Although section 3186 of the Revised Statutes of Wisconsin may
have enlarged the ordinary equitable action to quiet title and
remove a cloud, the circuit court of the United States, sitting in
that district, may take jurisdiction of a bill properly brought
under its provisions.
A person in possession, claiming under a tax deed under which he
had obtained title may institute such a suit.
The jurisdiction of a suit so instituted is not affected by the
provision in section 1197 of the Revised Statutes of Wisconsin of
1878 conferring for three years a right of action by the grantee in
a tax deed against the owner to bar him and his grantees from
claiming the land, nor by the provisions of section 22, c. 138, of
the Revised Statutes of 1858.
Questions affecting the validity of a tax deed of real estate in
a state must be disposed of in accordance with the interpretation
of the statutes of the state by its highest judicial tribunal.
In Wisconsin, when a tax deed is in due form and recorded in the
proper office, and the lands described therein remain vacant and
unoccupied for three years or more after the recording thereof, the
tax title claimant is deemed to be in constructive possession, the
statute of limitations runs in his favor, and the original owner is
barred from attacking the validity of the tax deed.
The introduction of certain evidence by the appellee
held not to be a waiver of its right to rely on the
statute of limitations.
In considering the acts and proceedings of county boards acting
under Rev.Stats.Wis. of 1858, c. 13, section 28, they must be
liberally construed.
The Revised Statutes of Wisconsin of 1858 provided that the
register of deeds should keep a general index, each page of which
should be divided into eight columns, with heads to the respective
columns, as follows:
"Time of reception. Name of grantor. Name of grantee.
Description of land."
Name of instrument. Volume and page where recorded. To whom
delivered. Fees received;
that such register should make correct entries in said index of
every instrument or writing received by him for record, under the
respective and appropriate heads, entering the names of the
grantors in alphabetical order, and should immediately upon the
receipt of any such instrument or writing for record enter in the
appropriate column and in the order in which it was received the
day, hour, and minute of its reception, and the same should be
considered as recorded
Page 157 U. S. 328
at the time so noted. By section 759 of the Revised Statutes of
1878, it is directed that the division shall be into nine columns,
the first column being headed "Number of instrument," and the
others as in the act of 1858. In this case, the tax deed was
entered in the index under the name of Douglas County, by which it
was issued, although running in the name of the state as well as of
the county. The original index had the eight divisions required by
the statute, but the fourth column, under the heading "Description"
was subdivided as shown in the opinion. This index, becoming
dilapidated was laid aside, and a new one was prepared under the
provisions of the laws of 1860, c. 201, which complied with the
provisions of the statute in that respect, and was substituted for
the original.
Held:
(1) That it was not necessary to insert in the index the name of
the state as a grantor.
(2) That, taking the page of the original index as a whole, no
one could be misled by it who was not willfully misled, and it was
sufficient to set the statute of limitations in operation.
(3) That the new and correct index, having been properly
certified to according to law, was from that date as effective as
the original.
(4) That the appellant could not question the complainant's
title on the ground of informality in the original.
This was a bill in equity, filed, under section 3186 of the
Revised Statutes of the State of Wisconsin, by the Land & River
Improvement Company, a corporation of New Jersey, against Thomas
Bardon, a citizen of the State of Wisconsin, in the Circuit Court
of the United States for the Western District of Wisconsin, to have
certain conveyances declared void, and to quiet the title to the
southeast quarter of section 28, township 49 north, range 14 west,
in Douglas County, Wisconsin.
The section in question is as follows:
"SEC. 3186. Any person having the possession and legal title to
land may institute an action against any other person setting up a
claim thereto, and if the plaintiff shall be able to substantiate
his title to such land, the defendant shall be adjudged to release
to the plaintiff all claim thereto, and to pay the costs of such
action, unless the defendant shall, by answer, disclaim all title
to such land, and give a release thereof to the plaintiff, in which
case he shall recover costs unless the court shall otherwise order.
It shall be sufficient to aver in the complaint in such action the
nature and extent of the plaintiff's estate in such land,
describing it as accurately
Page 157 U. S. 329
as may be, and that he is in possession thereof, and that the
defendant makes some claim thereto, and to demand judgment that the
plaintiff's claim be established against any claim of the
defendant, and that he be forever barred against having or claiming
any right or title to the land adverse to the plaintiff, and the
defendant, if he do not so disclaim and release, may answer any
matter in denial of the plaintiff's claim, title, or possession, or
which, if proved, will establish his own, and judgment shall be
rendered according to the rights of the parties. And any person not
having such title or possession, but being the owner and holder of
any lien or encumbrance on land, shall also have the same right of
action as the owner in fee in possession to test the legality and
validity of any other claim, lien, or encumbrance on such land or
any part thereof."
Complainant purchased the land of one Hiram Hayes, and paid him
therefor $6,400, June 2, 1883, and took a warranty deed of
conveyance and had paid the taxes since that time, and expended on
the land up to 1890, including the taxes of 1889, something over
$12,500. Hayes derived title through two tax deeds issued to him,
one dated September 5, 1870, for the taxes of 1866, recorded
September 7, 1870, and the other issued January 1, 1882, for the
taxes of 1877, and recorded January 3, 1882. The original owner of
the land was one James D. Ray, who conveyed it to James Bardon by
release or quitclaim on March 6, 1878, and James Bardon
subsequently conveyed it to Thomas Bardon, the defendant, for a
nominal consideration. James Bardon testifies that he paid Ray for
his quitclaim deed $100 "and perhaps more," and conveyed his
interest to Thomas without money consideration. The case turned
upon the validity of these tax deeds or either of them, and the
circuit court held that the deed dated September 5, 1870, was
valid; that the statute of limitations had run upon it; that the
original owner was barred, and that complainant's title was good. A
decree was accordingly entered for complainant, to review which
this appeal is prosecuted. The opinion of the circuit court will be
found in 45 F. 706.
Page 157 U. S. 330
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts in the
foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
We remarked in
Gormley v. Clark, 134 U.
S. 338,
134 U. S. 348,
that while the rule was well settled that remedies in the courts of
the United States at common law or in equity, according to the
essential character of the case, are uncontrolled in that
particular by the practice of the state courts, yet an enlargement
of equitable rights by state statutes may be administered by the
circuit courts of the United States, as well as by the courts of
the state, and when the case is one of a remedial proceeding
essentially of an equitable character, there can be no objection to
the exercise of the jurisdiction.
Broderick
Will Case, 21 Wall. 503,
88 U. S. 520;
Holland v. Challen, 110 U. S. 15,
110 U. S. 25;
Frost v. Spitley, 121 U. S. 552,
121 U. S.
557.
Notwithstanding the statute may have enlarged the ordinary
equitable action to quiet title and to remove a cloud, the circuit
court had jurisdiction to award the relief prayed if the bill were
properly brought under the section in question, and, as that
section provided that any person having the possession and legal
title might institute the suit, we perceive no reason why the
complainant could not, if it were in possession, as is conceded,
and had obtained the legal title through either of the tax deeds, a
matter to be hereafter examined.
Section 35 of chapter 22 of the General Laws of Wisconsin of
1859, reenacted as section 1197 of the Revised Statutes of 1878
(Gen.Laws Wis. 1859, p. 30; Rev.Stat.Wis. 1878, p. 383, c. 50),
provided that the grantee in a tax deed might at any time within
three years after its date commence an action against the owner or
any person claiming under him for the purpose of barring such owner
or his grantees from all right, title, interest, or claim in the
land conveyed, and it
Page 157 U. S. 331
is argued that that remedy was exclusive, and, not having been
availed of by Hayes, that complainant cannot maintain this suit.
But there is nothing in the statute to show that the remedy
existing during three years after the date of the tax deed was
intended to contract the jurisdiction and practice in equity,
independently of statute, in respect of bills to quiet title, or to
exclude the general remedy given by section 3186 (a remedy existing
in Wisconsin since 1858, § 29, c. 141, Rev.Stat. 1858) in
favor of a person having the legal title and actual possession,
though that legal title depended on a tax deed.
Stridde v.
Saroni, 21 Wis. 173;
Grimmer v. Sumner, 21 Wis. 179;
Wals v. Grosvenor, 31 Wis. 681;
Grignon v. Black,
76 Wis. 674.
Nor can we regard the position of appellant that this suit was
barred under section 22 of chapter 138 of the Revised Statutes of
1858 as tenable. That section provided that "an action for relief
not hereinbefore provided for must be commenced within ten years
after the cause of action shall have accrued," and the enumerated
actions apparently did not include this suit. But this alleged
limitation was not set up in the answer or the question raised in
any way, so far as appears, in the circuit court, and if so, comes
too late. And apart from that, actual possession was not taken
until October 13, 1889, and the bill was filed November 1,
1889.
We proceed, then, to the objections urged to the validity of the
tax deed of September 5, 1870, and these must be disposed of, in
accordance with the interpretation of the statues of Wisconsin, by
the highest judicial tribunal of that state. As was observed in
Lewis v. Monson, 151 U. S. 545,
151 U. S.
549:
"No question is more clearly a matter of local law than one
arising under the tax laws. Tax proceedings are carried on by the
state for the purpose of collecting its revenue, and the various
steps which shall be taken in such proceedings, the force and
effect to be given to any act of the taxing officers, the results
to follow the nonpayment of taxes, and the form efficacy of the tax
deed, are all subjects which the state has power to prescribe, and
peculiarly and vitally affecting its wellbeing. The determination
of any questions affecting them is a matter
Page 157 U. S. 332
primarily belonging to the courts of the state, and the national
tribunals universally follow their rulings except in cases where it
is claimed that some right protected by the federal Constitution
has been invaded."
Under the laws of Wisconsin, the owner of land sold for taxes
might, at any time within three years from date of the certificate
of sale, redeem the same in the manner prescribed, and in like
manner redeem at any time before the tax deed executed upon such
sale was recorded. Gen.Laws Wis. 1859, c. 22, §§ 18, 19;
Rev.Stat. 1878, § 1165.
By section 25, c. 22, of the Laws of 1859, carried forward into
section 1176 of the Revised Statutes of 1878, it was provided that
the tax deed,
"duly witnessed and acknowledged, shall be
prima facie
evidence of the regularity of all the proceedings, from the
valuation of the land by the assessor inclusive up to the execution
of the deed, and may be recorded with like effect as other
conveyances of land."
Section 5 of chapter 138 of the Laws of 1861 provided that no
action should be commenced by the former owner to recover
possession of land which had been sold and conveyed for nonpayment
of taxes or to avoid the deed unless the action should be commenced
within three years next after the recording of the deed. Rev.Stat.
1878, § 1188.
By section 32, c. 22 of the Laws of 1859, it was enacted that no
action should be maintained by the grantee in a tax deed or anyone
claiming under him to recover the possession of the land described
therein unless such action should be brought within three years
next after the date of the recording of such deed, or unless such
grantee or those claiming under him shall have paid the taxes
assessed on such land for five years next after the date of such
deed, or unless such grantee or those claiming under him had been
in actual continual possession of said land, claiming title, for
three years previous to the expiration of five years next after the
date of such deed, Rev.Stat. 1878, § 1187.
The rule may be accepted as thoroughly settled by the decisions
of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin that when a tax deed is in due
form and recorded in the proper office, and the
Page 157 U. S. 333
lands described therein remain vacant and unoccupied for three
years or more after the recording thereof, the tax title claimant
is deemed to be in the constructive possession, the statute runs in
his favor, and the original owner is barred is barred from
attacking its validity.
Geekie v. Kirby Carpenter Co.,
106 U. S. 379;
Gunnison v. Hoehne, 18 Wis. 268;
Lawrence v.
Kenney, 32 Wis. 281;
St. Croix Co. v. Ritchie, 73
Wis. 409;
Dupen v. Wetherby, 79 Wis. 203;
Lander v.
Bromley, 79 Wis. 372;
Hotson v. Wetherby, 60 N.W.
423;
Oconto Co. v. Jerrard, 46 Wis. 317, 327. In the last
case, Chief Justice Ryan said:
"It has been uniformly held in a multitude of cases that, as
against the grantee of a tax deed, the statute puts at rest all
objections against the validity of the tax proceedings, whether
resting on mere irregularity or going to the groundwork of the tax.
The statute makes a deed valid on its face
prima facie
evidence, as soon as executed, of the regularity of all the
proceedings, from the assessment of the lands, inclusive, to the
execution of the deed. And the effect of all the decisions is that
when the statute has run in favor of the grantee, the deed becomes
conclusive to the same extent.
See Edgerton v. Bird, 6
Wis. 527, and the cases collected in the note of Vilas and Bryant;
Lawrence v. Kenney, 32 Wis. 281;
Wood v. Meyer,
36 Wis. 308."
Here, the land was vacant and unoccupied for more than three
years from the time of the record of the tax deed, and if that deed
was not void upon its face, and was properly recorded, it would
follow that under these decisions, Hayes obtained the legal title.
With the record of the deed, the time of redemption ended and the
period of limitation began. Before the deed was recorded, the owner
might tender the redemption money, and defeat the tax title, and at
any time within three years after record, he might bring suit to
impeach the tax deed or make defense to suit against him by proof
of defects in the proceedings upon which it was based. But after
the expiration of three years, the statute purged the tax
proceedings of all defects, and the deed could only be attacked on
the ground of want of power to levy and sell by reason of
Page 157 U. S. 334
payment of taxes, lack of jurisdiction in the taxing officers,
or the like.
On behalf of the appellant, a great variety of objections is
urged to the validity of the tax deeds and proceedings, many of
which are not open to consideration if the deed was not void on its
face and was duly recorded. It is, indeed, contended that appellee,
by the introduction of certain evidence, waived its right to rely
on the statue of limitations and the conclusive effect of the deed,
but we do not think this contention can be sustained. The evidence
referred to was adduced in rebuttal or in support of complainant's
general equities, and although formal defects in the proceedings
may have been disclosed, we cannot hold that the door for an attack
thereon was thereby intentionally opened which the statute had
effectually closed, still less in a case where the right, as well
as the remedy had been extinguished, if complainant's position were
as claimed.
Leffingwell v.
Warren, 2 Black 599. We regard the deed as valid on
its face, and cannot accept the suggestion that this is not so
because too literally following the statutory form. The recital as
to redemption was:
"And whereas it further appears, as the fact is, that the owner
or owners, or claimant or claimants, of said lands has or have not
redeemed from said sale the lands which were sold as aforesaid, and
said lands are now unredeemed from such sale. . . ."
The meaning is clear that there had been no redemption by the
owner or owners, or claimant or claimants.
But it is insisted that the tax proceedings in question were
void for want of jurisdiction in the taxing officers. There,
proceedings were carried on by the officers of the Town of
Superior, and appellant proved that in 1859, the Town of Pokegama
was organized by the county board, and included township No. 49,
range 14 W., in which the land in controversy was situated, and
that the Town of Pokegama was duly organized and represented upon
the county board in 1859 and 1860. But it appeared that in 1859,
two towns were set off by the board of county supervisors -- one,
township 48, range 14, to be known as "Nemadji;" and the other,
township 49, range
Page 157 U. S. 335
14, to be known as "Pokegama" -- and that on January 19, 1861, a
resolution was passed by the county board as follows:
"That the towns of Pokegama and Nemadji be vacated, the above
order to take effect and be in force on and after the first day of
April next, and the board do further order and determine that the
next town meeting shall be held in the Town of Superior to elect
three supervisors that shall be the county and town board of
supervisors."
While not accurately worded in that respect, the obvious
intention was that the territory of these two towns should become
part of the Town of Superior, and the record of town and board
meetings thereafter down to a point of time subsequent to these tax
proceedings establish the continued exercise of jurisdiction over
the whole territory.
By section 28 of chapter 13 of the Revised Statutes of 1858,
power was conferred upon county boards "to set off, organize,
vacate, and change the boundaries of towns in their respective
counties." And to their action as embodied in this resolution, it
will not do, as is well said in
Hark v. Gladwell, 49 Wis.
172, to apply
"nice verbal criticism and strict parliamentary distinctions,
because the business is transacted generally by plain men, not
familiar with parliamentary law. Therefore their proceedings must
be liberally construed in order to get at the real intent and
meaning of the body."
By chapter 54 of the General Laws of Wisconsin of 1883 (vol. 1,
p. 49), it was provided, among other things, that
"every town shall be considered and held to be and to have been
duly organized which has exercised or shall hereafter exercise the
powers, functions and franchises of a town for a period of two
years."
The statute further enacted that the validity of any order or
ordinance purporting to organize or set off any new town, or to
change the boundaries of any existing town or towns, might be
tested by certiorari or any other proper proceeding brought
directly for the purpose of vacating such order or ordinance in a
court of competent jurisdiction at any time within two years after
the date of such order or ordinance, or within sixty days after the
publication of the act if two years had already expired, and that
no such order or ordinance
Page 157 U. S. 336
should be otherwise questioned than directly. This recognized
the general rule of the common law on the subject of collateral
attack, and we are of opinion that the corporate standing of the
Town of Superior as including the other two towns cannot be thus
questioned after the years of corporate action shown by the
evidence.
Austrian v. Guy, 21 F. 500.
Dismissing the numerous other objections discussed, such as the
admission of the deeds in evidence without proof of execution, the
alleged payment of the taxes for 1866, the custody of the tax
records, the official character of the deputy county clerk, the
validity of his appointment, etc., as either not properly raised or
arising on the record or as not sufficiently well founded to call
for observations upon them, although they have all been carefully
examined, we are brought to the point which the circuit court
regarded as the principal question in the case; namely, the
objection made to the elder tax deed that the record thereof was
void because not properly indexed as the statute required.
By sections 140, 142, and 143 of chapter 13 of the Revised
Statutes of 1858, it was provided that the register of deeds should
have the custody of all books, records, deeds, etc., deposited or
kept in his office; should record or cause to be recorded
correctly, and in a plain and distinct handwriting, in suitable
books, all deeds, mortgages, maps, instruments, and writings
authorized by law to be recorded in his office. That he should keep
a general index, each page of which should be divided into eight
columns, with heads to the respective columns, as follows:
"Time of Reception. Name of Grantor. Name of Grantee.
Description of Land. Name of Instrument. Volume and Page Where
Recorded. To Whom Delivered. Fees Received."
That such register should make correct entries in said index of
every instrument or writing received by him for record, under the
respective and appropriate heads, entering the names of the
grantors in alphabetical order, and should immediately, upon the
receipt of any such instruments or writing for record, enter in the
appropriate column, and in the order in which it was received, the
day, hour, and minute of its reception,
Page 157 U. S. 337
and the same should be considered as recorded at the time so
noted. By section 759 of the Revised Statutes of 1878, it is
directed that the division shall be into nine columns, the first
column being headed "Number of Instrument" and the others as in the
act of 1858.
In
Lombard v. Culbertson, 59 Wis. 433, it was said that
the entries in the general index are the material things in
determining whether a deed has been so recorded as to be notice to
subsequent purchasers, prior decisions to the same effect being
cited, and as to a claimant under a tax deed it was held that
"he is clearly required to show that it was so recorded as to be
constructive notice, at least, to the plaintiff that he held such
tax title, and intended to rely upon such deed to defeat
plaintiff's title. He must record it the same way to set the
statute of limitations running in his favor, and against the
plaintiff, as he would be required to do in the case of a deed or
mortgage to defeat the right of a subsequent purchaser for value
without notice."
The decisions are numerous, and many are cited by counsel upon
the question whether, in recording tax deeds, the general index and
the record at large can be relied on to help out defects existing
in either.
In this case, the tax deed was entered in the index under the
name of "Douglas County," by which it was issued, although running
in the name of the state as well as of the county, and it is
contended that as a tax deed containing the name of the county as
grantor, but omitting the name of the state as grantor, is void
upon its face,
Easley v. Whipple, 57 Wis. 485;
Haseltine v. Hewitt, 61 Wis. 121, and that if the index
showed a deed void on its face, though it was not so in fact, the
falsity of the index would not be cured by the actual and correct
spreading of the deed upon the record, therefore this deed should
be held void. But it was distinctly ruled in
Hall v.
Baker, 74 Wis. 118, 131, that all that is required by the
provision regarding the general index is to give the name of the
county only, and not the state, as grantor, and Chief Justice Cole
said:
"A person searching the record for a tax deed would naturally
look for the name
Page 157 U. S. 338
of the county which gave it, and would not be likely to look for
the name of the state as grantor. It would be laborious to find the
proper deed under the name of the state, considering the many
counties in the state."
It appeared that none of the tax deeds of record in the
register's office of Douglas County, Wisconsin, had been indexed
under the name of the State of Wisconsin, either under the letter S
or under the letter W, in the index, and that the respective
registers of deeds had been and were accustomed to enter such deeds
under the latter D, with the name of Douglas County as grantor.
We entirely concur in the ruling of the Supreme Court of
Wisconsin, and it is decisive of the question made.
We do not understand from the arguments of counsel that it was
contended in the court below, or is contended here, that the date
of filing, "1870, September 7, 3 p.m.," the name of the grantor,
"Douglas County, per Clerk," and of the grantee, "Hayes, Hiram,"
did not appear upon the original index, although, in his brief in
reply, counsel for appellant criticizes the language of the
district judge in disposing of the case as if he had therein
proceeded upon the ground that a part of the index was the whole of
it. We assume that the original index had the eight divisions of
the statute, but that the fourth column, under the heading
"Description," was subdivided, and that all after the first three
statutory divisions ran as exhibited in the photographic copy
introduced below, and presented at the bar, which is as
follows:
image:a
The objection appears to be that in the column for the
description, the figures 28, 49, 14, were not under the subheadings
of the fourth division, but so crowded towards the right as to be
so incorrect and misleading as to invalidate the index in respect
of that entry. We do not think so. We agree with the circuit court
that, taking the page as a whole, anyone who would be misled by it
would be misled willfully, and that the index furnished all the
information that an ordinarily prudent man would want to send him
to the full record of the deed. The entry would be read at once as
the southwest quarter or half of section 28, township 49 north, of
range 14
Page 157 U. S. 339
west, recorded in volume one of Tax Deeds, on pages 378 and 379,
and delivered to H. Hayes, who paid the charge of $1. The
designation of the range should have been west instead of east, but
the owner or any person desirous of obtaining information about the
land would know that range 14 west was in Douglas County, and that
range 14 east was not. At all events, he could refer at once, if he
had any doubt, to volume one of tax deeds, pages 378 and 379.
It was said in
Oconto Company v. Jerrard, 46 Wis.
322:
"The statutory direction is substantially complied with by a
reference to another book in the same office. No sane man searching
the general index for instruments affecting any land would
disregard such a reference, and it would be a severe technicality
to avoid the registration of a deed for such a failure in the duty
of the register with such present and easy means given on the face
of the index of obtaining the information which the index itself
should have given. The cruelty of such a technicality would be
apparent in any instrument except a tax deed, and, as already seen,
that can impair registry of a tax deed impairs the registry of any
deed."
Even if a more rigid rule were applied, we should say that in
any view, the index was sufficient to set the statute of
limitations in operation.
But it further appeared that under chapter 201 of the Laws of
1860 (Laws 1860, p. 178), providing that when public records should
become dilapidated, it should be the duty of the board of
supervisors to cause the same to be transcribed and certified, the
original index in the register's office was transcribed under
certain resolutions of the Board of Supervisors of Douglas County
of May 28, 1872, and July 2, 1873, and that the record was
completed November 9, 1875. It is admitted that the index as thus
reproduced is not open to the objections raised.
In
Hotson v. Wetherby, 60 N.W. 423, it was held
that
"it is well settled that an omission to make proper entries in
the general index at the time the deed is spread upon the record
may be removed after such recording by making the proper entries,
and, when so made, the entry will be good from
Page 157 U. S. 341
that date, and it will not be necessary to record the deed again
at length."
And in that case, and in
Lombard v. Culbertson, 59 Wis.
433, the doctrine is laid down that the register of deeds may
correct a record of this own motion.
The law of 1860 directed the officer making the transcript
to
"certify that he has carefully compared the matters therein
contained and written, and that the same is a correct and literal
copy of the book from which the same was transcribed, naming such
book,"
and enacted that
"such copy record, so certified, is hereby declared a public
record, and as such shall in all respects have the same effect as
the book from which the same was transcribed."
The resolution of May 28, 1872, provided that, after the indices
should be transcribed,
"the old volumes shall be carefully preserved as the records of
the county, and the new copy shall be for general use until the
legislature shall authorize the use of the copies as records."
The resolution of July 2, 1873, requested the register to
complete the general index as authorized May 28, 1872, and to
examine and correct the index and copy in time for legislation by
the next legislature.
By chapter 284 of the Laws of 1875, approved March 5, 1875 (Laws
1875, p. 541), authorizing the county board of supervisors to
replace worn or dilapidated records, it was provided that the
officer
"shall carefully compare the copy so made with the original, and
shall certify thereon that he has carefully compared said copy with
such original, and that said copy is a correct transcript from such
original and of the whole thereof, and that the same has been so
transcribed by him pursuant to the resolution of the board of
supervisors of the said county specifying in the certificate the
date of the passage of such resolution,"
and that
"the copy so made shall have the same effect as the original,
and be evidence in all cases where such original would be evidence
and shall be in its legal effect in all respects considered as an
original record in such office."
The certificate to the copy in this instance, under date
November 9, 1875, was by the register, who certified to this
effect:
"I have carefully compared this copy of 'Grantor's Index' with
the original in this office, and that said copy is a
Page 157 U. S. 342
correct transcript from such original and of the whole thereof,
being up to and including the 31st day of December, A.D . 1871, and
that the same has been transcribed by me pursuant to the resolution
of the board of supervisors of said county passed May 28th,
1872."
After the index was thus reproduced, the original was kept in
the vault, and the certified copy was in common use from November
9, 1875. It would seem that the new volume was from that date as
effective as an original, and that the register of deeds would have
the same power to correct mistakes in the latter as in the former.
At all events, under the circumstances, appellant occupied no
position to question the title of complainant as a
bona
fide purchaser in 1883, on the ground of informality in the
original index.
Decree affirmed.