26 Mo. App. 678 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is founded upon the following facts alleged in the plaintiff’s petition :
The plaintiff, in January, 1884, bought of the defendant a tract of land for two thousand dollars, of which sum he xiaid five hundred and sixty dollars in cash and property, and executed his notes for the residue secured by dedd of trust on the premises, of which notes the amount of one hundred and fifty dollars was subsequently paid, making the entire payment seven hundred and ten dollars.
The tract thus purchased was part of a larger tract, and such larger tract was, at the date of the purchase, subject to another record incumbrance by mortgage to
The petition further states that the land was actually worth twenty-five hundred dollars, and that the plaintiff, but for the fact of the Ullmann mortgage remaining unsatisfied, could have sold it for that sum; that the defendant, with a design to cheat and defraud the plaintiff out of the purchase money paid, and improvements made on the land, failed and refused to satisfy the said Ullmann mortgage, at once, as he had agreed to do, and, thereafter, caused the lands to be sold for non-payment of some of the notes secured by the deed of trust given by the plaintiff, under the provisions of the said deed, and caused the same to be bought in by one of his relatives for the sum of eight hundred dollars, whereby the plaintiff lost the amount of purchase money paid by him, the value of his improvements, and the difference between the purchase money and the amount for which the plaintiff might have sold the lands, but for such incumbrance to Ullmann.
The petition, in its first count, prayed judgment for twelve hundred and eleven dollars, the damages thus suffered by the plaintiff, and in a second count prayed a decree that the notes given by the plaintiff for the deferred payments of the purchase money be - surrendered up to him, or otherwise cancelled.
The defendant’s answer was a general denial.
The Ullmann mortgage secured ten notes, nine for five hundred dollars each, payable respectively January 1, 1881, and in two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, and nine years after date, 'and one note for one thousand dollars, payable ten years after date. How many of these notes remained unpaid at the date of the defendant’s deed to the plaintiff does not clearly appear. It did appear that the failure of the defendant to discharge this Ullmann mortgage was a serious injury to the plaintiff ; that the plaintiff offered\to pay his notes' as they matured, provided the Ullman mortgage was discharged by the defendant, and offered to do so even when -the lands were offered for sale under the deed of trust in the defendant’s favor. The defendant denied that he ever agreed to discharge the Ullmann mortgage presently, but contended that his agreement was to discharge such mortgage only when the entire purchase money, including deferred payments, should have been fully paid to him by the plaintiff.
The court, upon the close of the evidence, rendered judgment for the plaintiff on the first count for nominal damages, and in the second count rendered judgment in favor of the defendant.
It will be seen that the first count of the plaintiff’s petition contained an action at law for damages, while .the second prayed equitable relief upon the facts therein stated. The view which the court took of the evidence appears- only from the instructions given and refused, and its finding for the plaintiff on the legal cause of action for nominal damages.
“If the court believes and finds, from the evidence, that the defendant agreed to satisfy the Ullmann mortgage at once and release the land sold to the plaintiff from the lien of said mortgage, and that, relying upon the covenant and promise of the defendant, the plaintiff paid to him a portion of the purchase money, and executed bis notes and a deed of trust on the property purchased,, and, relying upon said agreement to satisfy said mortgage, received said deed from the defendant and closed said trade; and if the court further finds that the defendant failed to satisfy said mortgage, but permitted the same to • rémain as an encumbrance on said property, and, whilst so remaining, proceeded to sell said real estate under the plaintiff’s deed of trust to him, and, by said sale, the plaintiff has lost said real estate ; and if the court further finds that the said Ullmann encumbrance prevented the plaintiff from mortgaging, selling, or disposing of said property, and prevented competition at said sale, and the defendant failed and refused to. have said real estate released ■ from said Ullmann deed of trust as aforesaid, then said acts upon the part of the defendant constitute a breach of the defendant’s covenant and agreement to satisfy said Ullmann deed of trust or mortgage, and the court will find the issues for the 'plaintiff [and will render judgment for nominal damages only].”
And, also, gave the following instruction
“ The court declares the law to be, that the agreement to satisfy said Ullmann mortgage, upon the part of the plaintiff, as expressed in said deed, no time being set forth when the same should be done, the law implies that it shall be done presently and without delay.”
And, upon the request of the defendant, the court gave the following instructions:
*684 “That, Tinder the evidence and the pleadings, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover more than nominal damages.”
“ That the covenant sued on in this case is to satisfy the covenantor’s own debt which was an encumbrance on the property sold by Wagoner to Chinn, and as the latter has paid nothing to remove it, nor been evicted by proceedings under the Ullmann mortgage, he can not, in this action, recover more than nominal damages.”
“The covenant to satisfy the Ullmann' mortgage, contained in the deed from Wagoner to Chinn, is a covenant of indemnity against damages from said mortgage, and not a covenant of indemnity against liability.”
“The plaintiff can not recover except for such damages as are the natural, direct, and certain result of the act complained of, and in an action on a covenant against incumbrance, unless the plaintiff has removed the incumbrance, or suffered ouster under it, he can not recover, and damages resulting from loss of improvements or speculative profits, can not be considered even if the plaintiff had suffered ouster under the incum-brance.”
It will be seen, from the action of the court upon the instructions, coupled with its finding for the plaintiff on the first count for nominal damages only, that the court found the facts and declared the law as follows : (1) That the defendant had agreed to satisfy the-Ullmann mortgage,’ presently, upon the making of his> conveyance to the plaintiff. (2) That the plaintiff couldrecover nominal damages only by the breach of. this agreement. The judgment rendered by the court, under the law declared by it, is not compatible with any other theory. _ Whether this view of the law is correct, is the only question presented for our consideration.
Counsel for both parties have argued the case before us on theories of the technical law applicable to covenants! against incumbrances ; the one claiming that the plain
It may be conceded, under the authorities, that if the plaintiff had shown nothing more than the failure of the defendant to discharge the Ullmann mortgage, as agreed, his recovery would have been limited to nominal damages. The mere effect of a continuance of the in-cumbrance upon the land could not be estimated by a mere money standard, the plaintiff not being himself liable for the debt. But the plaintiff has shown more; he has shown an eviction. This eviction, it is true, was not under this mortgage, but it was, if the plaintiff’s testimony is true, the result of its not being discharged, as agreed, by the defendant. Nor can we see how the defendant, who has, himself, brought about this eviction, by his own act, can, if the jdaintiff ’ s testimony is true, successfully maintain that it was not the proximate result of the breach of his own agreement.
In a somewhat analogous case, the supreme court of Ohio, in Manahan v. Smith (29 Ohio St. 391), says: £t This is not a covenant as to the state of the title, but an agreement to do certain acts, for the plaintiff’s benefit, within a special time. For the breach of such an executory contract, we know of no reason why the plaintiff should not be allowed to recover such damages as are the necessary, natural, and proximate result of the breach complained of. Such is certainly the general rule as to the measure of damages, and it would seem to rest upon principles of obvious justice.”
It results that, in our view, this case has not been decided according to correct principles of law, and that the judgment .must be reversed. If, upon a re-trial, the court should find that the loss of the plaintiff was caused by the concurrence of -the defendant’s default to comply with his agreement, as to the discharge of the
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.