Sears v. . Burnham

17 N.Y. 445 | NY | 1858

The several judgments were entitled to priority in the distribution of the surplus, according to the priority of their liens on the land at the time of the sale. The equitable rights of the parties in regard to the distribution, corresponded with their legal rights to the land, for the payment of their judgments, when it was sold. Their rights as at that time were to be regarded in the distribution, as the sale upon a conveyance would divest their rights from that period; the conveyance would relate back to the sale. (McLaren v. The Hartford MutualInsurance Company 1 Seld., 151.)

The remaining question in the case is, whether the error in the dockets of the respondent's judgments in New-York, *447 in stating the entry of the judgments to have been one year later than they were actually obtained, precluded them from a preference over the appellant's judgment. The Revised Statutes, in reference to docketing judgments, require the clerk, at the time of filing the record, to enter in an alphabetical docket a statement of the judgment, containing, among other things, the hour and day of entering such docket. (2 R.S., 361, § 13.) By the act of 1840 (Laws of 1840, 334, § 26), the clerk, on request and payment of fees, is to furnish a transcript containing all the facts necessary to make a perfect docket of the judgment; and on presenting the transcript to the clerk of any other county, it is his duty to file the same and docket the judgment, specifying, among other particulars, the day and the hour on which the judgment was perfected and the day and hour of docketing the same. The clerk is to make the docket on filing the record or transcript. It is a duty imposed on the clerk and in case of any default it is his default. The Revised Statutes (2R.S., 360, § 12) provide that "no judgment shall affect any lands, tenements, real estate or chattels real, or have any preference as against other judgment creditors, purchasers or mortgagees, until the record thereof be filed and docketed as herein directed." This section relates to the original docketing of the judgment. By the act of 1840 above cited (§ 25), "no judgment or decree which shall be entered after this act takes effect, shall be a lien upon real estate, unless the same shall be docketed in books to be provided and kept for that purpose, by the county clerk of the county where the lands are situate." This section, it will be observed, omits the words "as herein directed" in the section last aforesaid of the Revised Statutes; but I do not think the latter section should receive a different construction on account of them, from what would otherwise be given. It could not, I think, have been the intention of the legislature, by any of the provisions in regard to the docketing and lien of judgments, to require a strict, litera *448 compliance in every particular with the requirements as to the contents of the docket, in order that the judgment may be a lien on lands as against other incumbrances. If such a compliance was necessary, a variance of a day or hour as to time, or of a single penny as to the amount of the judgment, would vitiate the docket and render it a nullity as to securing a preference over other incumbrances. A substantial observance of those requirements, having reference to the object the legislature had in view of affording information to all who might be affected by the judgment, I am satisfied is all that was designed or is necessary. Those provisions are merely directory; and omissions and variances which cannot work any prejudice are immaterial. It is for the court so to administer the provisions as to the docketing and lien of judgments as carefully to secure the information designed to be given, and at the same time protect the judgment creditor from the loss of his preference on account of slight omissions and defects entirely unessential to the docket for the purpose of such information. The mistakes of the clerk are to be overlooked when no prejudice results. The views above taken, as to the proper construction of these provisions, is fully sustained by the practice of the Supreme Court in amending defects in the dockets of judgments. In Hunt v.Grant (19 Wend., 90), a docket of a judgment was amendednunc pro tunc by increasing the amount from $3,000 to $30,000. Numerous judgments had been recovered against the defendants after that in question was docketed; but by the amendment the plaintiff obtained a preference over all of them. The court, by BRONSON, J. say: "If the three creditors who appear, had given credit or granted indulgence to the defendants; if they had omitted any diligence in attempting to secure their debts, or had in any other way acted on the supposition that the plaintiff's judgment was no more than $3,000, it would be proper to protect them against the consequences of an unrestricted amendment of the docket. But nothing of the kind is *449 alleged. Indeed, it does not appear that granting the motion will necessarily work any injury whatever to these creditors. They produce no affidavits, but rely wholly on the fact disclosed in the plaintiff's papers, that they have subsequent judgments, and consequently may be affected by correcting the docket. I think this is not a sufficient answer to the motion. In Hart v.Reynolds (note to Chichester v. Cande, 3 Cow., 39), a docket was amended by correcting the name of the defendant as against subsequent judgment creditors. In both cases there was a saving clause in the order as to the rights of the bona fide purchasers and mortgagees; and in the former, leave was reserved to judgment creditors who had not received notice of the motion, to apply for such modification of the order as the case might require.

In the present case, the error in the docket could not possibly prejudice the appellant. It simply postponed the lien of the judgments for a year; the dockets gave as ample notice of the judgments as they would have done if the error had not occurred; the like search which would have been required if the dockets had been correct would have disclosed the judgment and the mistake.

All the judges concurring,

Judgment affirmed.

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