i. ci.ekk of entries. I. The clerk had no authority, on his owd motion, to enter any decree not warranted by the entries upon the judge’s calendar. The entries or minutes upon the calendar serve as a guide to the clerk in making the record entry. The minutes upon the calendar directed a decree dismissing the plaintiff’s petition or bill, and nothing more.
2 — -: code, section 2866. II. But if such record entry was authorized from the minutes on the calendar, we do not think this is such a case as is contemplated by the statute, requiring a complete , , „ ... . record to be made. Section 2b66 ot the Code is as follows: “In cases where the title to land is involved, and expressly settled or determined, the clerk shall make a complete record of the whole and enter it in the proper book * * * The plaintiffs, in the petition to subject the land to the payment of their claim, did not question the title of the wife only so far as it affected them as the creditors of the husband. They claimed that the wife took the land charged with the payment of their claim against the husband. We *145think tiie statute contemplates only that class of cases where the plaintiff upon the one side claims that he has title, legal or equitable, and the defendant disputes the plaintiff’s title, and claims title in himself or another. The evident object of the statute is to preserve record evidence of titles, for the better security of rightful owners, in cases where the title is involved and expressly settled or adjudicated. "What was adjudicated and settled in this action? Nothing more than that the plaintiffs had no right to subject the land to the payment of their judgment. The defendant’s title was left untouched, and she now holds the land free from her husband’s debt to the plaintiff. The dismissal of the petition was not an adjudication that Cumins & Co. had no title to the land, and that the defendant had such title. It was merely a determination that the defendant’s land could not be subjected to the payment of her husband’s debts. And we may say that the adjudication would not have been other, nor different, if the affirmative decree quieting her title had been pleaded as a cross-petition, and the entry upon the calendar had warranted an affirmative decree in her favor. The dismissal of the plaintiff’s petition on a trial upon the merits effectually disposed of the claim made by the plaintiffs.
_.__. -• III. If the case had been such as to require a complete record, the court properly refused to allow costs for recording the depositions, and other papers. Here again we must look to the object of the statute, which is to preserve records of titles. All that should be recorded, in a proper case for recording, is the original notice and return, the pleadings and the judgment or decree. This is a complete record of the whole cause, and shows what was adjudicated. It should uot include the evidence. Section 196 of the Code provides that “ The records of each court consist of the original papers constituting the causes adjudicated or pending in that court, and the books prescribed in the next section.” The next section provides for a record book containing the entry of the proceedings of the court and judgment docket, a fee book, an appearance docket and other books. Now it cannot be claimed that, to make a complete record under the statute, *146the entries in the appearance docket, the fee book, etc., should be recorded. The original papers constituting the causes include the original notice and return, and the pleadings, including motions and demurrers, and not the evidence. The cause will be affirmed on plaintiff’s appeal, and upon defendant’s appeal it will be
Reversed.
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