Court Opinion

ID: 5469637
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 20:26:47.225915+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:33:15.379155
License: Public Domain

By the court, Miller, Justice.
The question raised in this case involves the construction of the provisions of the Revised Statutes in reference to the time required for the docketing of judgments.
Second Revised Statutes, 285, section 54, as amended by Session Laws of 1860, chapter 276, provides that clerks of counties and of courts of record in this state, and the register of deeds in the city and county of New York, shall respectively keep open their several offices, for the transaction of public business, every day in the year, except Sundays and such other days as are and shall be declared by law to be holidays, in the city of New York, from nine o’clock in the forenoon to four o’clock in the afternoon, and in each of the other counties of the state, between the thirty-first day of March and the first day of October, from eight o’clock in the forenoon to six o’clock in the afternoon, and between the thirtieth day of September and the first day of April, from nine o'clock in the forenoon to five o'clock in the afternoon.
*184There are hut two reported cases in this state which have any bearing upon the precise point now considered.
In Simon agt. Staats (1 Cow. 592), where all the judgments were docketed before nine o’clock a. m., it was decided that among several judgments, that in which the record is first filed takes preference. And to determine this, the court will inquire into the fractional parts of' a day. The case was decided in 1823, and before office hours were fixed by statute, and can therefore scarcely be regarded as decisive upon a question arising under a statute since enacted.
In Warden agt. Mason (10 W. R. 573), the question appears to have been raised and considered. The court, Sutherland, J., presiding, observed, “ that a party cannot gain a preference by filing a record before the hour of nine o'clock in the morning, that being the earliest hour at which the clerks of our court are required by statute to open their offices for the transaction of business, and that all records delivered at an earlier hour must be considered as filed at the hour of nine.” The case is not very fully reported, but sufficient appears to show that the point was under consideration.
The ninth rule of the supreme court makes provision that judgments shall only be entered and docketed in the offices of the clerks of the several counties, within the hours during which by law they are required to keep open their offices for the transaction of business. It would appear that the court designed by this rule to carry out the provisions of the Revised Statutes in the practice. I am also inclined to think that the authorities cited above tend to establish that all judgments docketed out of office hours must be considered as docketed within the office hours prescribed by the statute.
.It is insisted, however, by the counsel for the judgment creditors, whose judgments were docketed out of office hours, that they became a lien the moment they were dock*185eted in the county clerk’s office, according to the express provisions of the statute (Code, § 282 ; 2 R. S. 359, §§ 4, 5 [3d ed. 3 R. S. 637]; 2 R. S. p. 360, §§ 14, 15); that the provision first cited has no bearing on the question, and though mandatory as to these hours, it does not prohibit a clerk from keeping his office open at other hours. The object of the statute was doubtless in part to compel the clerks of the counties to be at their offices during certain hours of the day for the transaction of business ; but I am of the opinion that it was also designed to go a little beyond this, by prescribing rules and regulations which should regulate and control the office where the business was transacted. The record must be filed and the judgment docketed at the office; and there is certainly great propriety in making provisions as to the time within which the daily business should be done. Were it otherwise, it would to some extent vest a county clerk with power to determine the priority of liens. As there is no compulsory provision for the transaction of business beyond the hours fixed by law, he might docket judgments for some and refuse to do it for others; thus exercising a discretion dangerous to be intrusted, and liable to be abused. All this could be done with impunity, as it would be no good cause or legal ground of complaint that he declined to open his office for the transaction of business outside of office hours. I think that this provision of the statute was intended to remedy such a difficulty, and to place safeguards around the office and the officer so as to prevent abuse. If the intention was to give the clerk a discretionary power in this respect, the statute should have further provided that the clerk should be at liberty to open the office for the transaction of business at any other time he thought proper to do so. The failure to give such a power must be regarded as somewhat important.
It is said that the next section (2 R. S. 285, § 55, 5th ed. vol. 3, p. 475), requiring sheriffs to keep open their *186offices during the same hours, does not postpone the lien of an execution levied or received after those hours. It appears to me that it is a complete answer to this point to say, that it is not necessary that an execution should be received or levied at the office ; whereas no records are in force until delivered and filed in the county clerk’s office. It is also observable that the phraseology of the last section is somewhat different from the previous one. The words “ for the transaction of business” are omitted; thus very properly conceding what is well understood, that business with the sheriff may be transacted at other places besides the office, and outside of office hours. The use of the language employed in the one section, and its omission in the other, is of singular significance, and clearly indicates that the legislature intended to make a difference. If they only meant to fix the hours when the clerk should keep open the office, the omission would have carried out such intention. They did so as to the sheriff, where the place of business was not important; and I think, in making an express provision for the transaction of business on certain days and within certain hours, they intended to say that business should be done at ho other time.
I am better satisfied with this construction, because there is an eminent appropriateness in having some established rules in reference to a matter of so much consequence. The policy of the statute was to prevent any uncertainty ; and the interest of creditors demands that rights so important should not be left to the discretion or judgment of a public officer who is not made accountable for an error in this particular. By the interpretation given, there is no chance of abuse ; vigilant creditors stand upon precisely the same footing, and no advantage can be derived except what each one is fairly entitled to and the law gives. Such, no doubt, was the intention of the legislature.
The judgments must be considered as docketed at the *187same time, and judgment rendered that the plaintiffs Hamilton and Wing restore the money to the sheriff, and that the sheriff divide it, together with the sum of $178.62 remaining in his hands, among all the judgments unpaid, pro rata. As the question is a new one, the costs of the parties should be paid out of the fund.