113 N.W. 870 | N.D. | 1907
Plaintiff, an assignee of a remote grantee in a deed purporting to convey certain real property, brought this action in the district court of Wells .county'to recover damages against defendants, who are remote grantors, for the breach of certain covenants contained in the latters’ 'deed to their immediate grantee, one Charles A. Johnson. The -complaint alleges' that at the date such deed was executed and delivered by defendants to the said Johnson they had no right, title or interest in the real property therein described, nor had they the possession thereof. The complaint then alleges the execution and delivery of a deed of such premises by the said Johnson to one W. D. Washburn, who thereafter, in order to obtain title to said land, was obliged to and did purchase title to the same from' the owner, one J. W. Bull, and as a portion of the consideration therefor the said Washburn, at the request of the said J. W. Bull, assigned to plaintiff herein the cause of. action which he claimed to have against defendants for breach of the covenants in the latter’s deed to Johnson, amounting to $1,120 and interest; such sum being the consideration paid by Johnson to defendants for such deed. Defendants demurred to the complaint upon the ground that it failed to allege facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The district court sustained the demurrer, and to reverse such order this appeal is prosecuted. ' We think the demurrer was properly sustained'. From the facts disclosed by the complaint, it is apparent that Washburn had no cause of action against defendants which he «could assign to plaintiff. The action was brought and the complaint framed upon the mistaken theory that the covenants contained in defendants’ deed to Johnson were covenants running with the land, and therefore passed to Washburn by the deed from Johnson to him. This probably would be true if any title or possession was transferred by such conveyances; but under the facts alleged in the complaint neither title nor possession, actual or constructive, passed under the deeds, and hence there was nothing for the covenants to run with. There was a constructive eviction of the grantee immediately upon the execution and deliver}'- of the deed to'Johnson, and a .cause of action for breach of the covenants in such deed at once arose in his favor against the Beisekers to recover damages therefor, and the deed from Johnson to Washburn did not operate to assign to the latter such cause of action. While .a few isolated cases may be found holding to the contrary, we think the correct
It is true, as counsel for appellant say, that defendants had color of title at the time of executing the deed to Johnson; but such mere color of title was not accompanied by actual possession of the property, and did not draw to it even the constructive possession thereof, such constructive possession following the legal title. Therefore such mere naked color of title would not ripen into a title by lapse of time, as suggested by appellant. It would serve no useful purpose to review the many adjudicated cases upon this question, and we will content ourselves by calling attention to the following: Bowne v. Wolcott, 1 N. D. 500, 48 N. W. 426; N. P. Ry. Co. v. McClure, 9 N. D. 73, 81 N. W. 52, 47 L. R. A. 149; McInnis v. Lyman, 62 Wis. 191, 22 N. W. 405; Wallace v. Pereles, 109 Wis. 316, 85 N. W. 371, 53 L. R. A. 644, 83 Am. St. Rep. 898; Mygatt v. Coe, 152 N. Y. 457, 46 N. E. 949, 57 Am. St. Rep. 521; Ladd v. Noyes, 137 Mass. 151; Real et al. v. Hollister, 20 Neb. 112, 29 N. W. 189; Chapman v. Kimball, 7 Neb. 399; Davidson v. Cox, 10 Neb. 153, 4 N. W. 1035; 8 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) 149, 151; 11 Cyc. 1097-1100, and numerous cases cited; 1 Jones on Law of Real Prop., section 942; 2 Washburn, Real Prop. (6th Ed.) section 1203; note to 1 Smith’s Lead. Cas. (8th Ed.) 205.
Section 5229 of our Revised Codes, referred to by appellant’s counsel, in no manner changes the rule almost universally announced by the courts of this country as enunciated in the foregoing authorities. This section merely provides that certain covenants in grants of estates in real property pass with them, so as to bind the assigns of the covenantor and vest in the assigns of the covenantee in the same manner as if they had personally entered into them. “Such covenants are said to run with the land.” The section merely attempts to define what covenants run with the land. In order that covenants may run with the land, it is apparent that some interest in the property must be granted; and, as we have heretofore observed, no interest whatever was granted by defendants to Johnson according to the facts alleged in the complaint.
The conclusion above reached makes it unnecessary to consider the other points raised by counsel.
The order appealed from is affirmed.