This was an action brought by Robert C. Banes against the New Jersey Title Guarantee & Trust Company upon its guaranty of title. Peter Bentley (the first), on October 1, 1867, took a mortgage on land of the New Jersey Railroad & Transportation Company to secure a loan of $147,000, subsequently reduced by payment on account to $100,000. On his death a one-half interest in this mortgage became vested in his son, Peter Bentley (the second). At the death of the latter, under his will, his wife, Emma P. Bentley, was appointed his executrix, and his whole estate was devised to her for life, with remainder in equal shares to his seven children, including Richard and Peter (the third). In January, 1900, Robert C. Banes (the plaintiff in this action) acquired by assignments the interests of Richard and Peter (the third) in the above-mentioned mortgage. Upon his written application, the New Jersey Title, Guarantee & Trust Company (the defendant in this action) issued to the plaintiff its guaranty or title policy, dated January 24, 1900, which contains the following covenant:
“This guaranty witnesseth that the New Jersey Title Guarantee & Trust Company, in consideration of the sum of $300, to it paid by Robert C. Banes, does hereby covenant that it will indemnify, keep harmless, and guaranty the said Robert C. Banes * * * from all loss or damage not exceeding the sum of $14,000, which the said party guarantied shall sustain by reason of defect of title of the party guarantied to the estate, mortgage, or interest described in Schedule A, hereto annexed, or because of liens or incumbrances charging the same at the date of this guaranty; saving the defects, objections, liens, or incumbrances excepted in Schedule B, or by the conditions of this guaranty hereto annexed and hereby incorporated into this contract.”
In Schedule A, under the marginal note — “The estate or interest of the party guarantied covered by this guaranty” — is the following specification:
“Assignment of interest in mortgage: The interest which was of Peter Bentley the third (being an undivided 1/1 of %) and the interest which was of Richard Bentley (being an undivided i/t of %) in and to a certain mortgage of the Jersey Railroad & Transportation Company to Peter Bentley, dated October 1, 1867, and recorded October 19, 1867, 'in book 47 of mortgages for Hudson county, on page 605, to secure the payment of $147,000, afterwards reduced to $100,000.”
Here follows a description of the land covered by the mortgage. Schedule A also contains a list of various. assignments of the mortgage, including the assignments of the interests of Richard Bentley and Peter Bentley (the third) to the plaintiff. The annexed conditions of the guaranty we do not deem it necessary to quote.
Some of the children of Peter Bentley (the second), having become dissatisfied with the management of their father’s estate by his executrix, Emma P. Bentley, in 1894 had a receiver of the estate appointed by the court of chancery. On March 2, 1901, this receiver collected the one-half interest in the said mortgage cf which
The course of the trial of this case appears from the following extract from the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error:
“Plaintiff’s case consisted simply of proof of the title policy, and proof that one William Lewis, as receiver of the estate of Peter Bentley, 2d, had received the $50,000 of the mortgage and satisfied the mortgage to that extent. Plaintiff rested, proceeding on the theory that a legal title to Vt of % of the mortgage was insured, and it had been shown that the legal title was in the receiver.”
This being the plaintiff’s case, the court instructed the jury to render a verdict of “no cause of action,” which was done, and judgment entered accordingly.
It will be perceived that the defendant’s guaranty is against loss or damage which the plaintiff shall sustain by reason of defects of title or because of liens or incumbrances as specified therein. Therefore, by the very terms of the contract, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to show some loss or damage. This is the general doctrine in actions on contracts of indemnity. Jeffers et al. v. Johnson, 21 N. J. Law, 73; Miller v. Fries, 66 N. J. Law, 377,
The offer by the plaintiff of parol evidence to show the circumstances under which the title policy was issued, and particularly that the insurance of a legal title was demanded, and that the deeds of
In view of the evidence introduced upon the trial of this case, we think the learned judge below was right in directing the jury to render a verdict of no cause of action; and, accordingly, the judgment is affirmed.
