*1242 Opinion
Plaintiff Kristina Dyer appeals the judgment entered following the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants Exon Martinez, Argent Mortgage Company, EEC (Argent), and Town & Country Title Services, Inc. (Town & Country). The court granted summary judgment based on defendants’ status as bona fide purchasers and encumbrancers for value who took their interests without knowledge of Dyer’s specific performancе action against the real property seller. Dyer contends the trial court erred because she had placed a lis pendens with the recorder’s office the day before the property closed escrow, putting defendants on constructive notice of her action, even though the recorder’s office had not yet indexеd the lis pendens.
For well over a century, the law in California has been that a recorded document does not provide constructive notice unless and until it can be located by a title search. We have found nothing in the current statute governing the recording of a lis pendens to indicate the Legislature intended to change this long-standing rule cоncerning constructive notice. Because the lis pendens at issue was not indexed at the time defendants took their interests in the property, it could not have been located by a diligent title search, and therefore did not provide constructive notice. Accordingly, defendants, who had no actual knowledge of Dyer’s claim against the рroperty, took their interests free from Dyer’s claim. We therefore affirm.
I
Factual and Procedural Background
On June 9, 2003, Dyer agreed to purchase real property in Mission Viejo from Juan Carlos and Aida Rojas. On July 3, 2003, the sellers sent a letter to the escrow company purporting to cancel the sale due to Dyer’s purported failure to obtain loan approval and timеly close the transaction. They relisted the property for sale on July 15, 2004, just over a year after they purported to cancel the sales agreement with Dyer. On August 19, 2004, Dyer contacted the former listing agent to inform him she had a prior sales agreement to purchase the property and she remained “ready, willing and able to perform under” thаt agreement.
Dyer filed suit against the Rojases on September 9, 2004, seeking specific performance and damages based on their alleged breach of the sales agreement. The same day, Dyer deposited a lis pendens with the Orange County *1243 Recorder’s Office for recording. Although the lis pendens reflects a recording date of September 9, 2004, it was not indexed until September 14, 2004. On September 10, 2004, escrow closed on the sale of the property to Martinez. Martinez purchased the property through loans provided by Argent, secured by two trust deeds in the amounts of $312,500 and $78,800. Town & Country was listed as trustee on the trust deeds.
Dyer filed an amended complaint for breach of contract, quiet title, and declaratory relief against thе Rojases and defendants. Among other remedies, Dyer continued to seek specific performance of her sales contract with the Rojases. The Rojases did not respond to Dyer’s amended complaint or defendants’ cross-complaint, and the clerk entered defaults against them. Defendants moved for summary judgment, contending Dyer’s lis pеndens failed to provide constructive notice of her claim against the property, and Dyer sought summary adjudication of defendants’ affirmative defense concerning the same issue. The trial court granted defendants’ motion, denied Dyer’s motion, and ordered Dyer’s lis pendens expunged. The court then entered judgment.
Dyer petitioned for a writ of mandate seeking a stay of the trial court’s order expunging her lis pendens, and directing the superior court to vacate its expungement order. By separate order we denied the request for a stay and deemed the writ petition to be a notice of appeal from the judgment.
II
Discussion
A Lis Pendens Does Not Impart Constructive Notice Until It Has Been Indеxed
For over a century, the law in California has been that a bona fide purchaser of real property has constructive notice of only those matters that could be located by a diligent title search. For example,
Chamberlain v. Bell
(1857)
The Supreme Court reached a similar result 44 years later in
Cady v. Purser
(1901)
Hochstein v. Romero
(1990)
Lewis v. Superior Court
(1994)
Acknowledging that all relevant case law is contrary tо her position, Dyer argues that we should literally apply Code of Civil Procedure section 405.24, which provides: “From the time of recording the notice of pendency of action, a purchaser, encumbrancer, or other transferee of the real property described in the notice shall be deemed to have constructive notiсe of the pendency of the noticed action as it relates to the real property and only of its pendency against parties not fictitiously named. The rights and interest of the claimant in the property, as ultimately determined in the pending noticed action, shall relate back to the date of the recording of the notice.” Dyer сontends that under section 405.24, defendants had constructive notice of her lis pendens on the day she placed it with the recorder’s office, even though it had not yet been indexed and could not have been located by a title search.
As noted above,
Cady
declined to apply similar language in Civil Code section 1170 literally, holding section 1170 must be read in harmony with Civil Code section 1213, which provides that constructive notice occurs only when an instrument is “ ‘recorded as prescribed by law.’ ”
(Cady, supra,
Dyer cites no authority, treatise, or legislative history demonstrating the Legislature enacted Code of Civil Procedure section 405.24 to abrogate the long-standing and uniformly applied rule that purchasers do not receive constructive notice if a diligent title records search would not locate the documents providing that notice.
Before 1992, the lis pendens statute was Code of Civil Procedure section 409, which provided, in part: “From the time of filing the notice for record only, a purchaser or encumbrancer of the property affected thereby shall be deemed to have constructive notice of the pendency of the action as it relates to the real property . . . .” (Former Code Civ. Proc., § 409, subd. (a), italics added.) The comments of the Real Property Law section of the State Bar to Code of Civil Procedure section 405.24 explains the change from “the time of filing the notice for record” in section 409 to “the time of recording the notice of pendency of action” in section 405.24 as follows: “This section preserves and clarifies prior law. The last sentence of former CCP 409(a) provided that constructive notice dated from ‘the time of filing the notice for record.’ Proper terminology is that the nоtice is not ‘filed,’ but rather ‘recorded’ in the land title records maintained by the county recorder. The first sentence of the new section uses the phrase ‘from the time of recording’ to clarify that it is recordation of the lis pendens which begins constructive notice.” (Code com., 14A West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc. (2004 ed.) foll. § 405.24, p. 333, reprinting 3 Assem. J. (1993-1994 Reg. Sess.) p. 4270.)
The comment reflects that Code of Civil Procedure section 405.24 simply continued existing law. Equally important, the new statute expressly recognizes that constructive notice is not given simply by delivering an instrument to the recorder’s office. Rather, constructive notice is given only when the instrument is recorded. Given the history of constructive notice in California, and the Legislaturе’s comment that enactment of Code of Civil Procedure section 405.24 was not intended to change existing law, we are compelled to read the term “recording” in that statute as meaning “ ‘recorded as prescribed by law.’ ”
(Cady, supra,
Arguing that enactment of Code of Civil Procedure section 405.24 changed prior recording law, Dyer points to comment No. 3, which states that the second sentence of section 405.24—providing that the rights and interests *1247 of a claimant relate back to the date the lis pendens was recorded—is new. 1 As the сomment explains, however, the new sentence simply incorporated the existing constructive notice provision of Code of Civil Procedure section 1908, subdivision (a)(2), to simplify application of the lis pendens law. The comment states the addition to 405.24 “preserves prior law.” As discussed above, for over a century, the law in California has bеen that a bona fide purchaser for value who acquires an interest in real property is not charged with constructive notice of a claimant’s interest if the recorder’s office had not properly indexed the document reflecting that interest.
Dyer also argues that failing to impute constructive notice until a lis pendens is indexed crеates uncertainty because the claimant has no control over when the recorder indexes the document. Although this may be true, the uncertainty would be greater if a purchaser of real estate could not rely on a diligent search of public records to reveal a prior claimant’s interest. “The policy of the law is against uphоlding secret liens and charges to the injury of innocent subsequent purchasers and encumbrancers.”
(Smitton
v.
McCullough
(1920)
Dyer contends “common sense” supports her view. We disagree. Placing the risk of loss due to a recorder’s delay in indexing on a claimant provides the claimant with the incentive to ensure the recorder properly and timely indexes the lis pendens. Placing the risk with the innocent purchaser or the purchaser’s title insurer does nothing to ensure the lis pendens is properly and timely recorded. But placing the risk with the claimant provides an incentive to diligently deposit the lis pendens for recordation in the first instance. In the present case, Dyer filed suit and recorded a lis pendens over a yеar after agreeing to buy the property, one and one-half months after the seller relisted the property for sale, and three weeks after informing the former listing broker and escrow of her claims. There is no basis in policy or logic allowing Dyer to shift responsibility for her lack of diligence to the innocent purchaser or the purchaser’s title insurer.
*1248 III
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. Defendants are entitled to their costs of this appeal.
Rylaarsdam, Acting R J., and Fybel, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 13, 2007, S151348.
Notes
Comment No. 3 to Code of Civil Procedure section 405.24 provides: “The second sentence of this section is new to the lis pendens statute. Prior law stated only that the recordation of a lis pеndens afforded constructive notice to subsequent purchasers or encumbrancers. The effect of constructive notice was not stated in the lis pendens statute, but rather was supplied by CCP 1908(a) (2) (a judgment is conclusive between the parties and their successors in interest by title subsequent to commencement of the action provided they have constructive notice of the pendency of the action). The second sentence of the new section is consistent with CCP 1908(a) (2) and preserves prior law, but simplifies application of the lis pendens law by expressly stating the effect of constructive notice in the lis pendens statute.” (Code com., 14A West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc., supra, foll. § 405.24, p. 333, reprinting 3 Assem. J. (1993-1994 Reg. Sess.) p. 4270.)
