48 Minn. 462 | Minn. | 1892
The instrument, executed and acknowledged by 'Willis G. Baker and wife, in which these persons and S. B. Loye were named as parties of the first part, was fatally defective as a conveyance of xeal property, because no one was therein named as of the second part, and no person could take anything by it. In every grant there must be a grantor, a grantee, and a thing granted, and a deed wanting in either essential is invalid. A grantee is as necessary to the validity of a grant as that there should be a grantor or a thing granted. Garnett v. Garnett, 7 T. B. Mon. 545; Whitaker v. Miller, 83 Ill. 381. When these defendants, by warranty deed with full covenants, ■except as to a particularly described mortgage, conveyed the premises in question to plaintiff, they had not been invested with the legal title, for that remained in Baker when he failed in an attempt to ■convey. For this reason there was a breach in defendant’s covenant •of seisin, for “seisin” means, ex vi termini, the whole legal title, and nothing short of it will satisfy. A covenant of seisin is broken if the covenantor has not the possession, the right of possession, and the complete legal title. Fitzhugh v. Croghan, 2 J. J. Marsh. 429; Lockwood v. Sturdevant, 6 Conn. 373. And the covenant was broken upon the execution of defendants’ deed, vesting in the plaintiff an immediate cause of action. Kimball v. Bryant, 25 Minn. 496. The court below seems to have held that the legal title to the premises passed from Baker to Loye upon the execution of the purported deed by Mr. and Mrs. Baker, and this view must have been based upon the conclusion of the court that the name of the real grantee could be ascertained from an inspection of the deed itself, in connection with an indorsement on the' back, or outside, which indicated that Baker and his wife were the sole grantors, and Loye the grantee; or upon parol testimony, improperly received for that purpose, to the effect that by mistake Loye was named as one of the parties of the
Judgment reversed.
(Opinion published 51 N. W. Rep. 473.)