CORCORAN ET UX. v. ABSTRACT & TITLE COMPANY OF MARYLAND, INC.
No. 289, September Term, 1957.
Court of Appeals of Maryland
Decided July 18, 1958.
Mоtion for rehearing filed August 15, 1958, denied September 16, 1958.
217 Md. 633 | 143 A.2d 808
Dissenting opinion filed July 24, 1958.
Since we have decided that the lower court has jurisdiction to award the husband an absolute divorce and to award the care, custody, and guardianship of thе children, the question of a “special” or general appearance of the wife is no longer important, and it is not necessary for us to discuss the question further.
Order reversed, and case remanded for the passage of a decree of divorce, and for further proceedings with respect to the custody of the children in accordance with this opinion, the appellant to pay the costs.
David A. McNamee, with whom were W. Carroll Beatty and Beatty & McNamee on the brief, for appellants.
Henry A. Babcock, with whom were Walter L. Green and Green & Babcock on the brief, for appellee.
HENDERSON, J., delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellants agreed to purchase from George O. King and Esther J. King, his wife, a parcel of land in Riverdale Park, Prince George‘s County, and employed the appellee to examine the title for them. In due course a certificate of title was executed and delivered to the appellants by the title company. It certified that “the title to the above described real estate is considered good in fee simple“, with certain exceptions not here material. It further stated: “This certificate does not cover mеchanics’ liens not recorded at the date hereof, nor unrecorded deeds, adverse claims and interests, defects of title, secret trusts, easements, restrictions, or any other liens or encumbrances not properly evidenced by the public land records and not properly indicated by general indices at the date hereof.” The certificate did not list among the exceptions, following the statement that the title was “good in fee simple“, a right-of-way deed from George O. and Esther J. King to the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission, recorded on January 28, 1954. After delivery of the certificate, the appellants completed the purchase and entered into possession of the property.
Upon discovery of the easement, when the Sanitary Commission began to excavate and lay pipe lines across their lot,
It appears that the land records in question were indexed according to the “Cott” system. Instruments offered for record are recorded in libers or books maintained for that purpose, with an index arranged alphabetically in the front of each liber, and references then given to the initial folio or page where the particular instrument is transcribed. There are also grantor and grantee indices referring an abstracter to the appropriate liber and folio where the instrument is recorded. The instrument in question was correctly recorded in Liber 1693, fol. 251, and was correctly noted in the grantee index. In the grantor index, however, therе was a clerical mistake. The entries were as follows:
| Surname | Grantors | Grantees | Kind of Instrument | Date Recorded | Land Record (Book) | Record (Page) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| King | Esther J. George O. | W.S.S.C. | R/W | Jan. 28, 1954 | 1693 | 248 |
| King | Winifred William A. | W.S.S.C. | R/W | Jan. 28, 1954 | 1693 | 251 |
The page numbers were transposed by the clerk who made the entries. The right-of-way deed from the appellants’ predecessors in title actually appeared at page 251, and the right-of-way deed from William A. King and Winifred King appeared at page 248. If we assume that the abstracter ran the grantor index, he must have found the entry showing the conveyance of a right-of-way from George O. and Esther J. King. If he then turned to page 248, he found there the conveyance from the other Kings. Presumably, he made no further investigation. If he had turned back to the index showing the entry as to the other Kings, the transposition would
One who undertakes to examine a title for compensation is bound to exercise a reasonable degree of skill and diligence in the conduct of the transaction. This liability, “although ordinarily enforced by an action of case for negligence in the disсharge of his professional duties, in reality rests upon his employment by the client and is contractual in its nature.” Watson v. Calvert Bldg. Ass‘n, 91 Md. 25, 33 (1900). It is generally recognized that damages are recoverable on the theory of a breach of contract, and the legal situation is not changed by the fact that the contractual act bargained for is negligently pеrformed. See Russell & Co. v. Polk County Abstract Co., 54 N. W. 212 (Ia. 1893); Savings Bank v. Ward, 100 U. S. 195 (1879); Bridgeport Airport v. Title Guaranty & Trust Co., 150 A. 509 (Conn. 1930); Commercial Bank of Mott v. Adams County Abstract Co., 18 N. W. 2d 15 (N. D. 1945); Trisdale, Inc. v. Shasta County Title Co., 304 P. 2d 832 (Cal. 1956). See also 1 Fitch, Abstracts & Titles to Real Property, § 10; Note 28 A. L. R. 2d 891; 1 Am. Jur., Abstracts of Title, § 27; 1 C. J. S., Abstracts of Title, § 11. Since the liability is contractual, it may be limited in its scope by apt and clear language brought home to the employer. Liability in the instant case depends upon the meaning to be accorded the exclusion clause in the certificate of title.
The right-of-way deed was duly recorded in Liber 1693, fol. 251 of the land records and it is conceded that it was “properly evidenced by the public land records“. The question is whether it was “properly indicated by general indices“, under a fair and natural construction of the phrase selected by the defendant. Since the facts as to the state of the records are undisputed, the problem is one of construction, and we think the phrase is not free from ambiguity. It is not clear, for ex-
We think it may fairly be contended that the entry in the grantor index was enough to put a reasonably skillful and diligent аbstracter upon notice of the deed, and that it was his duty to exhaust the means at hand to locate it. Of course, he was not obliged to go outside the record, but here the error could have been detected by referring to the grantor and grantee indices since the correct page number appeared on the grantеe index, or by merely referring back to the grantor index where the conveyance by the other Kings was entered. Whether the abstracter used reasonable care under the circumstances presented an issue to be resolved by the trier of facts, or by the court upon motion for directed verdict. In the light of the general undertaking tо use reasonable skill and diligence, we think the exception should be construed to cover only those cases where the error could not reasonably be discovered by a further search of the indices.
We conclude that the defendants’ motion for summary judgment should not have been granted, and accordingly, we
Judgment reversed and case remanded, costs to be paid by the appellee.
PRESCOTT, J., filed the following dissenting opinion.
The issue here involved is a narrow one, and, in my opinion, the Court has decided the case on a theory that has no application to the facts. The Court has reversed the trial court аnd held that although “[i]n the grantor index, however, there was a clerical mistake” (using the language of the majority concerning a fact admitted by the appellant) in indexing the right-of-way in dispute, the right-of-way was, nevertheless, covered by a certificate of title that provided, “[t]his certificate does not cover * * * easements * * * not prоperly evidenced by the public land records and not properly indicated by general indices at the date hereof“; and that the corporation issuing the certificate of title was liable for negligence in the performance of its contract. (Emphasis partly added.) It seems to me that we do not reach the question of negligence in the performance of the contract, but all that need be decided is whether or not the language employed in the certificate and quoted above excluded the right-of-way from the operation and effect of the certificate. If it did, the appellee is not liable; if it did not, the appellee is answerable for the breach of its contract, not for negligenсe. The trial judge held that the right-of-way was specifically excluded by the above language, and that he had no authority to add to, nor detract from, the contract made by the parties. The counsel for the appellee, an able and experienced lawyer, frankly conceded that if the right-of-way were not excluded from the coverage of the certificate by the quoted portion, his client was liable; consequently, it was only necessary to decide the one question: Was the right-of-way covered by the certificate or not?
As stated above, there is no issue of negligence or standard of care properly involved in the determination оf this case. Every lawyer knows, as stated by the majority, that one who undertakes to examine a title for compensation is bound to
Let us now see whether or not the abstracter complied with the terms of its agreement. The majority admit “there was a clerical mistake” in the grantor index;1 a fact conceded by the appellant. The certificate stated that “according to the records as indexed in the Office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court * * * the title * * * is considered good in fee simple” in the appellants, “[s]ubject, however, to [certain liens not here pertinent] * * * and to such further limitations as are indicated herein.” The crucial limitation followed, and is: “This certificate does not cover * * * easements * * * not properly evidenced by the public land records and not properly indicated by general indices at the date hereof.” (All emphasis supplied.)
I think a fair and reasonable construction to be afforded this limitation is that the certificate did not purport to cover any easement unless it was both properly recorded and prop-
The Court states that the case of Crook v. Chilvers, (1916), 157 N. W. 617 (Neb.), is the “closest case on the facts” that it has found. In that case there were no exclusionary limitations whatsoever. The abstracter certified thаt he was rendering “a full and complete abstract of all instruments on record or on file in the office of the register of deeds.” The register was required to keep general grantor and grantee indices and a numerical index. The abstracter relied upon the numerical index alone, and did not report a mortgage shown on the grаntor index, for which he was held liable. While the case has little, if any, analogy to the case at bar because there were no exclusionary limitations in the certificate, the Court specifically points out (at page 619) that the abstracter could have limited his search to the numerical index alone, provided the certificate had so stated.
A case much closer in point is that of Thomas v. Carson, (Neb.), 65 N. W. 899. The suit was brought to recover on an abstracter‘s bond. The certificate contained limitations. The Court held that the relation between abstracter and employer was “purely contractual“; that the abstracter‘s “liability is measured by his employment“; and, in order for the plaintiff to recover, it was necessаry to show “that the act of omission or commission alleged as the cause thereof is a breach of the conditions * * * of the particular engagement to which it relates.” Similar rulings or statements were made in the following cases: American Trust Invest. Co. v. Nashville Abstract Co., (Tenn.), 39 S. W. 877; Abstract & Title Guaranty Co. v. Kigin, (Ala.), 108 So. 626; McVeigh v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Co., (Ark.), 132 S. W. 638; Lee Lumber Co. v. Hetherwick Title Co., (La.), 107 So. 772; Wakefield v. Chowan, (Minn.), 4 N. W. 618; Chase v. Heany, 70 Ill. 268; Hillock v. Idaho Title & Trust Co., (Idaho), 126 P. 612. In the last case, the Court, after pointing out that an abstracter‘s liability is measured by the terms of the certifiсate, stated: “The certificate annexed thereto [to the abstract] may be of such a nature that it would at-
For the reasons assigned above, I think the trial judge was correct in holding that the parties, by their agreement, had specifically excluded the error of the clerk from the responsibility of the abstracter, and that he had no right to make a contract for them; consequently he should be affirmed. In addition, I believe the decision of the Court renders it very difficult for abstracters to determine for what mistakes of the clerks they are to be held liable, and the ones for which they are not to be held responsible.
