86 P. 411 | Utah | 1906
This action was instituted to recover $2,263 for a breach of a covenant of warranty contained in a conveyance of certain land situate in Salt Lake City, made by the defendants to the plaintiff; the plaintiff claiming a failure of title'to a part of such land, as determined by an action wherein Stringfellow and others were plaintiffs, and Gray, Baumgarten, and others were defendants. At the trial herein the court found the issues in favor of the defendants and entered a decree accordingly.
The most important assignment of error is the one relating to the third finding of fact, where the court found “that the defendants were never notified, by plaintiff or otherwise; of the commencement or the pendency of said, or any, action involving the title, ownership, or possession of any portion of the above-described premises; nor were they ever notified by plaintiff or otherwise, or requested to defend the same.” The appellant insists' that this finding was contrary to the evidence, because as is urged, the proof shows that the defendants were not only notified by the plaintiff of the commencement and pendency of the action which involved the title, owership, and possession of the premises, and by the judgment in which, as is claimed by the appellant, the plaintiff was evicted from a portion of the land, but also that the defendants were notified by the plaintiff to defend the action. We are of the opinion that this contention is not well founded. It appears that, after service had been made in the Stringfel-low suit, Baumgarten delivered the papers to the defendant, James Chipman, and requested him to defend the action. Ohipman stated to' him that he wanted to submit them to his attorneys. Whether he did so does not expressly appear,
Nor, under tbe facts and circumstances disclosed by tbe record, do we tbink tbe "judgment roll in tbe Stringfellow case constituted sufficient evidence of eviction by paramount title. In sucb case, where no notice of the commencement or pen-dency of tbe action bas been given to tbe warrantor, tbe war-rantee, wbo brings an action for breach of covenant of warranty, must sbow by proof debors the record of eviction that-be bas been evicted by paramount title. Although notice of tbe pendency of an adverse suit is not indispensable to a recovery in an action on tbe covenant, yet, as settled by tbe weight .of authority.
“If no notice has been given, the record, of such adverse suit is not even prima faoie evidence that the title was a paramount one, though it may under some circumstances be evidence of eviction.” (Rawle on Covenants for Title, sections 125, 123-124; 8 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d Ed.), 207, 208; Maupin on Marketable Title to Real Estate, 405-408.)
In the cas© at bar, as we have thus seen, there was no proof of notice to the warrantor of tbe Stringfellow suit, and no evidence to sbow an eviction by paramount title, and tbe court, therefore^ correctly held tbat tbe warrantee was not entitled to recover. We find no error in tbe action of tbe court.
Tbe judgment is affirmed, with costs.