98 Tenn. 153 | Tenn. | 1897
This is a bill of review. In the year 1885 the complainant, Mrs. Elizabeth Curtis, sold and conveyed to the defendant, W. D. Bran-non, a 'small building lot in the city of Nashville, at the price of $900. The deed executed contained
In January, 1896, after the sale of the property attached, and before confirmation, Mrs. Curtis filed the present bill to review the final decree against her, under Brannon’s bill, for errors of law alleged
Brannon’s demurrer to this bill was overruled by the Chancellor, who adjudged that the decree impeached was erroneous in law upon its face in three particulars: (1) Because it allowed the vendee a full recovery of purchase money and interest thereon, without abatement for rents and profits; (2) because it allowed such recovery without restoring the possession to the vendor; and (3) because it allowed a recovery for improvements without proper cause shown. And, thereupon, the Chancellor further adjudged that the said decree be reviewed, reversed, and set aside for the reasons stated, and that a reference be had to ascertain the value of the rents and profits of the lot since the vendee went into possession.
The Court of Chancery Appeals affirmed the decree under the bill of review, in so far as it denied Brannon a recovery for improvements, but reversed it, and restored the decree under the original bill in other respects. Both parties have appealed, and, in this Court, complain of such parts of the decree of the Court of Chancery Appeals as are adverse to them, respectively.
1. A covenant of seizin is an assurance to the vendee that the vendor has the very estate, in quantity and quality, which he purports to convey. It is a personal covenant in presentí, and, if not true, is breached the instant it is made, and an immediate
2. If the breach be total, or such that the ven-dee may so treat it, the measure of damages is, ordinarily, the amount of consideration paid, with interest thereon. Kincaid v. Brittain, 5 Sneed, 119;
3. The recovery of the consideration and interest is subject, however, to abatement for rents during the vendee’s possession, when it appears that he cannot be made liable therefor to the owner of the paramount title. A vendee, having enjoyed the advantages of possession at the expense of his vendor, is bound, especially in a Court of Equity, to account for those advantages when he demands repayment of the purchase money with interest. He cannot in such a case hold benefits, and at the same time recover as if he had not received them.
Some of the authorities treat liability for rents as the reason for allowing interest on the consideration paid. Kent says: “The interest is to countervail the claim for mesne profits, to which the grantee is liable.” 4 Kent., *475.
Sutherland says: “ Possession without title may compensate for the interest on the purchase money, if there be no liability which can be enforced to
We see no good reason for limiting the vendee’s liability for rents to the interest on the purchase money, if they have, in fact, been of greater value. He should account for all the benefits he has derived from the possession, and, if not responsible therefor to some other person, his vendor should have an abatement to that extent.
“The whole consideration money and interest cannot be the criterion of damages, except in those cases where the purchaser derives no benefit from the conveyance.” 2 Suth. on Dam., Sec. 597. “But if some title passes, though so far short of that covenanted for that the grantee is clearly not bound to retain it for a proportionate part of the purchase money, on tendering a reconveyance and surrendering possession recovery may be had of the entire consideration money and interest, together with taxes paid, less the value of the rents received.’,’ II)., Sec. 599.
This last proposition is based upon the decision in Frazer v. Supervisors of Peoria Co., 74 Ill., 282, which goes further than the text, and holds that the grantee must answer not only for ‘ ‘ rents received, ’ ’
It is said in another case, that if the vendee takes any benefit, directly or indirectly, from the deed, he must be charged with that benefit in the assessment of his damages. Hartford & Saulsbury Ore Co. v. Miller, 41 Conn., 113.
This Court, in Park, v. Cheek, which was an action at law for the breach of a covenant of seizin, said: “The defendant will have the right, where the plaintiff seeks to recover the purchase money and interest, to set off the rents and profits of the land, and such damages as may be sustained by reason of the plaintiff removing and appropriating any permanent improvements the defendant may have erected on the premises.” 4 Cold., 28.
4. Having been in rightful possession, under a deed passing a good and perfect title to at least a life estate in the land conveyed, and the life tenant being still alive, so as to preclude the remaindermen from demanding rents for any part of the time, the vendee in the present case was liable to his vendor for the rental value of the premises from the inception of his possession to the date of the decree, and it was an error of law not to reduce the ven-dee’s recovery to that extent.
5. The original decree was further erroneous, in that it allowed the vendee a full recovery for the breach of the covenant of seizin, as in case of a total failure of title or of rescission, without, at the
Never, when adequate relief can be granted to both parties, will it be given to one and withheld from the other. Had Brannon sued at law, the measure of damages would have been the difference between the value of the life estate acquired and the fee contracted for. Recohs v. Younglove, 8 Bax., 385; 2 Devlin on Deeds, Sec. 901.
It is only in a Court of Equity, and upon the ground of rescission, that he can have the larger recovery. Being in that forum, and seeking relief upon that ground, he must by the same decree surrender the possession and account for mesne profits as well. Asking equity he must do equity.
It has been said, and upon good reason, that a vendée in like situation with Brannon, should recon-vey or tender a reconveyance before asking a recovery for the breach of a covenant of seizin. Frazer v. Supervisors of Peoria Co., 74 Ill., 291; 2 Suth. Dam., Sec. 599.
Rawle remarks that “it .would, perhaps, be a matter of prudence for the purchaser to offer such reconveyance before or at the time of the trial, although it would be no bar to his action that he had not done so.” Rawle Cov. Tit., Sec. 185,
6. At an early period in American jurisprudence it was decided that a vendee, suing for a total breach of the covenant of seizin, could not augment his recovery by showing a rise in value, whether the enhancement arose from extrinsic causes, as in Staats v. Ten Eyck, 3 Caines, 111, or from improvements placed upon the land by him, as in Bender v. Tromberger, 4 Dall., 442, and Pitcher v. Livingston, 4 Johns., 1; and such is the general rule prevailing at this day. 4 Kent, *475; Rawle Cov. Tit., Sec. 158; 3 Sedg. Dam., Secs. 958 and 961; 2 Snth. Dam., 593; 2 Devlin on Deeds, Sec. 894; and cases cited by the text writers, and in note to Mecklem v. Blake, 99 Am. Dec., 73.
Perhaps the most important reason underlying this rule is the fact that the vendor ordinarily receives no benefit whatever from the enhanced value of the land. He does not, in the usual case, actually regain the land, but it goes to the owner of the paramount title, with all its enhancement.
7. But the present case is not the usual one, and the reason for the rule is not entirely applicable. It applies as to the remainder estate, but not as to the life estate. There is no paramount ownership of the life estate. The vendor is actually
Such equitable circumstances impel a Court of conscience to grant the vendee a recovery for improvements to the extent that they may have permanently enhanced the rental or usable value of life estate.
Enter decree in accordance with this opinion, and remand for an account, in which Brannon will be credited with (1) purchase money and interest, (2) taxes paid, and (3) improvements, so far as they may have enhanced the rental or’ usable value of the life estate, and charged with the annual rents or use of the premises in the condition in which they may have been from time to time.