Judges: Davis
Filed Date: 9/5/1887
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Among other duties, the registers of deeds in their respective counties are charged with the custody and safe keeping of the books in which are contained the records of the deeds, mortgages, and other instruments required by law to be registered.
These are the public records of the county, and all persons have a right to know, in fact are conclusively presumed to know, their contents.
All persons have a right, therefore, to inspect them, and it is the duty of the register, not only to record all instruments required by law to be registered, but to keep his office open, and be present "in person or by deputy," for such time as will afford ample opportunity to the public to inspect the records, and if necessary, the board of county commissioners may designate the times at which he shall attend. For his services he is compensated by fees fixed by law.
All persons have the right to inspect these records freely and (23) without charge, and all persons who may desire to do so, can get copies by paying the prescribed fees.
It is the duty of the register to keep them open to the inspection and examination of all who may desire to inspect and examine them, and for this there is no fee; it is his duty to furnish copies to all who require them and will pay the fees allowed. Perhaps, in addition to this, so long and so universal has been the custom, that it may be said to be the right of lawyers, and others needing them, to take such reasonable memoranda as may not interfere with the rights and duties of the register, and we have never known this refused. We know of no law that requires the register, in this respect, to do more.
No one has the right, to use the language of the learned judge in the court below, "to make copies or abstracts of the entire record of the office, including those instruments in which the person so desiring to make abstracts, etc., is not at the time interested, but simply anticipates that he will at some time be interested, and abstracts of which he desires to make for merely speculative purposes. This might have the effect to transfer from the register's office to the office of the attorney, who might have a place of business more conveniently located, a large part of the business and emoluments of the register of deeds, as no one would have a right to make copies of records in the office of the register, except upon payment of the fees allowed by law for copies, and this would deprive the register of the emoluments of his office. In this view, the plaintiff would be entitled to every facility for the legitimate prosecution of his business by access to the records for the examination of instruments registered, but the court is not satisfied of his right to make an abstract of all transfers of real and personal property for the year 1886, without *Page 52 having an interest in the same for the prosecution of his business or paying any fee therefore."
(24) If he has the right to make abstracts of all the records of 1886, he has the right to make them for all the years; if he has the right to copy or make abstracts of parts of the records, it may be the material parts, he has the right to copy the whole. If it is the right of one, it is the right of all. Once concede the right, and where will it end? The records of this Court, of all the courts, of the executive departments of every public office in the State, would be subject to the same right in every individual in the State, and, aside from the inconvenience, and perhaps intolerable annoyance and loss of just emoluments to public officers, the danger and risk which they might incur in possible injury to the records, affecting public and private rights, make it manifest that such right cannot exist. It is not the right of all — it is not the right of one.
It is the first time, so far as our researches go, that this or any similar question has been before the courts of this State, but the identical question was before the Supreme Court of Michigan, Webber v.Townley,
In that case, conceding the right of the plaintiffs to inspect the records, Marston, C. J., says: "It is a request for the law to grant them the right to inspect the record of the title to every person's land in the county, and obtain copies or abstracts thereof, to enable them hereafter, for a fee or reward, to furnish copies to such as may desire the same, whether interested or not, and irrespective of the object or motive such persons may have in view in seeking such information. In other words, the plaintiffs ask the right of copying or abstracting the entire record of the county for private and speculative purposes, they having no other interest whatever therein." Again he says: "As the use of the (25) public records cannot thus be handed over to the indiscriminate use of those not interested in their future preservation, how shall the register protect them from mutilation? This he cannot do personally, without neglecting his official duties, and if he must employ clerks, or appoint deputies for such purposes, at whose expense shall it be, the law having made no provision for such emergencies?"
To the same purport is the reasoning, supported by the authorities cited, in the case of Brewer v. Watson,
It was there held that the attorney for the collector had a right toinspect the settlement of accounts in the Auditor's books, in which his *Page 53 client was interested, and it was put upon the ground of direct interest in the matter contained in the record.
The cases of Bryan v. Comrs.,
The fifth and sixth allegations of the complaint were not insisted upon in this Court. There is no error.
No error. Affirmed.
(26)