Opinion by
1. The principal question for decision is whether the judgment of Andrews against Dysinger was a lien upon the property in controversy at the time of the conveyance to the plaintiff. The statute provides:
• “From the date of docketing a judgment * * such 'judgment shall be a lien upon all the real property of the defendant
The contention for the plaintiff is that “real property,” within the meaning of this statute, is only that to which the judgment debtor has full and complete legal title, and, since the patent had not issued to Dysinger at the time of his conveyance to plaintiff, he had only an equitable title, the legal title being in the government, and therefore the Andrews judgment was not a lien on the property so conveyed. It may be regarded as settled that a judgment is not a lien on a mere equitable interest or title, which can only be ascertained, established or made available in a court of equity: Smith v. Ingles, 2 Or. 43; Bloomfield v. Humason, 11 Or. 229 (4 Pac. 332); Silver v. Lee, 38 Or. 508 (63 Pac. 882). In each of these cases the judgment debtor had no title to the property sought to be charged with the lien. In the Smith and Silver cases, he had purchased the property and caused it to be conveyed' to another for the purpose of defrauding creditors, and in the Bloomfield case the title was held by a trustee. The interest of the judgment debtor, therefore, was such as a court of equity alone could take notice of and which required the aid of such a court to establish and make available. There was consequently no interest of the judgment debtor which a court of law could recognize or to ¡which the .judgment lien could attach. His right was a mere equity and the claim of his creditors could be worked out only through a suit in equity to which all persons claiming an interest in the property must or should be made parties, and in which their respective rights could be ascertained and determined and a decree rendered-directing the sale of some certain and definite title.
2. But a purchaser of land from the Government of the United States, who has in good faith fully complied with the law providing for its sale, paid the purchase price and received a final certificate or receipt, has more than a mere equity. He has a substantial title to the property which he may devise or
The right of a purchaser' to land from the United States
3. The judgment in favor of Andrews and against Dvsinger was rendered June 15, 1892, but was not entered in the lien docket until June 14, 1902, and counsel for the plaintiff contends that because it was not docketed “immediately” after its rendition, the right to docket it at all was lost. The statute provides that “immediately- after the entry of judgment in any action, the clerk shall docket the same,” etc.: B. & C. Comp. § 205. But this is a direction 'to the clerk and a failure by him to discharge his duty in the premises does not affect the validity of the judgment or deprive the judgment creditor of the benefit of the lien created thereby when it is properly docketed. The 'object of requiring a judgment to be entered in the judgment docket is to notify intending purchasers and incumbrancers of the date of the rendition of the judgment and the amount of it. The judgment becomes a lien on the prop
4. Complaint is made because in the clerFs certificate to the transcript of the judgment docket of Lane County filed in the clerk’s office of Coos County, it is stated that such transcript is a true and correct copy of the original circuit court “judgment lien docket”; while such record is denominated in the statute “judgment docket”: B. & C. Comp. § 584. But from the entry itself it appears that it was made in a book in which the judgments■ and decrees of .the circuit court were docketed and substantially conforms to the requirements of Section 584, contains the information required to be entered in the judgment docket, and was, therefore, sufficient.
There are some technical objections to the validity of the lien, but they are without merit. The entries in the circuit court judgment docket of Coos County, when explained by the certified transcript on file with the clerk, show that the judgment of Andrews against Dysinger was rendered in the circuit court for Lane County, was entered in the journal of that court, and was docketed in the circuit court docket of both Lane and Coos counties on certain dates. Finding no error in the decree, it is affirmed. Affirmed.