57 Fla. 385 | Fla. | 1909
This appeal is from a decree dismissing a bill of complaint brought to cancel the record
A former appeal is reported in Curry v. Lehman, 55 Fla. 847, 47 South. Rep. 18. The only question presented here is whether the record of the judgment as stated is sufficient to create the statutory lien.
The statutes provide that a judgment or decree rendered in the Circuit Court of one county “shall create á lien upon the real estate of the defendant situated in another county than the one in which the same shall have been rendered, when a certified transcript of the said judgment or decree shall have been recorded in the count)' in which the real estate so sought to be bound may be situated.” The clerk shall keep “a record of foreign judgments, in which he shall enter all transcripts of judgments in other counties of the State,” &c. Sections 1601 and 1831 General Statutes of 1906. Section 1832 specifies the record books the clerk is required to keep and there is none designated as “Foreign Judgment Book” or by other name to indicate a separate and exclusive book for the record of foreign judgments. This being so and no such book being in fact kept by the clerk when the record of the judgment here was made, it seems that the record of the foreign judgment in the book
The decree is affirmed.