium, synopsis, or summary of the material facts necessary for the production of an adequate abstract of title, and that "other system of indexes" would appear to mean an orderly combination or arrangement of references pointing out the pages of an abstract book where certain articles or subjects may be found as well as containing such information as is necessary to enable an adequate title search without recourse to the county records. The books, records, files and indexes in the County Clerk's Office may be copied provided that said records are not removed from said office; however, as noted earlier mere copies of the County Clerk's records and the Clerk's indexes to those records are not sufficient as, ". . . An independent set of abstract books or other system of indexes compiled from instruments of record affecting real estate in the office of the County Clerk" within the meaning of Section 13. Both abstract books and indexes are not necessarily required in order to comply with the provisions of 1 O.S. 13 [1-13] and that the adequacy or inadequacy of such books or indexes must be determined on an individual basis. The Attorney General has received your request for an opinion regarding 1 O.S. 13 [1-13] (1971), wherein you, in effect, ask the following questions: (1) What does the phrase "abstract books" mean? (2) What does the phrase "other system of indexes" mean? (3) May the books of record, or the microfilms of such books, maintained by the county clerk be copied? (4) May the indexes maintained by the County Clerk be copied? (5) Are both "abstract books" and an "other system of indexes" required in order to engage in the business of abstracting? Title 1 O.S. 13 [1-13] (1971), reads as follows: "In addition to the bond required by Section 8513 O.S. 1931 any person, firm or corporation, now engaged in the business of abstracting, desiring to enter into the business of compiling or abstracting titles to real estate in any of the counties of the State of Oklahoma from and after the passage of this Act, shall have for use in such business an independent set of abstract books or other system of indexes compiled from the instruments of record affecting real estate in the office of the County Clerk, and not copied from the indexes in said office, showing in a sufficiently comprehensive form all instruments affecting the title to real property on file or of record in the office of the County Clerk and Court Clerk of the county wherein such business is conducted." (Emphasis added.) This office has found two cases wherein the court specifically discussed the phrase "abstract books." It is interesting to note that both discussions were directed at describing what an abstract book is not, as opposed to what it is. Hess v. D. T. Draffen and Co., 74 S.W. 440, 441, 99 Mo. App. 580, State, ex rel. Freeman v. Abstractors Board of Examiners, 45 P.2d 668, 671, 99 Mont. 564 . In Hess, supra, the court stated that: "Books which contain only an index to the books of the recorder of deeds for the county, showing the different conveyances of land, and the books and pages where they might be found, not containing an abridgement of the contents of the different instruments, including the acknowledgements or the manner in which they were executed, nor their dates, are not complete abstract books." Going further in attempting to arrive at a usable definition for this phrase, one might very well break it down into its component words. 1 C.J.S. Abstract, at page 377, defines an abstract as follows: "As commonly understood, and by definition, an abridgement: a compendium; a complete history in short, abbreviated form; an epitome; a synopsis; a synopsis or summary of the material facts. "It ordinarily means a mere brief. and not a copy of that from which it is taken, although sometimes used in the sense of copy. That which comprises or concentrates in itself the essential qualities of a larger thing, or of several things. It denotes a less quantity containing the virtue and force of a greater quantity; it implies an antecedent subject from which it is made or taken." Black's Law Dictionary, Revised Fourth Edition (1968), defines "book" as: "An assembly or concourse of ideas expressed in words. A literary composition which is printed; a printed composition bound in a volume. The largest subdivisions of a treatise or other literary composition." Another definition of "book" which seems especially applicable to your inquiry is found in the case of Scoville v. Tolarld, 21 F. Cas. 863, 864, which contains the following language: "A 'book,' in its popular sense, is understood to be a volume, bound or unbound, written or printed." In reading these accepted definitions of "abstract" and "book" together, an abstract book would appear to be a written or printed volume, bound or unbound, containing an abridgement, compendium, synopsis, or summary of the material facts. Of course in the instant case the "material facts" would be those facts determined relevant and necessary for the production of an adequate abstract of title. These requirements are set forth in 1 C.J.S. Abstract of Title, 4b at page 382, et seq., entitled, "What Abstract Should Contain," and reading in part: "An abstract of title should set forth or disclose all the facts of record relating to the title under investigation, so as to show its origin, course, and condition . . . . an abstract should contain a full summary or statement of the material parts of all grants, conveyances, wills, or other instruments or matters of record relied on as evidence of title, and of all instruments, judicial proceedings, and other records which in any way affect the title, and also of all encumbrances, liens, and other facts of record which may burden or impair the title, and, as to such encumbrances and liens, show whether they have been released. Even instruments which are invalid or ineffectual should be included, where they are such as to cast a cloud on the title; and doubtful encumbrances or other matters should be shown, rather than omitted. "It has been said that an abstract should be 'so full that no reasonable inquiry shall remain unanswered, so brief that the mind of the reader shall not be distracted by irrelevant details, so methodical that counsel may form an opinion on each conveyance as he proceeds in his reading, and so clear that no new arrangement or dissection of the evidence may be required.' " You are advised that this interpretation of the meaning of the phrase "abstract books" is solely a reiteration and compilation of accepted definitions of the individual words, and might not be in accordance with the definition deemed applicable by the court to a particular fact situation. The second matter about which you inquired involves arriving at a definition of "other system of indexes." Other is defined by Black's Law Dictionary, supra, as: "Different or distinct from that already mentioned; additional, or further." In the context of Section 1 O.S. 13 [1-13] the use of the word "other" would appear to be in reference to the phrase "abstract books" which immediately precedes it.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Freeman v. Abstracters Board of Examiners
45 P.2d 668 (Montana Supreme Court, 1935)
In re Richardson
1947 OK 347 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1947)
Hess v. D. T. Draffen & Co.
74 S.W. 440 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1903)
Perkins v. Strong
22 Neb. 725 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1888)
Scoville v. Toland
21 F. Cas. 863 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Ohio, 1848)

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