The opinion of the court was delivered by
McIver, A. J.The object of this action is to recover the value of a bale of cotton, sold to the defendant by one Morris, upon which the plaintiff claimed to have a lien, by virtue of an. agreement in writing, between himself and said Morris, which, it is insisted, amounts to what is commonly called an agricultural lien, under the provisions of the act of March 4th, 1878. Iff Stat. 410. This agreement, bearing date January 13th, 1879, a copy of which is set out in the case, was received in the clerk's-office on January 17th, 1879, and so marked, and was indexed by the name of the parties, the amount of the advances and the date of its entry in that office; but as soon as it was indexed it: was taken out of the office by the plaintiff and remained in his-possession until the trial in the court below. The action was originally instituted before a trial justice, and, he having rendered judgment for the plaintiff, the defendant gave notice of' appeal to the Circuit Court upon various grounds, which are fully set out in the case. That court proceeded to hear the casede novo, and, upon such hearing, rendered judgment for the defendant, and from that judgment this appeal has been taken.
Various exceptions were taken to the rulings and the final-decision of the Circuit judge, and the questions thus raised will be considered in their order. The first question is as to the right-of the defendant, who was the appellant in the Circuit Court, to-have a trial there de novo. It is contended here that as the grounds of appeal from the judgment of the trial justice raised *39questions of law only, the case could not be tried de novo in the Circuit Court. This position is based, as we understand it, upon the language of the proviso to Section 369 of the code of procedure. That section provides that on appeal from a judgment of a trial justice, where the amount in controversy exceeds the sum of $10, as it does here, “ a new trial shall be had in the Circuit Court in the following appellate cases: 1. When the judgment was rendered upon an issue of law joined between the parties. 2. When it was rendered upon an issue of fact joined between parties, whether the defendant was present at the trial or not.” Then follows the proviso, containing a mere permission,to appellant to waive his right to a new trial, by stating in his notice of appeal that such appeal is taken upon questions of law only. The only person who can avail himself of this permission is the appellant, and unless he does so in the manner prescribed-by the statute, the code declares that “ a new trial shall be had ” even-in cases “ where the judgment was rendered upon an issue of law joined between the parties.” We are unable to perceive the force of the argument drawn from the fact that Section 370 of the code requires the appellant to serve a notice of appeal “ stating the grounds" upon which the appeal is founded. The provis-ions of this section apply to every case in which there is an appeal, and it is manifest that there are some cases in which, upon appeal, the trial must be de novo, we do not see why this requirement should operate, in this case, to abridge or deny the right of the appellant, in the Circuit Court, to a new trial there.
The next position taken, is, that even if the trial should be de novo the parties should have been restricted to the issues raised before the trial justice, and that the Circuit Court erred in permitting the defendant to offer additional testimony to that adduced before the trial justice. We do not see the force of this objection. When a new trial is had, it seems to us that it should be conducted just as if there had been no previous trial, and either party is at liberty to offer any competent testimony pertinent to the issues involved in the case. Here there were no formal pleadings before the trial justice. The plaintiff alleged that he was entitled to recover the value of the bale of cotton in question, and this being denied by the defendant, any testimony *40tending to defeat the plaintiff’s claim was certainly pertinent to the issue which the court was called upon to try, and, if otherwise competent, was clearly admissible, even though it may not have been offered at the original hearing before the trial justice.
The next question to be considered is, whether the paper in question, assuming it to be an agricultural lien, would authorize the bringing of this action; in other words, whether the lien provided for by the statute invests the lienee with such a right of possession in the property covered by the lien, as would entitle him to recover the value of such property from an innocent purchaser -who had previously disposed of it. An agricultural lien, as it is commonly called, is the creature of the statute, and to ascertain its nature and the rights which it confers, resort must be had to the terms of the statute. Looking into the statute we do not find that it purports to give such a paper the incidents of a chattel mortgage. It does not confer upon the lienee the right to the possession of the property covered by it even after default and while the property still remains in the possession of the lienor, and, certainly, not while it is in the possession of an innocent purchaser. The remedy which the statute provides is ■ of a totally different character. So far from authorizing the lienee to seize the property covered by the lien, even after default, it expressly provides that such seizure shall be made by an officer of the law, under a warrant issued by another officer. In this respect the lien provided for by the statute differs very materially from a chattel mortgage. One who undertakes to enforce his rights under a lien which is the creature of a statute, must confine himself to the remedy provided by the statute. The right is derived solely from the statute, and the remedy resorted to must be that furnished by the statute. The attempt to invest au agricultural lien with the qualities of a chattel mortgage, is an attempt to interpolate into the statute provisions which the legislature has not seen fit to adopt, for, certainly, if that body had designed to give an agricultural lien the qualities of a chattel mortgage, it would have been very easy to have said so. On the contrary, however, the agreement provided for by the statute, which creates the lien, lacks one of the qualities of a chattel mortgage, which has been held (Green v. Jacobs, 5 S. C. 283,) *41to be essential to invest the mortgagee with the right to the possession of the property, in that it does not contemplate any provision whatever for the transfer of the title; and, as we have seen, the remedy provided by the statute manifestly contemplates no change in the title, but, on the other hand, presupposes the continuance of the title in the lienor, subject, however, to the lien, until it is transferred by the execution of the process of the law, just as in the case of property covered by the lien of a judgment or execution, the title to the property remains in the judgment debtor until it is transferred by a sale under process of law; and one who purchases from the judgment debtor takes subject to the lien, which follows the property into whosoever hands it may go, but the purchaser, after he has disposed of it, cannot be made liable for the value of the property or for the proceeds of its sale. Paysinger v. Shumpard, 1 Bail. 237. The foregoing remarks are based upon the character of the agreement contemplated by the statute; and the fact that the agreement in the case now under consideration does contain words purporting to transfer the title, cannot affect the argument as to the proper construction of the statute and the rights which it was designed to confer. These words might, possibly, have the effect of converting the paper in question into a chattel mortgage, as is argued by the respondent, though upon this point also we are inclined to agree with the Circuit judge, and if they should have such effect, then, manifestly, the plaintiff could not maintain his action. For, aside from the question whether the paper could be sustained as a chattel mortgage upon a crop not yet planted, as against the rights of a third person, (a question which we do not propose to consider, as all the facts necessary for its-proper determination are not before us,) it is not pretended that it ever was recorded in the manner in which mortgages are required to be recorded, and, therefore, could avail nothing against the defendant who is a subsequent purchaser for valuable consideration without notice.
Another question has been raised by the grounds of appeal which, under the view we have taken, it is not absolutely necessary to decide, but as the point raised is one of importance it may be well for us to express our views. That question is *42whether the paper, considered as an agricultural lien, was properly recorded so as to affect subsequent purchasers with constructive notice. To state the question more precisely — was the entry of this paper in the office of the clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, who, in the county where the parties resided is ex officio register of mesne conveyances, and indexing it as was done in this ease, a sufficient compliance with the sixth section of the act of March 4th, 1878, (16 Stat. 411,) or was it necessary that the paper should remain on file in that office ? The act requires that every lien “shall be filed in the office of the register of mesne conveyances for the county in which the lienor resides, * * * and he shall keep an index of all such liens so filed, * * * and this shall be a sufficient record of the same.” It is argued that the word “this” refers only to the indexingrequiredand not to the filing. This appears to us to be a forced and unnatural construction. The legislature manifestly designed to dispense with the usual mode of recording by copying the paper at length, and to substitute another simpler and cheaper, to wit, by filing the original paper and indexing it, and then declared that “ this ” — that is the new mode, not merely one of the incidents of the new mode, the indexing, but both, the filing and the indexing, should be a sufficient record.
Again, it is argued that filing a paper in the clerk’s office does not necessarily convey the idea that it is to remain there, but that it may be marked filed and taken out of the office; and this view, it is urged, is supported by the prevalent practice in this state, to take papers from the clerk’s office after they have been marked filed therein. There is no evidence in this case of any such custom, and if we were to assume its existence, we do not feel at liberty to give it judicial sanction. When papers are placed on file in a public office, they become public records, open to the inspection of the public, under proper regulations; but if private individuals are at liberty to remove them whenever they see fit, they necessarily lose their character as public records. They are in the custody of the officer in whose office they are filed, and he is responsible for them. If he chooses to allow individuals to remove the originals rather than to require them to procure copies, that is a matter of mere favor and not of right, *43and while we may not feel called upon to volunteer a condemnation of such a practice, we certainly cannot be expected to give it judicial sanction. As is said in 1 Bouv. Law Diet. 524: “A paper is said to be filed when it is delivered to the proper officer and by him received to be kept on file.” In addition to this the proper office of an index is to afford a ready means of finding something else which contains the information desired, and if’ that something else is not in the office where the index is kept, it would not serve the purpose for' which it is intended. The statute does not prescribe how the index should be kept, and the-presumption- is that it was intended to be kept in the usual way,. • and if so kept it would not afford such information- as the statute evidently' designed should be furnished to the public.. The fact that the index in this particular case was fuller than usual cannot affect the question as to the proper construction of’ the statute, which requires a mere index, not an abstract.
Finally, it is argued that the presumption is that the clerk did his duty, and at all events the appellant should not suffer for the clerk’s default. There is no doubt that in the absence-of evidence to the contrary the presumption is that a public officer has done his duty, but here the proof shows the contrary, and there is no room for the presumption invoked. As to the other branch of the proposition, that is likewise disposed of by the evidence, which shows that it was by the appellant’s own act. and consent that the paper was removed from the office after it was indexed, and retained in his own custody. But even if it was the default of the clerk, it is difficult to see how that could affect McSween. If a party delivers a mortgage or other paper to the clerk to be recorded, and he neglects to do so, we can very readily understand how he might be made responsible for any damages occasioned by such a neglect of duty, but how an innocent third person could be made to suffer for such a neglect of duty on the part of a public officer it would be more difficult to-comprehend.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Willard, C. J., and McGowan, A. J., concurred.