Sackett v. Rose

1916 OK 2, 154 P. 1177, 55 Okla. 398, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 4, 1916
Docket4770
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 1916 OK 2 (Sackett v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sackett v. Rose, 1916 OK 2, 154 P. 1177, 55 Okla. 398, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 169 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

BOWLES, C.

The defendant in error (plaintiff below) instituted this action in the superior court of Oklahoma county, against James G. Sackett, an abstractor of title, and Robert I. Sackett, Lizzie Jennings, and A. C. Farmer, bondsmen for said James G. Sackett, plaintiffs in error (defendants below), hereinafter referred to respectively as “plaintiff” and “defendants,” for damages resulting from an incorrect abstract on certain property in Oklahoma City on which the plaintiff loaned *400 $1,750, and subsequently thereto purchased what she thought was a fee title to said property. The defendant James G. Sackett, in making the abstract, prior to the loan above referred to, omitted in his certificate to disclose the existence of a judgment which was then a lien on said property, which said judgment was against one Dewaide, a former owner of the property, in favor of J. W. Morrison. After the plaintiff had purchased the property, said property was sold under said judgment and entirely lost to plaintiff. Plaintiff recovered judgment in the court below for the value- of said property so lost to her; hence this appeal.

At the outset, we are called upon to construe section 1, Wilson’s Revised & Annotated Statutes of 1903; plaintiffs in error claiming that an abstractor is only liable for damages for any incompleteness, imperfections, or errors in any abstract furnished by him to the person or persons for whom he may compile, make, or furnish an abstract of title. The court below held that a party furnishing an abstract was liable in damages to any person relying upon said abstract to his detriment. We believe this construction of the statute clearly right. Section 1 reads as follows:

“That it shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation to hold themselves out as abstractors and to engage in the business of abstracting title to real estate in any of the counties of the Territory of Oklahoma, without first having executed and filed with the county clerk of the county in which said person, firm or corporation intends to engage in the business of abstracting, a bond to beap-proved by the board of county commissioners of said county, with three or more good and sufficient sureties residing in the county, and worth not less than double the amount of the bond over and above all debts, liabilities and exemp *401 tions, in the sum of five thousand dollars, conditioned that he will properly demean himself in the business of abstracting, and will pay all damages that may accrue to any person by reason of any incompleteness, imperfections or error in any abstract furnished by him, and will in no way mutilate, deface or destroy any of the records of the several offices to which he may have access, and that he will not in any way interfere with, hinder or delay the several county officers in the discharge of their duties, while using said records, in the prosecution of said business of abstracting: Provided, however, that the records shall in no case be taken from the county office to which they belong. The person, firm or corporation who shall execute and file said bond of five thousand dollars for said purpose, shall, together with the sureties thereon, be liable on said bond to the Territory of Oklahoma in the penalty of one hundred dollars ($100) ; and to any county or person who shall be in any way damaged by any mutilation, injury or destruction of any record or records of the several county offices to which he or they may have access, to the amount of damage actually done said county or person; and to any person or persons for whom he or they may compile, make or furnish abstracts of title, to the amount of damage done to said person or persons by any incompleteness, imperfection or error made by said person, firm or corporation, in compiling said abstract.”

This statute seemingly has two inconsistent provisions. The first part of the section provides that the ab-stractor shall give bond,’ etc., said bond conditioned that he will properly demean himself in the business of abstracting and pay all damages that may accrue to any person by reason of any incompleteness, imperfection, or error in any abstract furnished by him. The latter part of the same section provides that the abstractor and his bond sha'l be liable to the state or territory in the penal sum of $100 and to any counts for mutilating the records, etc., *402 and to any persons for whom he or they may compile, make, or furnish abstracts of title, to the amount of damage done to said person or persons by any incompleteness, imperfection, or error made by such person, firm, or corporation in compiling said abstract.

It is clear that the former part of the section makes the abstractor liable to any person by reason of any error in any abstract furnished by him. The latter part of the section provides that the abstractor is liable to any one to whom he furnishes an abstract. It seems to us that these two expressions can be construed together without doing violence to either. The latter part of the section in no wise repeals, modifies, or curtails the clear import and purpose of the Legislature to make an abstractor liable to any person injured by relying upon his abstract, as provided in the first part of the section. The liability in the first portion of the section is general. The latter part of the section provides that he is liable to the party to whom he furnishes the abstract and does not undertake to confine or curtail his liability ' to any other person relying upon the correctness thereof to his injury. The section might well read:

“The abstractor will pay all damages that may accrue to any person by reason of any incompleteness, imperfections or error in any abstract furnished by him and to any person or persons for whom he or they may compile, make or furnish an abstract.”

Would it be contended that the provisions, read together as above, indicated anything else than that the ab-stractor’s liability extends to any person relying upon the abstract, whether it was furnished to him in the first instance or furnished to some other person?

This construction of the statute makes it a harmonious whole and gives full effect to all of its provisions and does *403 violence to none. Harmony, not confusion, is to be sought for by statutory construction. Conflicts between different provisions of a statute are not to be held to exist, if harmony, by any reasonable construction of them, can be discovered. The true rule has often been said to be that where two acts or parts of acts would be reasonably susceptible of a construction that will give effect to both and to the words of each, without violence to either, it should be adopted, in preference to one which, though reasonable, leads to the conclusion that there is a conflict. There is no conflict between different parts of a statute if there is a reasonable meaning of -the words used, considering the manner of their use, which will bring them into harmony. See Atty. Gen. v. Brown, 1 Wis. 513; Atty. Gen. v. Railway Co., 35 Wis. 425; Mason v. City of Ashland, 98 Wis. 540, 74 N. W. 357.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 2, 154 P. 1177, 55 Okla. 398, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sackett-v-rose-okla-1916.