176 Ga. 227 | Ga. | 1933
Jurisdiction of this case would inhere in the Court of Appeals but for the fact that the amendment to the declaration brings in question the constitutionality of section 9 of the act of 1927 (Ga. L. 1927, pp. 1404-1415), which can only be adjudicated by the Supreme Court. The plaintiff insists that the provision of the act of 1927 upon which the defendants in error rely is unconstitutional, as in violation of art. 1, sec. 4, par. 1, of the constitution of Georgia of 1877, quoted above, because the act in question has the effect of repealing and revoking §§ 4194 and 4195 of the Civil Code, quoted above, which are general laws; and that thereby so much of the act of 1927 as seeks to exclude unmatured instalments for paving from the terms of any general covenant of warranty is unconstitutional and void. It is also set up in the declaration of the plaintiff that the provision of the act of 1927 in question is violative of art. 3, see. 7, par. 8, of the constitution, quoted above. Learned counsel for the defendants urge for our consideration the grounds set forth in the motion to strike the declaration as amended, and direct our attention to the fact that there is no issue as to the fact that there was no paving instalment mature as against the real estate conveyed by the defendants at the time of the making of the alleged warranty, that the declaration shows on its face that the plaintiff has never been evicted from said premises, that the defendants had no notice or opportunity of defending any alleged general covenant of warranty that had been made by them, and “that the alleged lien or encumbrance had never been adjudged a valid lien by a court of competent jurisdiction.” The defendants insist that the provision of section 9 of the act of 1927, providing that unmatured paving instalments shall not be covered by any general covenant of warranty, is valid and constitutional, and cite Knight v. Clinkscales, 51 Okla. 508 (152 Pac. 133), to show that the State of Oklahoma had adopted a law providing that a general warranty of title should not cover unmatured instalments of street-paving assessments. This court is
The issues between the parties raise only two real questions. First, is that part of section 9 of the paving act of 1927 in question which declares that “unmatured instalments shall not be deemed to be within the terms of any general covenant or warranty” unconstitutional for either reason urged in the amended declaration of the plaintiff; and second, was it legally necessary that the plaintiff should allege actual eviction as a condition precedent to his instituting an action for breach of warranty in the circumstances alleged? We are of the opinion that the paving act of the City of Millen in question is a special and local act. The law embodied in the Civil Code, §§ 4194, 4195, is a general law affect
It is insisted, however, that before the plaintiff would be entitled to recover upon the breach of warranty he must show the failure of his title by establishing that he had been evicted, and that the vendor and warrantor had notice of the proceedings, or that he should have resisted the levy and vouched the vendor into court. The warranty contained in the deed involved in this case is a special warranty against encumbrances. Code §§ 4194 and 4195 modify the common law. Under these statutes, there is embraced in the term general warranty, by implication, certain specific warranties which the common law required to be express. In order to recover on a warranty of seizin, the loss of seizin (that is, eviction,) had to be proved. On a covenant for quiet possession, loss of possession had to be shown. But on a covenant against encumbrances, the only condition precedent to a right of action are the outstanding of a valid encumbrance at the date of the covenant affecting the property conveyed, and its discharge by the covenantee. “When a vendee under a warranty deed has fairly and reasonably paid a sum of money to remove an encumbrance which was outstanding, and was a legal and valid lien on the land at the time of his purchase* he may recover the amount thus paid from his vendor.” Amos v. Crosby, 74 Ga. 793. In the Amos case, it is true, the facts showed an eviction, but the eviction was not referred to, and the decision was not predicated on eviction. It will be found upon examination, we think, that it is only in cases based upon actual loss of seizin by reason of an outstanding paramount title that it has been held that eviction must be alleged and proved. In Martin v. Hamlet, 159 Ga. 465, 468 (126 S. E. 371), Mr. Justice Atkinson, in
Judgment reversed.