52 Mo. 313 | Mo. | 1873
delivered the opinion of the court.
By the record it appears that the parties were owners of ad" joining lots, numbered 43 and 44, in Mills’ addition to the city of St. Louis. The plaintiff owned and had a house situated on lot 44, and it was supposed by the parties that the house extended about nine inches on the side of lot 43, which was the property of defendant.
The deed contained the statutory covenants of grant, bargain and sale, and the descriptive words after the granting clause, were as follows:
“A strip of nine inches more or less, off the east side of the east half of lot number forty-three, of block number two, in Mills’ Addition to the city of St. Louis, or so much as is occupied of said lot by the house of the said party of the second part.”
Then follows a more particular description by metes and bounds. It was subsequently ascertained, that the house was entirely on lot 44, and that no part of it was on the defendant’s lot 43. Plaintiff then brought this action, for an alleged breach of seizin, to recover the purchase money. The trial was before the Court, without the intervention of a jury, and there was a judgment for the plaintiff. The declarations of law given and refused will show the theory upon which the case was tried.
For the plaintiff there was a declaration, that if the Court found from the evidence, that defendant, when he conveyed to plaintiff, had neither title to nor possession of the nine inches, more or less, which he purported to convey, then the plaintiff was entitled to recover her consideration money and interest from the date of the deed. For the defendant the Court declared, that if it was found from the evidence, that the house of plaintiff was wholly situate on lot 44, and it was further found from the evidence, that the description of the land in the deed, did not embrace or include any part of lot 44, then the plaintiff could not recover.
The Court refused two instructions asked for by the defendant. The first of the refused instructions was in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, and was rightfully rejected, aud the second was also essentially of the same character, and after reciting certain facts in evidence, declared as a conclusion of
The conveyance is for nine inches, more or less, off'the east side of lot 43, or so much as is occupied by the house of the plaintiff. This shows very clearly, that the minds of the parties were directed to the very land, on which the house stood and no other. The intention was to convey that, and that only. But if the defendant was not possessed of, and did not own that, then he conveyed nothing, and there was a total failure of consideration.
G-reenleaf says, that the modern rule in construing deeds, is to ascertain the true intention of the parties, and to transpose the words, wherever it is necessary, in order to carry the general intention plainly manifested into effect. (2Greenl. Cru. Tit. “Deed,” Oh. 12, § 26.)
In the ease of Rutherford vs. Tracy, (48 Mo. 325,) where many authorities are cited and examined, it was decided as the correct principle of law applicable to this question, that where the grantor uses apt or appropriate words, showing what it was his intention to convey, effect will be given to that intention, without regard to any mere verbal position or arrangement they may occupy in the deed.
The intention here seems to' be very manifest. It was to convey the land on which the plaintiff’s house was erected. That was the only thing had in view hy the parties. The grantor undertook to do that, and nothing more. Every thing else may well be rejected as misdescription, so far as it is in' consistent with this essential and primary object. And as the grantor did not own or possess the land, he conveyed nothing.
I therefore think the judgment was right, and should be af filmed.