Opinion
INTRODUCTION
In this сase we hold, where two deeds of trust secured by the same real property were simultaneously time-stamped for recording by the Los Angeles County Recorder’s Office but were indexed at different times, that the lenders have equal priority. One of the lenders, defendant East West Bank, appeals from the judgment of the trial court declaring that the two trust deeds have equal priority. Defendant contends, as its trust dеed was indexed first, that its lien has a prior right. We conclude the other lender, plaintiff First Bank, demonstrated in its summary judgment motion indisputably that, pursuant to its practice, the Los Angeles County Recorder’s Office time-stamped both trust deeds at issue at 8:00 a.m. on September 4, 2008. Hence, neither deed of trust was first duly recorded and neither bank was a subsequent purchaser. (Civ. Code, §§ 1107, 1214.) As a matter of law, therefore, the trust deeds havе equal priority. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 2008, plaintiff and defendant granted loans to Kyung Ha Chung and secured them with the same real property located in South Gate, California. Chung signed both trust deeds on August 28, 2008, before two different
Kathy Tregg, the person identified as most knowledgeable about practices at the recorder’s office, testified that the procedure in the Los Angeles County Recorder’s Office, as with most recorders across the state, is to allow title insurance companies to deliver trust deeds to the recorder’s office in batches before 8:00 a.m. when the office opens. As is the case for all documents and instruments deposited with the recorder’s office, one of thе examiners reviews the title insurance companies’ trust deeds to determine whether they meet the requirements for recording. The examiner then enters the instruments into the enterprise recording archive system and sends the documents to a cashier to determine the applicable fees. The recorder stamps them with the date and time of recording. The practice of most of the recоrder’s offices across the state is to give all instruments deposited before the offices open for business an 8:00 a.m. time stamp. Instruments are indexed roughly two days later.
Following its procedure, the recorder time-stamped both deeds of trust here with the following: “Recorded/Filed in Official Records Recorder’s Office, Los Angeles County, Califomia[,] 09/04/08 AT 08:00AM.” Tregg testified that the trust deeds were recorded at 8:00 a.m. by the recorder’s office. Also on September 4, 2008, the recorder indexed defendant’s trust deed at 11:26 a.m. and plaintiff’s trust deed at 3:08 p.m.
Plaintiff filed the instant declaratory relief action seeking a determination about the priority of these liens. Once the case was at issue, plaintiff and defendant each moved for summary judgment. Plaintiff argued that all of the trust deeds have equal priority because they were reсorded concurrently. By contrast, defendant argued its trust deed has priority because it was indexed first. The trial court granted plaintiff’s motion and denied defendant’s, holding the deeds of trust were recorded concurrently and neither bank was a subsequent purchaser, with the result the liens have equal priority. Defendant appeals.
DISCUSSION
1. Standard of review
“Summary judgment is granted when a moving party establishes the absence of a triable issue оf material fact and the right to entry of judgment
2. Overview of California’s law of priorities
California starts with a “ ‘first in time, first in right’ system of lien priorities,” under which “a conveyance recorded first generally has priority over any later-reсorded conveyance.” (Thaler v. Household Finance Corp. (2000)
“An instrument is deemed to be recorded when, being duly acknowledged or proved and certified, it is deposited in the Recorder’s office, with the proper officer, for record.” (Civ. Code, § 1170.)
This “ ‘first in time[,] first in right’ ” system is modified by the recording statutes (5 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (3d ed. 2009) § 11:3, p. 11-18), which allow subsequent purchasers to achieve priority under the “ ‘race-notice’ theory.” (Id. at p. 11-19.) Thereunder, “Every grant of an estate in real property is conclusive against the grantor, also against every one subsequently claiming under him, except a purchaser or incumbrancer who in good faith and for a valuable consideration acquires a title or lien by an instrument thаt is first duly recorded.” (Civ. Code, § 1107.) Stating the rule differently, Civil Code section 1214 reads in relevant part, “Every conveyance of real property ... is void as against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee of the same property ... in good faith and for a valuable consideration, whose conveyance is first duly recorded . . . .”
Under these “race-notice” rules, a subsequent purchaser obtains priority for а real property interest by (1) acquiring the interest as a bona fide purchaser for valuable consideration with neither actual knowledge nor constructive notice of (2) a previously created interest and (3) “first duly record[ing]” the interest, i.e., recording before the previously created interest is recorded. (Civ. Code, §§ 1107, 1213, 1214; see 5 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate, supra, § 11:3, p. 11-20; Hochstein v. Romero (1990)
Constructive notice is a legal “ ‘fiction.’ ” (Lewis v. Superior Court (1994)
Stated otherwise, constructive notice of an interest in real property is imparted by the recording and proper indexing of an instrument in the public records. (Civ. Code, § 1213; Dyer v. Martinez, supra, 147 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1243-1246; Watkins v. Wilhoit, supra, 104 Cal. at pp. 399-400; Cady v. Purser, supra,
3. Plaintiff’s and defendant’s trust deeds are deemed recorded at the same time and neither bank is a subsequent purchaser.
Applying these rules to the facts here, the undisputed evidence shows that plaintiff’s and defendant’s trust deeds were both deposited before business hours on September 4, 2008, and hence received the following stamp: “Recorded/Filed” with the same date and time: September 4, 2008, “AT 08:00AM.” Pursuant to Civil Code section 1170, both trust deeds are “deemed” recorded simultaneously.
Defendant argues that plaintiff failed to carry its burden in moving for summary judgment because plaintiff lacked evidence about when the trust deeds were deposited in the recorder’s office. (Civ. Code, § 1170.) In its separate statement, plaintiff asserted as fact No. 15 that the banks’ trust deeds “were all delivered to the Recorder’s Office by title insurancе company representatives at approximately 6:00 a.m. on September 4, 2008.” Plaintiff supported fact No. 15 with excerpts from Tregg’s deposition. Defendant argues that, where the trial court sustained its objection to Tregg’s testimony in support of fact No. 15, there is no evidence about when the documents were actually deposited.
Plaintiff has carried its burden. Plaintiff’s undisputed evidence shows . that the title insurance companies deposited both trust deeds in the recorder’s office sometime before business hours, as permitted by most recorders’ offices across the state. According to this practice, instruments deposited before business hours are processed and given an 8:00 a.m. recording time. We give “great weight” to “contemporaneous administrative construction of a statute by an administrative аgency charged with its enforcement and interpretation. [Citation.]” (Andal v. Miller (1994)
Defendant next challenges the trial court’s decision to overrule its objections to Tregg’s deposition testimony that the deeds of trust were “ ‘recorded
To summarize, plaintiff’s and defendant’s trust deeds were recorded concurrently, with the result neither instrument was “first duly recorded” and neither bank is a subsequent purchaser. Necessarily, therefore, plaintiff’s and defendant’s trust deeds have equal priority (Civ. Code, §§ 1107, 1214). The trial court’s ruling was not error.
4. Recording and indexing are different functions and so priority in this case cannot depend on the time of indexing.
Defendant would like us to break the tie, so to speak, and establish one trust deed as being first in time. Toward that end, defendant contends priority is determined by the “order in which they [(the trust deeds)] are indexed!” and because defendant’s trust deed was indexed four hours earlier than that of plaintiff, defendant’s instrument was first in time. (Italics added.)
Although courts conflate the two duties, recording and indexing are separate and distinct functions. (Lewis v. Superior Court, supra,
The Legislature has established recording and indexing as two distinсt functions. (Ricketts v. McCormack, supra,
In addition to sеgregating recording and indexing as two separate functions, the Legislature imposes a time requirement on the duty of recording, but not on the task of indexing. Government Code section 27320 directs the recorder to “record [an instrument] without delay,” and to endorse on it “in the order in which it is deposited” the date, “hour, and minute of its reception”-, but the Legislature has assigned no particular speed to indexing. (Italics added.) Clearly, the fact the Legislature direсts that recording be achieved expeditiously and identify the time of recording to the minute, indicates that it views recording as an extremely time-sensitive function. Meanwhile, the recorder is not required to index an instrument within any particular time. Therefore, it would disrupt the statutory scheme to make priority turn on the random act of indexing, as defendant advocates, especially where banks and title insurers havе no influence over when the recorder indexes trust deeds. (Cf. Dyer v. Martinez, supra,
5. The time of indexing does not aid defendant.
As explained, a bona fide purchaser can obtain priority if it acquires its property interest without notice of a previously created interest and first duly records. (Civ. Code, §§ 1107, 1213, 1214; 5 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate, supra, § 11:3, pp. 11-19 to 11-20.) Here, neither bank had actual notice of the other lienor’s interest in the property. More important, both banks acquired their property interests without constructive notice. Nor could they have had constructive notice because at the time of recordation, neither trust deed had
6. The authorities relied on by defendant are distinguished.
Defendant cites Cady v. Purser, supra,
Dougery explained, Civil Code section 1170 “has no application to the recording of instruments which are intended to give third persons constructive notice. . . .” (Dougery v. Bettencourt, supra,
Dougery, Cady, and Hochstein did not involve the questiоn of determining priority of liens among concurrent purchasers. These cases concerned the impact on subsequent purchasers of improperly indexed instruments that did not impart notice. (Cady v. Purser, supra, 131 Cal. at pp. 554-555; Dougery v. Bettencourt, supra, 214 Cal. at pp. 458-459; Hochstein v. Romero, supra,
Our Supreme Court explained in 1894, “So far as creditors are concerned the law is satisfied if the assignment is recorded in the county where the debtor resides; but to be effective against subsequent purchasers or mortgagees ... it must be so recorded as to give them constructive notice. To determine what will give such constructive notice we look to section 1213 et seq., of the Civil Code, but to determine whаt is recording without reference to the question of notice to subsequent purchasers we look to section 1170 of the Civil Code.” (Watkins v. Wilhoit, supra, 104 Cal. at pp. 399-400, italics added.) Here, “to determine what is recording without reference to the question of notice,” as we are asked to do, “we look to section 1170 of the Civil Code,” as we have done. (Watkins v. Wilhoit, supra,
Instead, we are persuaded by Dyer v. Martinez, supra,
To be sure, indexing is essential for imparting constructive notice to defeat the claims of bona fide subsequent purchasers. (Lewis v. Superior Court, supra,
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Respondent to recover costs on appeal.
Klein, P. J., and Croskey, J., concurred.
Notes
At least one other lender, Flagstar Bank granted a loan to Chung and secured it with the same real property. Flagstar’s trust deed was also delivered to the recorder’s office prior to business hours on September 4, 2008. However, Flagstar, whose joinder in plaintiffs summary judgment motion was procedurally defective, is not a party in this appeal. Accordingly, we refer to the two trust deeds of plaintiff and defendant only.
Civil Code section 1213 reads: “Every conveyance of real property or an estate for years therein acknowledged or proved and certified and recorded as prescribed by law from the time it is filed with the recorder for record is constructive notice of the contents thereof to subsequent purchasers and mortgagees; and a certified copy of such a recorded conveyance may be recorded in any other county and when so recorded the record thereof shall have the same force and effect as though it was of the original conveyance and where the original conveyance has been recorded in any county wherein the property therein mentioned is not situated a certified copy of the recorded conveyance may be recorded in the county where such property is situated with the same force and effect as if the original conveyance had been recorded in that county.” (Italics added.)
Civil Code section 1213, establishing how instruments impart constructive notice, uses the phrase “recorded as prescribed by law,” meaning indexing. By contrast, Civil Code sections 1107 and 1214, establishing the race-notice system of lien priorities in California, utilize the phrase “first duly recorded.”
See also footnote 3, ante.
The parties do not dispute they paid valuable consideration for their liens.
See Hochstein v. Romero, supra,
