This еase concerns an application for a certificate of authority to do business as an abstracter in Tulsa County. The parties in this controversy have stipulated that the appellant, T.I.M. Company, Inc. (T.I.M.), an Oklahoma Corporation, has complied with all the statutory requiremеnts, except those imposed by 1 O.S.1981, § 13 (hereinafter § 13), 1 to become a certified bonded abstracter in Oklahoma.
The County Clerk of Tulsa County conducted a public hearing on T.I.M.’s application for a certificate of authority. At the conclusion of the hearing, the county clerk found that T.I.M. had complied with the provisions of § 13 and was capable оf producing an abstract in compliance with the applicable laws of the state. The County clerk thereupon issued a certificate of authority to T.I.M.
Appellee, Oklahoma Land Title Association (OLTA), an Oklahoma corporation, filed an appeal in accоrdance with
The district court, sitting without a jury, conducted a trial de novo on T.I.M.’s application for a certificate of authority. Testimony introduced at trial established that T.I.M.’s abstract plant consisted of microfilmed duplications of all instruments of record affecting real estate on file in the office of the county clerk of Tulsa County and in the office of the court clerk of Tulsa County. In order to utilize the microfilmed records, T.I.M. also made microfilmed copies of a variety of indexes used by the offices of the county and court clerks. T.I.M. would not update the indexes; rather it would rely on the work of the two offices. Contestants’ two expert witnesses testified that certain instruments affecting real property might not be located through the microfilmed indexes. Additionally, one of the contestants’ experts testified that because of the flaw in T.I.M.’s system of indexes, the company could not issue accurate abstracts of title.
“It is undisputed in the record that ‘the minimum requirement’ of the terms used in the Act is ‘a tract index showing all instruments affecting all pieces of property in the county’. Such requirement increases the protection of the public in relying upon the aсcuracy of abstracts. ‘Index learning turns no student pale, yet holds the eel of science by the tail,’ declared Alexander Pope.” [emphasis added].
At p. 670 the Montana Court explained:
“The undisputed evidence received on the trial is to the effect that an abstractor cannot safely rely upon the records and indices in the clerk’s office for use in his business, for the reason that, under the statutes, the county clerk merely indexes instruments under the names of the parties. Section 4799, Rev.Codes 1929. A break in the chain of title, by name indic-es, would mislead the investigator into believing that he had reached the end of the chain. Numerous instances in illustration could be given; a few will suffice.”
The Court concluded its explanation by defining the phrase “abstract books or other system of indices” to mean that comprehensive tract index. At 671, the court continued:
“The indices differ somewhat with different individuals but the system is universal among abstractors, and it is such records, varying according to the individual ideas on the subject, that are known to the men in the business as ‘abstract books or other system of indices or records showing in a sufficiently comprehensive form all instruments’ affecting the title to each tract of land in the county. This is manifestly the meaning of the terms used by the legislature.”
ISSUES PRESENTED
T.I.M. presents three issues on appeal:
1. Whether the contestants had standing, legal capacity or property interest in prosecuting the action in the district court, and
2. Whether the evidence that an abstract plant comprised of complete microfilm duplicatiоns of all indexes and instruments recorded in the offices of the county clerk and court clerk of Tulsa County which affect real estate supports the finding that T.I.M. had failed to comply with the requirements of Section 13; and
3. Whether the district court erred in failing to find that Section 13 violates T.I. M.’s rights under the Fourtеenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and under Article II, Section 1 of the Oklahoma Constitution?
RULINGS
A. Standing
T.I.M.’s assertion that contestants lack standing to prosecute this action in district court, granting a certificate of authority is a complication of three issues.
First, T.I.M. asserts that OLTA, as an educational сorporation chartered pursuant to 18 O.S.1981, Ch. 14, does not have the corporate capacity to prosecute litigation in opposition to the grant of a certificate of authority to an applicant. T.I.M. argues the lack of corporate capaсity — the commission of an ultra vires act — would deprive OLTA of standing to sue and would deprive the district court of subject matter jurisdiction.
Secondly, T.I.M. asserts that 1 O.S.1981, § 16 specifically limits the class of individuals who may appeal the decision of a county clerk on granting a certificate of authority to only those applicants who appear at hearing on the application. T.I.M. argues that the actions of two of the contestants at the September 16, 1981 hearing do not constitute an appearance under Section 16.
Initially, it must be noted that T.I. M.’s assertion that OLTA’s corporate charter prohibited it from taking part in this litigation is not supported by the record. As such, review of this issue is precluded by the absence of any basis upon which to base a decision. See
Way v. Grand Lake Association, Inc.,
However, to invoke the jurisdiction of the trial court it is only necessary that one of the contestants be found to have had the requisite standing. The reсord here clearly establishes that appel-lee Guaranty Abstract Co. caused its appearance to be listed of record in the initial hearing before the county clerk. Such an act clearly demonstrates an acknowledgement of the proceeding and an intention to appear therein. See
Patterson v. Rockwell International,
B. 1 O.S.1981, § 13
The business of abstracting titles to real estate is one which is affected with a public interest. The Legislature, in order to protect the public, may require those desiring to engage in the business of abstracting to meet certain minimum requirements and have adequate equipment to issue accurate abstracts. Application of Richardson, supra at 644. The Oklahoma Legislature has promulgated such a requirement in 1 O.S.1981, § 13, see Footnote 1, supra.
The language of Section 13 may be separated into three elements for the purpose of discussion:
1. An application abstracter must have an independent set of abstract books or other system of indexes;
2. The abstract books or other systems of indexes must be compiled from the instruments of record in the office of the county clerk and not copied from the indexes of said office; and
3. The abstract books or other system of indexes must show in sufficiently comprehensive form all instruments affecting the title to real property on file or of record in the offices of the county clerk and court clerk.
The question then is: Does T.I.M.’s abstract plant comply with these statutory requirements.
We answer in the negative.
Requirement of an Independent Set of Abstract Books or other System of Indexes.
The term “independent”, as used in 1 O.S.1981 § 13, was intended to have a twofold meaning. The first meaning mandates an abstract plant physically seрarate from the public records of the county clerk. T.I.M.’s application does not run afoul of this requirement. However, the second meaning to be assigned to an “independent set of abstract books or other system of indexes,” is based upon the intention of the Legislature that a рrospective abstractor have developed its own system of abstracting, or, more properly, of indexing the voluminous information affecting real property filed in the offices of the county clerk and court clerk. Such a system of indexing is the key to utilization of the public recоrding system and thus the source of the preparation of accurate abstracts. In the present case T.I.M. made no attempt to prepare an independent index.
As discussed in the case of
Application of Richardson,
supra, the reasoning
The evidence in this case supports the trial court’s finding that T.I.M.’s system for constructing abstracts would not be adequate to produce an accurate abstract for T.I.M. failed to maintain comprehensive tract indices. The record shows that T.I.M. would be unable to locate and include certain instruments in a chain of title. The failure to include such instruments in an abstract has been the basis of an abstractor’s liability in a civil litigation.
LVO Federal Credit Union v. Wolfe,
Having failed the first tier of 1 O.S.1981, § 16, it is not necessary to review T.I.M.’s attemрted compliance with the remaining elements of the test.
C. Constitutionality of 1 O.S.1981, § 13
The remaining issue for resolution is whether the district court erred in failing to find that Section 13 violates T.I.M.’s rights under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. We answer in the negative.
States have the authority to legislate against “injurious practices in their internal commercial and business affairs, so long as their laws do not run afoul of some specific federal constitutional prohibition, or some valid federal law.”
Lincoln Federal Labor Union v. Northwestern Iron & Metal Co.,
In examining due process and equal protection objections to the validity of an economic regulation, the standard of review is not to pronounce the regulatory legislation unconstitutional unless “it is of such a character аs to preclude the assumption that it rests on some rational basis .... ”
United States v. Cardene Products Co.
The test for determining the existence of an equal protection violation “requires that the classification rest on some real and not feigned differences; that the distinction have some relevance to the purpose for which the classification is made; and the different treatments are not complete by being disparately arbitrary.”
Clegg v. Oklahoma State Election Bd.,
It is the ruling of this Court that Section 13, as interpreted and applied by the district court, did not violate appellant’s rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article II, Section 7, of the Oklahoma Constitution.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. § 13 states: "In addition to the bond required by Section
. § 16 states: “The decision of the county clerk granting or refusing to grant the certificate of authority shall not become final for a period of thirty (30) days from thе date thereof, during which time said applicant or any protestant appearing at said hearing may appeal from the decision of the county clerk to the district court of the county in which said application is pending by serving a written notice of appeal upon thе county clerk and upon the adverse party or parties contesting the granting of such application, if any, and by procuring from the county clerk a certified transcript of the proceedings and filing the same in the district court within thirty (30) days from the date of said decision with a petition praying for a review of said decision, which petition shall state in simple and concise language the facts relied upon, and said appellant shall also file a bond in the district court in the sum of Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00), conditioned that he will pay all costs of appeal if costs be adjudged against him.
