Putnam v. . Stewart

97 N.Y. 411, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 188
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 25, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 97 N.Y. 411 (Putnam v. . Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putnam v. . Stewart, 97 N.Y. 411, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 188 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

This action was ejectment by the landlord against his tenant for non-payment of rent. The plaintiff proved title to the premises from and after February 14, 1835, in Washington and Rockwell Putnam, a durable lease dated March 1, 1843, from the said Putnams and their respective wives to Dinnen and Clere, with a reservation of annual rent; possession by Dinnen and Clere under the lease, and also possession in several intermediate lessees and assignees under successive transfers of the interest of Dinnen and Clere to each of them in such lease, down to and including the defendant and non-payment of rent by them since 1874. The plaintiff also established the death of said Rockwell Putnam in the year *415 1871, and her succession as his devisee to a life interest in the premises. She also proved her succession to the undivided interest of Washington Putnam and his wife in the premises by an assignment of said lease purporting to be duly executed by them to Rockwell Putnam, October 12, 1848. This assignment was attempted to be proved by the production in evidence of the records of the county clerk’s office of Saratoga county, showing a conveyance duly executed by Washington Putnam and his wife to Rockwell Putnam, whereby they assumed to grant, bargain, sell and assign to him all of their right, title and interest “ of, in and to the within lease, and to the premises therein described and to the rents therein reserved.” This assignment was preceded on the record by a memorandum reading as follows: ‘1 The following is indorsed on the counterpart of a lease which is recorded in deed book Y Y, page 258,” and was followed by the record of an acknowledgment thereof in' due form, and the certificate of the county clerk stating that l£ I certify the foregoing to be a true copy of the original, with the certificate of acknowlegment thereof, recorded October 16, 1848, 9 h. 20 m., a. m.

££ JAMES W. HORTON, Clerk.”

The introduction of the memorandum in question was objected to first as not containing legal evidence of the identity of the paper upon which the assignment recorded, was written, and second: That the memorandum was not made by the clerk in the performance of any official statutory duty, and was therefore mere hearsay.

Assuming for the purpose of the argument that the assignment in question was indorsed, either upon the original lease or a copy thereof, it cannot be doubted but that it showed a conveyance complete in form, and quite sufficient to convey the interest of the assignors in the property described by the paper attached.

The reference in the assignment to a paper and its contents which were therein stated to be attached or written upon, identified the thing intended to be conveyed by unmistakable *416 language and made that paper a component part of the instrument referring to it.

The detachment of this paper from it would render the assignment an incomplete and mutilated instrument; and a record of it as thus mutilated would fail to show the conveyance intended to be recorded.

It was undoubtedly the duty of the clerk to record the instrument delivered to him in haeo verba, or do some act which should be its legal equivalent. Doubtless a proper course was to record the whole instrument; but the question here is whether any other course was permissible.

Proof of the lease either by the production of the record or of the original, together with that of the assignment and paper attached, whether copy, counterpart or original, would show a satisfactory title in the assignee therein named, of the interest which the assignors possessed in the subject qf the conveyances. So too, if the plaintiff had produced in evidence an authenticated copy of the assignment including that of the paper on which it was written, the instrument would have been complete in form and meaning, and would have proved by legal evidence the title of the assignee to the property described.

Such a certificate we think the clerk was authorized to make from the data contained in the records; and the proof of the record was equivalent to the production of such authenticated copy.

It is made the duty of county clerks to record all conveyances of real estate situated in their respective counties, delivered to them for that purpose, in the books of record required to be kept in each county for such purposes. (3 R. S., §§ 1, 2, p. 2215.)

If the conveyances are properly recorded, memoranda made by the clerk in the proper places rendering the records intelligible are within the incidental powers conferred by the statute upon the recording officer. In this case a conveyance perfect in form to convey the interests intended to be affected, and unmistakably intelligible in its existing .state, properly acknowledged, was delivered to the clerk for the purpose of being recorded. *417 The omission of that officer to perform his legal duty could not defeat the effect of such a delivery. The parties had done all in their power to make a record of the instrument. The clerk instead of copying the whole conveyance in the records as it was delivered to him, recorded that part only which had not before been recorded, and as to the remainder, referred to it in a memoranda made a part of the record as having been previously recorded in his office in a book and page named. Was this a good record of the instrument? We think it was. If a paper is delivered to a clerk for record, as a duplicate, counterpart or authenticated copy of a paper which has been previously recorded, we see no legal necessity for rewriting the- ■ entire paper again in the record. In such a case a memorandum of the application to record, and its identity with a paper previously recorded, referring to the book and page of such record, together with the certificate of the clerk that it was recorded as of the day the application was made, not only satisfies the object of the statute, but is such a memorandum as lies within the scope of the incidental powers conferred upon the clerk to make.

The certificate of the clerk, entered upon the record, makes the entire entry his act, no matter by whom the writing was really performed.

It is provided by sections 24 and 25, chapter 3, part 2 of the Eevised Statutes, page 2220, 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.” “ The recording officer shall make an entry in the record immediately after the copy of every conveyance recorded, specifying the time of day, month and year when the said conveyance was recorded.” The memorandum, containing the time and place of the record of the original lease, is the precise equivalent of a re-recording of it, and there can be no more doubt as to the authenticity of the instrument than, as though it had been re-written, on the day and at the place of the recording of the assignment itself ?

*418

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.Y. 411, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-stewart-ny-1884.