Townshend v. Register of Deeds

7 How. Pr. 318
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 How. Pr. 318 (Townshend v. Register of Deeds) 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
Townshend v. Register of Deeds, 7 How. Pr. 318 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1852).

Opinion

Roosevelt, Justice.

This is an application for a mandamus, against the register of deeds, to compel him to search the records in his office and certify the title, as there appearing, of one Edward T. Wigfall,” to certain lots of land, fully described, in Eighty-fifth and Eighty-eighth streets in the city of New York. Mr. Townshend, who applies for the writ, complains that the Register while forbidding him, Townshend, from searching for himself, unless he paid a fee of five cents for every year searched, refused to comply with a written requisition to do it officially, although tendered full fees for the service. The register objects that the requisition was too general; that it was a very inconvenient departure from the uniform practice of giving the particular names and dates in respect of which the search was to be made; that the records consist of more than one thousand volumes, and that it would be impossible for the force allowed in the office to perform its duties if they were to be called upon to in-investigate titles, and virtually to discharge the functions of counsel. Titles, too, it is contended, and truly, depend not upon deeds and mortgages only, but upon wills and intestate descents upon deaths, marriages, relationship, alienisms, changes of description and other matters, none of which are recorded in the register’s office. How, then, it is asked, can he be expected to “ certify the title” of real estate? He may search for a specified [320]*320period in respect of a specified piece of property, against specified individuals, for deeds or mortgages from or to them—and even that, in the voluminous condition of the records of this city, is not unfrequently a very tedious and difficult operation—a general search is nearly or quite impracticable. The applicant, however, contends that whatever may be the difficulty, it is nevertheless the duty of the register to perform the service; and he cites the language of the act of 1849 (§ 13) as fully justifying the form of this particular requisition. That act, in prescribing the fees to be thereafter allowed to clerks of counties and registers of cities, declares that they shall charge for searching and certifying the title of and incumbrance upon real estate, the sum of ten cents for each conveyance and incumbrance certified; provided that such fees shall in no case amount to less than fifty cents, nor more than five dollars.” The previous law, as compared in the Revised Statutes of 1830, gave the clerks and registers five cents for each year, for searching the records in their office,” saying nothing about certifying titles. And the change of language, it is contended, was designed not merely to effect a change in the rate of compensation, but in the duties which the officer was to perform. Such a mode of interpretation is not consistent with the rules laid down for determining the effect of statutes or any other written documents. Still it can not be denied that the expressions used in the act of 1840 assume that it was at the time, and was to continue to be the duty of the register “ to search and certify titles and incumbrances.” What, then, is the fair practical meaning of those expressions? Can A, about buying a certain lot of land from B, who professes to be the owner, go to the register’s office and require him to search the title of B to the lot in question, giving merely the name of the alleged owner, and a suitable description of the lot to be conveyed? The register certainly can take the indexes, which the law requires him to make and keep in his office, and search back under tbe letter B, for grantees of the lot. If he finds no conveyance to B, that, so far as respects the register’s duty under the requisition, ends the search, and entitles him to his fifty cents; he certifying that on the records in the office B has no title. If he finds, on the contary, a conveyance to B, he then searches in [321]*321the index of grantors and mortgagors from the date of such conveyance to the time of search, and certifies according to the result, whether B, subsequent to his acquiring the title, has conveyed or incumbered the premises. Here, again, he would have earned his additional fees, and his duty under the requisition would have terminated. If the party applying wished for further details, he must make out a further requisition; and so on, from time to time, paying the fees, until he has received all the inform- ' ation the case called for and the records could supply. Has the act of December 14,1847, changed this view of the subject? That act (§ 40) provides that it shall be the duty of the register to “ search the records, and to certify to the correctness of such searches when required to do so, and on the payment, or offer to pay, the fees chargeable by law for such services.” It also declares that any refusal or neglect to perform this duty shall be deemed a misdemeanor. This language, it seems to me, so far as it relates to the nature of the duty to be performed by the Register, is substantially the same as that of the previous enactments; or if not, it must be deemed declaratory of their true meaning. What, then, are we to understand by the terms, “ searching the records?” Precisely, it seems to me, what has already been explained; that is ascertaining, as in the present case, who conveyed to Wigfall, and when and whether he has conveyed or encumbered his title since. Had the register made such a search and reduced it to writing, certifying to its correctness he would have discharged his duty, he would have searched and certified to the title of Wigfall and the incumbrances thereon. If the applicant then wished to go further, and trace the title of Wigfall’s grantor, he would have been compelled to present an additional requisition. A duty, the non-performance of which is made a misdemeanor, is to be interpreted, if not strictly, at least not with latitudinarian comprehensiveness. The interpretation above given, while satisfying, as it appears to me, the words of the law, whether we take the Revised Statutes, the act of 1840, or the act of 1847, seems also to be consonant with reason and convenience. If the applicant wishes to avoid repeated requisitions, he can first examine the records for himself, and with the information thus obtained, in connection with other facts not [322]*322there appearing, can frame a requisition sufficiently specific to embrace the whole case at once. But it is said, he is not bound to submit to the double charge. And this brings up the question, can the register charge for a search which the party makes himself 1 I think he can not. The law is positive (2 R. S. 650) that no fee shall be demanded for any service unless actually rendered. And in defining the rate of fees, the old fee bill of 1830 (1 R. S. 638, § 30) heads the section with the words “Fees of Clerks, &c., and Register of Deeds, for any of the services hereinafter specified,” enumerating among such services, searching the records.’ The act, too, of 1840 (§ 13), changing the rates, instead of the fees then allowed, gave ten cents “for each conveyance and incumbrance certified by him.” And that was to be, and now is, the compensation for searching and certifying the title;” meaning, of course, for a service rendered by the register.

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Townshend v. Dyckman
2 E.D. Smith 224 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1853)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 How. Pr. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townshend-v-register-of-deeds-nysupct-1852.