Court Opinion

ID: 7987925
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:27:42.340399+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:15.448478
License: Public Domain

Whitfield, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question which lies at the threshold in the decision of this case is whether the bill, of appellant was filed, within the contemplation of law, on May 5, 1892. The facts are these: On May 5, 1892, appellant’s counsel took the bill and the exhibits in one cover to the chancery clerk, and had him indorse on the bill the word “ filed,” etc., and the clerk made a corresponding entry in the general docket, and prepared a regular court wrapper, and put it around the papers. But counsel immediately took the bill and exhibits back to his office, telling the clerk that he did not wish process issued then, but not giving him any reason for not issuing process. The clerk charged the counsel with the papers in his attorney’s docket. The bill was kept by counsel in his office until the ninth of May, when he returned the bill, and process was issued and served on the tenth. In the meantime, on May 7, 1892, counsel for appellees took their bill to the clerk of the chancery court, and it was filed on that day, and process issued and served that day. Said counsel had, on the fifth of May, gone to the clerk’s office, to see what bill, if any, had been filed, and was told a bill had been filed by counsel for appellant, and was shown the entry on the general docket, and informed that the papers were at the office of appellant’s counsel: These are all the facts bearing on this question.
The code of 1892, § 463, provides that the clerk shall not suffer any paper so filed to be withdrawn, but by leave of the chancellor, and then only by retaining a copy, to be made *226at the costs of the party obtaining the leave. All the papers and pleadings filed in a cause shall be kept in the same file, and all the files kept in numerical order.” In Cooper v. Frierson, 48 Miss., 310, in construing the clause under the agricultural lien law of 1867, “he must file the contract, or a copy thereof, in the clerk’s office,” the court said: “ The statute is not satisfied by the indorsement on the contract that it was filed, if the creditor withdraws it, and keeps it. The term ‘ filing ’ imports that the paper shall remain with the clerk as a record, subject to be inspected by those who have an interest in it, and to be certified by him as any other paper properly lodged in his office and committed to his custody. It is admitted that Frierson’s contract was not, in this sense, ‘ filed ’ in the clerk’s office. It follows, then, that he has no lien.”
Anderson’s Law Dictionary defines the noun ‘ ‘ file ’ ’ as follows: ‘ ‘At common law, a thread, string, or wire upon which writs or other exhibits are fastened for safe-keeping and ready reference. ” And the definitions of Webster’s International Dictionary and the Century Dictionary are to the same effect. The verb Anderson thus defines: “To leave a paper with an officer for action or preservation;” and he adds: “ In modern practice, the file is the manner adopted for preserving papers. The mode is immaterial. Such papers as are not for transcription into 'records are folded similarly, indorsed with a note or index of their contents, and tied up in a bundle — afile.” Webster quotes Burrill, as follows: “To file a paper on the part of a party is to place it in the official custody of the clerk. To file on the part of the clerk is to indorse upon the paper the date of its reception, and retain it in his office, subject to inspection by whomsoever it may concern. ’ ’ Mr. Freeman, in a learned note to Beebe v. Morrell (Mich.), 15 Am. St. Rep., 295 (42 N. W., 1119), thus sums up: “Filing consists simply in placing the paper in the hands of the clerk, to be preserved and kept by him in his official custody as an archive or record, of which his office becomes thenceforward the only proper re*227pository; and it is his duty, when the paper is thus placed in his custody, or filed with him, to indorse upon it the date of its reception, and retain it in his office, subject to inspection by whomsoever it may concern; and that is what is meant by filing the paper. But, when the law requires a party to file it, it simply means that he shall place it in the official custody of the clerk. This is all that is required of him; and, if the officer omits the duty of indorsing upon it the date of the filing, that will not prejudice the rights of the party. This seems to be universal in its application to all documents, of whatever nature, which the law requires to be filed, ’ ’ citing many authorities, to the following among which we especially refer: Holman v. Chevallier, 14 Tex., 339; Bishop v. Cook, 13 Barb., 329; Phillips v. Beene's Admr., 38 Ala., 251.
In Pfirmann v. Henkel, 1 Ill. App., 145, cited in 7 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (1st series), 962, the case was this: “A certificate and affidavit required to be filed under a limited partnership act, were sent by a messenger to the clerk’s office, and there presented for the purpose of being filed. The deputy clerk, to whom they were presented, instead of retaining them, by mistake added a certificate of the official character of the notary before whom they were acknowledged, and returned them to the messenger, by whom they were carried away. Several months afterwards they were returned to the county clerk’s office and properly filed. As against a creditor whose debt accrued before the papers were returned to the clerk’s office, it was held that the first presentation of them did not constitute a filing. £ £ Filing a paper, ’ ’ said the court, £ £ ex vi termini, means placing and leaving it among the files. The memorandum indorsed by the officer in whose custody it is placed is merely evidence of the filing, and not the filing itself.”
We close the citation of authorities with the result in modern practice, as stated by Mr. Freeman in the note above referred to (page 294, vol. 15, Am. St. Rep.): “The word £file’ is *228derived from the Latin ‘filum, ’ signifying a thread, and its present application is evidently drawn from the ancient practice of placing papers upon a thread or wire for safe-keeping. The origin of the term clearly indicates that the filing of a paper can only be effected by bringing it to the notice of the officer, who anciently put it upon the thread or wire; and accordingly, under the modern practice, the filing of a document is now .generally understood to consist in placing it in the proper ■official custody by the party charged with the duty of filing it, .■and the receiving of it by the officer, to be kept on file. The most accurate definition of filing a paper is that it is its delivery to the proper officer, to be kept on file. ’ ’
In Christian v. O'Neal, 46 Miss., 672 (a case of an attempt to enforce a mechanic’s lien, in which, as in a chancery suit, the filing of the petition is the commencement of the suit), it was said: “If a petition was not on file when this or the writ of June, 1861, was issued, suit was not begun.”
We have quoted thus largely from the authorities, because the determination of this point will be decisive of the case. It is clear that marking the paper ‘‘ filed ’ ’ is not filing it. A paper may be marked filed, and yet not be in fact filed; and a paper may be in fact filed, though not marked filed. And the entry on the general docket does not constitute filing. All these indorsements of the clerk are evidence, but not conclusive evidence, of a filing. Whatever the nature of the paper, it can only be filed by delivering it to the proper officer, to be by him received and dealt with in the manner usual with the particular character of paper. If a deed, for example, or other paper required to be recorded, it must be kept by the clerk until recorded; if-.any paper, in respect to which a statute requires the original or a copy to be filed, the original may not be withdrawn till a •copy has been filed. If a bill in chancery, it must be delivered to the clerk, to be by him received, indorsed, and dealt with in the manner usual with such bills. It must be delivered and recorded with the purpose of having process issue in due course. *229Suits in chancery begin, of course, from the filing of the bill, and at law from the issuance of process, under the code of 1857 (for present practice, see § 670, code of 1892); but just as, under code of 1857, at law, the suit is not begun, though process be issued, unless it is intended that it be served as in regular course (Lamkin v. Nye, 43 Miss., 252), so, in equity, the suit will not be begun unless the bill is delivered with the purpose that the usual steps shall be taken. In the one case, there is no issuance of process, and, in the other, no filing of the bill, within the meaning of the law. Clearly, there was no such filing here. The error of counsel for appellant was in supposing that merely having the bill marked “filed,” and placed in a court wrapper, or docketed, without more, and with the declared purpose that the process should not issue, would constitute filing, because of the rule that in chancery the suit is begun by the filing of the bill. But the filing meant, as we have shown, must be a filing in the legal sense, with the purpose that process and all usual steps shall follow in due course. Lamkin v. Nye, 43 Miss., 252, explains the principle. It is not necessary to decide whether the provision in our statute against withdrawing papers (§463, code 1892) means to prohibit the taking out of a pleading by counsel for examination, except on the terms named in the statute, or whether withdrawal means permanent withdrawal from the files.
It is doubtless true, as suggested by learned counsel, that it is the custom for attorneys to take out pleadings, giving their receipt, and usually no question would arise, as the instances are rare in which the priority of a lien is determined by the filing of a particular pleading. But we desire to be understood as deciding nothing on this precise point, resting our decision in this case on its own facts. We cannot hold that what was done with this bill constituted a filing of it, under the general rule as to the filing of pleadings, nor under the terms of this statute, without deciding that the mere marking upon a pleading of the word ‘ ‘ filed, ’ ’ etc., and a docket entry thereof, and *230a placing momentarily of the bill in a court file, without more, in a cover, where it was at once handed back and taken away, and kept away until another bill had been filed regularly, with the direction not to issue process added, constitute filing; and this, manifestly, is in the face of all principle and of all the authorities. We have gone carefully through all the questions in the case, but it is unnecessary, in the view we have taken, to remark upon them.

Affirmed.