13 Barb. 267 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1852
The lessees of the plaintiff were evicted and ousted from the possession of the premises, in an action of ejectment against them after notice of the pendency of the action, and a request to defend, made to the original grantor of the land then in suit. Ryerss, the intestate, conveyed with covenants of warranty and for quiet enjoyment, and his grantee conveyed to the plaintiff with like covenants. If, therefore, the plaintiff has been legally damnified by the ouster of his tenants or assignees, he may maintain the action. But before he can maintain it he must make satisfaction upon his own covenant to the person evicted. For no person can maintain an action to recover damages who has sustained none. (Withy v. Mumford, 5 Cowen, 187. 4 Kent, 472, n. b, and cases there cited.)
The defendant then on his part proved that by a subsequent suit the land had been recovered from the plaintiffs in the first suit, and restored to the plaintiff here, who had ever since possessed and enjoyed the same under his original title. The defendant’s counsel contends that this is a complete and perfect defense to the action. That the plaintiff having recovered possession under the Ryerss title, and continuing to hold under that, is estopped from treating the title as having in any manner failed, and is barred of his right of action upon the covenants in his deed. But this consequence I apprehend would scarcely follow. Notwithstanding the Ryerss title was* ultimately vindicated and established as the paramount title, in another suit in which Ryerss and the plaintiff were plaintiffs, it is nevertheless true that the plaintiffs’ lessees were in a former action against them legally evicted, and a title hostile to the Ryerss title established as the paramount title. The covenants in the deed were then broken and the right of action accrued. That judgment must be regarded as conclusive as to the breach of the covenants.
Did the ultimate establishment of the Ryerss title, and the restoration of the possession to the plaintiff, work a complete satisfaction? I think not. The plaintiff could no longer recover the purchase money, because the land granted was restored, and he was holding under the grant. But that did not satisfy the costs of the suit, .nor the interest upon the purchase money for the time the plaintiff, or those to whom he was compelled to restore, was deprived of the enjoyment of the land by the judgment ; which would have been part of the recovery in case there had been no restoration of the land. I think in such a case the
But-the damages which the law gives, in addition to the purchase money, are the costs of the suit and interest upon the purchase money for a limited time. In no event, unless there he a special covenant to that effect, can the annual value of the land, or the mesne profits recovered against the party, be resorted to, to fix the measure of damages. The party is still confined to the same species of damages as though the recovery were for the whole purchase money.
It was well said by Sutherland, justice, in Kinney v. Watts, (14 Wend. 211,) that “ if a purchaser takes the general covenants of warranty and quiet enjoyment, he has no right to complain that the law does not afford him full compensation for the loss and injury which he has sustained by eviction. If he resorts to an action upon this covenant he must take the rule of damages which the law has established for the breach of it.” It follows, in any view of the case, that the recovery here was wrong.
From the report of the referee it appears that he allowed to the plaintiff $150 per year as the annual value of the premises with interest thereon, as I infer from the’amount, for the whole time from the eviction to the restoration. The plaintiff if he was entitled to recover at all, could only recover the costs of the suit by which he was evicted, and the interest upon the purchase money mentioned in Ryerss’ deed to Wilber, for six years. The interest is the legal countervail to the claim for mesne profits. The law has fixed that as the measure of damages, beyond the purchase money and costs, in all actions of this character.
But there is still a more serious, and perhaps more difficult, question to dispose of, which goes to the foundation of the action. Has the plaintiff been legally damnified? Was he under any obligation to make satisfaction to the persons evicted ? If he was not, no matter what sums he may have paid, or what recompense he may have made to his tenants, the law affords him no redress in this action. He will be regarded as a mere
‘ But independent of the statute there are no words in this lease which have ever been held to import a covenant. It was never held that a mere sale or lease imported a warranty of title in the
Selden, T. R. Strong and Johnson, Justices.]
Whether the lessees of the plaintiff, who were evicted, were assignees of the covenant of warranty and quiet enjoyment in Ryerss’ deed, so as to have enabled them to maintain an action for their breach, and if so what damages they would be entitled to recover, are questions which need not now be considered. It is sufficient here that there was no covenant to be broken between the plaintiff and his lessees, and that he was in no way-accountable to them by reason of the eviction; consequently the law gives him no right of action upon the covenant in Ryerss’ deed.
The report of the referee must therefore be set aside.