63 Mo. App. 316 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
This action is based on two counts— one for the breach of the covenants of warranty in a deed, whereby the defendant corporation purported to convey to plaintiff sixty-eight acres of land in Ray county, when, in fact, the land conveyed consisted of fifty-three acres only. The second count was for the
Since we can uphold the judgment rendered in this cause without sustaining plaintiff’s case as it may depend on the first count, we will disregard that count. Or, to speak more accurately, we will assume defendant’s objections to the deed containing the warranty sued upon are valid. It will therefore not be necessary to examine the ground of those objections, and we will only state that they were principally based upon the fact that the deed had no corporate seal attached and was not acknowledged as by statute it should have been in case of corporation deeds. Furthermore, that, though the deed was executed by the president and cashier of the defendant bank, yet they were not authorized to execute it.
~We have, then, this case: The president and cashier of a banking corporation, pretending to have authority
On such state of facts, we think the court very properly gave plaintiff a judgment for the amount paid by him for the land which the defendant did not own and could not convey. We are not unmindful of the fact that deeds to lands ordinarily contain the contracts of the parties, and that the grantee must look only to his deed as a basis for any relief he may seek from the grantor (2 Devlin on Deeds, sec. 957); and that in case of a quitclaim deed, even though no title is conveyed to any of the land described, yet, in the absence of fraud, the consideration agreed upon must be paid, since the deed, evidencing' the contract between the parties, does not contemplate that recourse may be had on the grantor, in case nothing is by it conveyed. Phœnix Insurance Co. v. Landis, 50 Mo. App. 119. But in the case before us, there is no deed to any of the land purchased, though the purchaser does not complain, exceptas to the fact of having paid defendant for more land than it owned. The case, then, is no more than this — defendant has received of plaintiff $120 for land which it did not own and did not and can
But, it may be urged that the defendant’s cashier and president had no authority to’ make the representation, or, indeed, to do anything connected with the land. Conceding this, the fact remains that defendant has received the money from the source aforesaid and has wrongfully appropriated it. Defendant should, under such circumstances, be estopped to deny the authority of its officers to receive the money in its behalf.
Defendant has suggested that the judgment cannot stand, from the fact that there are two counts in the plaintiff’s petition and the court made a general finding, without specifying which count the finding was based upon. Where the subject-matter of the causes of action are distinct and each count contains a different cause of action, the defendant’s contention would be correct. But where, as in this case, the subject-matter- of complaint in the different counts is the same and where a recovery on either would bar another suit on the other, the defendant’s contention has no application. Lancaster v. Ins. Co., 92 Mo. 460, and authorities cited.
An examination of the whole record satisfies us that we are without authority to disturb the judgment, and it is accordingly affirmed.