People ex rel. Title Guarantee & Trust Co. v. Reilly

45 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 429
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 45 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 429 (People ex rel. Title Guarantee & Trust Co. v. Reilly) 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
People ex rel. Title Guarantee & Trust Co. v. Reilly, 45 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 429 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Daniels, S.:

The relator is a corporation, incorporated under chapter 392 of the Laws of 1882, by the name of the German-American Loan and Trust Company of the city of New York. JBy chapter 167 of the Laws of 1884, its corporate name was changed to the Title Guarantee and Trust Company. Its powers have been fully defined by ■section 2 of chapter 367 of the Laws of 1883, amending section 9 of its charter. Among these is the power given to it “ to guarantee bonds and mortgages and titles to real estate.”

In' the course of its business, an application was made to it for a guarantee policy to the amount of $30,000 upon the title to certain lands on One Hundred and Forty-seventh street, in the city of New York, and persons in its employment were assigned to search the title of the land at the office of the register, the respondent in this case. According to the affidavits which have been produced, they were prevented from doing so by the interposition of the register and persons officially in his employment, who declined to permit them to examine the records of deeds and mortgages in his office. The register himself seems to have been under the conviction that it was not the purpose of the relator' to search the title of the piece of land already mentioned, but that its real object was to acquire information, from the examination of the books and maps of the office, “ to create a [431]*431set of books and of maps, by means of which all information necessary to enable a conveyancer to examine a title with speed and accuracy, can be placed at his disposal, within a short time after he has made a requisition upon the companies,’.’ and that he was not legally obliged to permit the examination of the records and maps of the office for the accomplishment of this object. And to prevent that, the persons assigned by the relator to duty in his office were not permitted to examine the records, maps and papers of the office. But the register and those acting under him were not authorized to prevent the examination of the books, records and maps of his office by the persons in the employment of the relator, whether it was to ascertain the condition of the land referred to, or to create books and maps of its own, by which titles to real estate could be more speedily and accurately examined than that could be done in the register’s office. For, by sections 1747 and 1751 of chapter 410 of the Laws of 1882, it has been made the duty of the register to permit all persons to have free access to the books, records and indices of the office, for search at all reasonable times during the day time, and he has been directed to exhibit the same to persons wishing to make searches. And that clearly authorized the relator to search the title to the land for which, it was stated, it had received and accepted an application for a guarantee policy.

But if it was not the real, as it was the expressed, object of the relator to search the title of that land, but to examine the books, maps and papers of the office to create a set of books of its own, from which searches of titles could afterwards be made, the register was not authorized to defeat the efforts designed to be made by the relator to secure this end. For, by section 2 of chapter 367 of the Laws of 1883, it was authorized “to make, and cause to be made, and to purchase and to pay for, all such searches, abstracts, indices, maps and copies of records, as the trustees thereof may deem necessary.” This power is sufficiently broad and comprehensive to entitle the relator, by persons in its employment, to examine the books, records, maps and papers of the register’s office, and to make searches, abstracts and copies of the records, so far as that may be considered necessary, to place itself in a position to examine and afford the means of examining titles, without afterwards resorting to the register’s office. The power given to the relator for this [432]*432purpose is unqualifiedly broad, and entitled it to acquire the information necessary to do what the register himself suspected it was the real object and purpose of the relator to secure. In his suspicions he was probably correct, even though the relator ostensibly desired to examine this particular title, for it was proposed to examine the records of the office thoroughly and completely and to make such extracts, notes and copies therefrom as might be necessary to enable the relator to supply the means of examining titles to real estate in the city of New York, without resorting to the office of the register. He could not, therefore, either by himself or others, interfere to prevent persons in the employment of the relator from obtaining, by the use of the books, maps and papers of his office, the information necessary to place itself, or its own books, in this position. He had no such arbitrary control over the books, records, maps and papers of his office, as would permit that to be done. For, in making searches, all persons have been secured free access to the records and indices of the office, and it has been made the duty of the register to exhibit them to such persons. And by the additional authority conferred upon the relator it may not only make searches, but abstracts, indices, maps and copies of records. ■ The register was accordingly in error in believing, as he seems to have done, that he could lawfully prevent persons in the employment of the relator from making such abstracts and copies of the records of his office.

The obligation imposed upon the register to permit the books, records and maps of the office to be examined is absolute in its character. And so is the additional right given by the charter to the relator. "When either may be applied for in an orderly way, he is bound to acquiesce in the application and permit the examination to be made and the copies and abstracts to be taken. The duty imposed upon him in this respect is entirely ministerial, and its observance may be lawfully required through the instrumentality of the writ of mandamus. Over this subject he has no discretion, and where that may be the case, there “ the writ is freely granted to compel the performance of strictly ministerial duties.” (High on Extraordinary Remedies, § 46.) It is true, as it has been urged on behalf of the register, that the right must be clear and unquestionable to entitle it to be enforced by a writ of mandamus. (People [433]*433ex rel. Mott v. Board of Supervisors, 64 N. Y., 600; People ex rel. Slavin v. Wendell, 71 N. Y., 171.)

But the facts, as they have been presented by the affidavits in this case, show a clear and unquestionable right on the part of the relator to search the records of the register’s office, and to make abstracts and copies of the same. Upon this subject it was held in People ex rel. Fiedler v. Mead (24 N. Y., 114, 119), that “it is one of the most usual offices of the writ of mandamus to compel executive and ministerial officers to perform official duties appertaining to their offices, where an individual has a private and a pecuniary interest in such performance.” And the existence of a right of action against the officer for refusing or omitting to perform his legal duty will not prevent the issuing of the writ, especially when it would fail, as it would in this instance, to provide anything like indemnity for the denial of the right.

But while a case has been presented upon the undisputed facts made to appear by the affidavits for the writ of mandamus, it cannot be directed to be issued without observing the restrictions imposed upon the exercise of these rights vested in the relator.

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Related

People Ex Rel. Hammond v. . Leonard
74 N.Y. 443 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
People Ex Rel. Fiedler v. Mead
24 N.Y. 114 (New York Court of Appeals, 1861)
People Ex Rel. Mott v. . Board of Supervisors
64 N.Y. 600 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)
People Ex Rel. Slavin v. . Wendell
71 N.Y. 171 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
People ex rel. German-American Loan & Trust Co. v. Richards
99 N.Y. 620 (New York Court of Appeals, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-title-guarantee-trust-co-v-reilly-nysupct-1886.