
    William Himmel, Doing Business as The Himmel Dress Co., Respondent, v. The Mutual Life Insurance Company, Appellant.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department,
    January, 1916.)
    Judgments — of Municipal Court of city of New York — docketing of — when judgment deemed complete.
    Before a judgment of the Municipal Court of the city of New York can be deemed complete it must be indexed in the current docket books as prescribed by the court rules, and an appeal duly taken from a judgment within twenty days after the same has been indexed is in time though several months have elapsed since it was docketed.
    Motion to dismiss an appeal from the Municipal Court of the city of New York, borough of Manhattan, first district.
    Frederick L. Allen, for appellant.
    Theodore Arnold, for respondent.
   Per Curiam.

This is a motion to dismiss an appeal from a judgment of the Municipal Court upon the ground that the notice of appeal was served more than twenty days after the entry of judgment. ' The facts are undisputed. The case was tried in June, 1915, and submitted to the trial justices for decision July 7, 1915. Some time prior to July twelfth the case was decided, and the papers handed to the clerk of the court for entry of the judgment.'' The judgment was in favor of the plaintiff and the defendant’s attorney repeatedly inquired at the clerk’s office, both in person and by telephone, as to the disposition of the case and was informed that no decision had been rendered. On August thirteenth the defendant’s attorney wrote a letter to the clerk asking if a judgment had been rendered and the letter was returned to him with a notation thereon to the effect that there was no record of any- decision in the case. On September eighth the parties, by their respective attorneys, entered into a stipulation setting the case down for a new trial, the stipulation reciting that ‘ judgment not having been rendered herein and that more than twenty days have expired since said 7th day of July, 1915, etc.”. On September twenty-third the parties appeared in court, but, the case was not on the calendar, no papers having been found on file. On November 22, 1915, the attorney for the defendant was informed by the clerk that the papers had been found that morning and that in the docket book there appeared to be an entry of the judgment on July 12, 1915, but that the same had not been indexed in the index book of judgments. Thereafter the defendant made a motion in the Municipal Court for an order declaring that the judgment had not been entered until November 22, 1915. This motion was granted to the extent of directing the clerk of the Municipal Court to note on the docket book that the judgment had not been indexed until November 22, 1915. The defendant served a notice of appeal from the judgment within the twenty days from November 22, 1915, and the plaintiff claiming that the time to appeal began to run from the time of the entry in the docket asks that the appeal be dismissed. Section 310 of the former Municipal Court Act provided that an appeal must be taken within twenty days after ‘ the entry of the judgment, order or final order in the docket.” A similar provision has been carried in the Municipal Court Code. The former act required the clerk to keep a docket in which, among other things, should be entered the judgment of the court, its amount and the cost of the action. ” ■ It also provided that the clerk must keep an index of his docket in which must be entered the names of the parties. The present Municipal Court prescribes that the clerk must “ keep a docket in such manner as the rules prescribe.” And the rules adopted by the board of justices require that the clerk shall keep the following- books: “ (a) Books to be known as current docket books *" -* .* . (b) * * * (c) An alphabetical index of all judgments entered in the current docket books on which an execution is issuable. * * * The judgment shall be indexed in' the name of the judgmentrdebtor and the name or names of the judgment-creditor shall be entered opposite to the judgment-debtor. * * * ” Under any of the foregoing provisions it will be seen that the indexing of a judgment is one of the most important elements of its entry and there being no provision in the Municipal Court for service of a copy of the judgment or notice of its entry, in order to limit the time in which an appeal. may be taken, the necessity for such indexing before a judgment can be deemed complete appears almost essential. The courts have held that if the clerk omits to properly index a judgment it does not become a lien upon property. Buchan v. Sumner, 2 Barb. Ch. 165 ; Lefevre v. Phillips, 81 Hun 352. See also Bernstein v. Schoenfeld, 81 App. Div. 175. For the purposes of an appeal we hold that under the peculiar circumstances of this case the judgment, was not properly entered until it was indexed and that the appeal in this case was therefore brought in time and should not be dismissed.

Present: Guy, Page & Philbin, JJ.

Motion denied.  