Reeder v. State ex rel. Harlan

98 Ind. 114, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 514
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1884
DocketNo. 11,519
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 Ind. 114 (Reeder v. State ex rel. Harlan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reeder v. State ex rel. Harlan, 98 Ind. 114, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 514 (Ind. 1884).

Opinion

Niblack, J.

At the October election in the year 1876, Thomas B. Reeder was elected recorder of Henry county, and in due time executed an official bond as such recorder, with William Reiman, John C. Hudleson, Henry H. Veach and Aquilla Davis, as his sureties. After, also, taking the requisite official oath, he entered upon the duties of his office. On the first day of May, 1879, one Nathan R. Hutson, executed a mortgage on a tract of land in said county of Henry to one Samuel B. Hill, to secure the payment of a promissory note for $1,200, bearing eight per cent, interest. On thel2th day of the same month that mortgage was recorded by Reeder in the proper mortgage record of Henry county.

In August following, Mrs. Frances M. Harlan, being [115]*115about to purchase the same tract of land of Hutson, caused her attorney to make an examination of the records under Seeder’s charge, to ascertain whether it was free from incumbrance. Her attorney reporting to her that the land in question was free from incumbrance, she accepted the terms proposed by Hutson, and on ihe 26th day of August, 1879, received from him a deed of conveyance for the land. Some time, perhaps two or three years afterwards, Mrs. Harlan received actual notice of the existence and record of the mortgage from Hutson to Hill, and to prevent its foreclosure upon her land paid it in full, and caused satisfaction of it to be entered. Being without recourse against Hutson on account of his insolvency, Mrs. Harlan commenced this action in the name of the State on her relation, against Eeeder and his sureties, on his official bond, for damages for his alleged failure to properly index the mortgage which she was compelled to pay as above, and for false representations concerning the existence of such mortgage as a lien on the land.

The complaint averred that prior to said purchase and conveyance she” (the relatrix) “ caused the indexes of all the records of mortgages in the recorder’s office of said county ” (of Henry) “ to be examined and read for the purpose of ascertaining if any mortgage had prior to that time been recorded upon the mortgage records of said county upon or against said land so purchased by her, and, upon such examination, it was then and there found that there was no index of any mortgagé recorded in said office upon or against said land, and that relying upon the correctness of said indexes and the truth of the representations of said Eeeder, as recorder, concerning the same, she purchased and paid for the land conveyed to her by Hutson.”

All the defendants, except Reiman, who was not served with process, appeared to the action, and first moved that the allegations of the complaint be required to be made more specific as to the particular index or indexes which the relatrix caused to be examined, but the court overruled the motion.

[116]*116An answer in four paragraphs was then filed. The first and second paragraphs were by all the defendants. The third was by the sureties alone, and the fourth was in general denial.

The first paragraph averred that when the mortgage referred to in the complaint was received -by Reeder, it was by him duly recorded in mortgage record No. 18, of Henry county, being the volume then in use for recording mortgages in that county, and properly indexed in that volume; that said mortgage was so recorded and indexed in said volume No. 18 of mortgage records when the relatrix caused the indexes of such mortgage records to be examined, as charged in the complaint; that said volume was not filled with records of mortgages until the 21st day of January, 1880.

The second paragraph repeated substantially the matters contained in the first, adding that the agent and attorney of the relatrix only examined the general index of mortgages, and that after said volume No. 18 was filled with the records of mortgages, all the mortgages therein contained were, also, indexed upon the general index of mortgages recorded in said county of Henry.

The third paragraph, being pleaded only by the sureties appearing in the action, set up in another form, but in legal effect, the same defence presented by the second paragraph.

Demurrers were severally sustained to these first three par-graphs of the answers, and the plaintiff obtained a verdict for the amount paid by the relatrix in discharge of the mortgage executed by Hutson to Hill as herein above stated. Notwithstanding formal objections first interposed, final judgment was rendered upon the verdict.

The first claim is that the circuit court erred in overruling the motion to have the allegations of the complaint made more specific. As to the part of the complaint to which the motion referred, its allegations were broad enough to let in evidence as to the examination of any and all mortgage indexes and that was sufficiently specific in an action of the class to which this belongs.

[117]*117It is next claimed that the court erred in sustaining demurrers to the first three paragraphs of the answer, So far, however, as the facts set up by those paragraphs were or might have been considered material to the appellant’s defence, they were as admissible under the general denial as they would have been under those special paragraphs. In any event, therefore, no injury was inflicted upon the appellants by the rulings upon those paragraphs of the answer.

Mrs. Harlan’s attorney, who made a search of the mortgage records for her, testified that he examined the general indexes of mortgages in Reeder’s office, and that there was no index of or reference to the mortgage from Hutson to Hill upon any of the general indexes. He also testified to conversations had with Reeder at the time which, he claimed, prevented him from making a more extended examination into the condition of the land which his client was about to purchase.

Reeder, testifying in his own behalf, stated that the mortgage referred to was properly indexed in mortgage record No. 18, at the time it was recorded, but admitted that when Mrs. Harlan’s attorney came to his office to make an examination for her, the mortgage had not been indexed upon the general index of mortgages in his office. He also admitted that none of the mortgages recorded in volume No. 18 had been entered upon the general index of mortgages at that time, and were not so entered until after the 21st day of January, 1880, when that volume became filled with the records of mortgages.

Evidence was admitted, the jury were instructed, and the verdict was returned, upon the theory that Reeder, in his capacity as recorder of his county, was required when he recorded a mortgage, to index it at once upon the general index of mortgages, as well as in the volume in which it was recorded, and that his failure to so index a recorded mortgage was such a breach of official duty as rendered him liable upon his bond to any one who was thereby misled and injured.

[118]*118The appellants maintained at the trial, and still seek to maintain, that Reeder was authorized, under the law, to postpone making any index entry of a mortgage on the general index, until the book in which it was recorded was filled with the records of mortgages, and could no longer be used except as a book of reference for information concerning mortgages.

Section 3 of the act defining the duties of county recorders (1 R. S. 1876, p.

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Bluebook (online)
98 Ind. 114, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeder-v-state-ex-rel-harlan-ind-1884.