44 Tex. 450 | Tex. | 1876
The judgment in this case is based upon the supposition that appellant is personally liable on the general covenant of warranty of title in the deed to appellee, attached as an exhibit to his petition for deficiency of the tract of land therein described. That the record does not support or warrant such a conclusion we think quite obvious.
If we were controlled alone by common-law rules of construction and interpretation, the instrument referred to in appellee’s petition, and upon which he relies, might, and probably would, if binding upon any one, be treated as the deed of appellant, and not that of his principal. But in our courts where the principles and rules of equity prevail, as has been frequently decided, we should hold to the contrary. (Giddens v. Byers, 12 Tex., 75; Rogers v. Frost, 14 Tex., 267; Rogers v. Bracken, 15 Tex., 564.) The body of the instrument purports to be the individual deed of the appellant, though it is a conveyance of land decreed by
But if there is any doubt as to the construction which should be given to the deed, looking merely to it, all doubt or uncertainty is removed when we consider, in connection with it, the other evidence tending to show the capacity in which appellant acted; to none of which does it appear an objection was made. It clearly appears that appellee knew that the land belonged to Felix R. Daughtrey, and that appellant had no interest whatever in the land. It was at the instance and for the accommodation of appellee that appellant got from his brother authority to sell and convey the land to him. He was fully aware that the individual deed of appellant would have been inoperative and worthless as a conveyance of the land. The terms of the contract, it seems, must have been understood and agreed upon before the execution of the power of attorney. The evidence shows that appellee was anxious for its arrival before appellant received it, so that he might get a deed. The power of attorney was acknowledged in Victoria on the fifth of February, and the deed is dated on the twenty-second of the same month, showing that the deed was made soon after, if not immediately on its receipt. The power of attorney and deed were both filed for record at 10½ o’clock March 1,1859, and were recorded on the 15th of the month, the latter immediately after the former. In view of these facts, we think
But we are also of opinion, if the deed could he treated as the personal deed of appellant, that appellee has failed to show any valid ground of action against him. This action cannot be regarded as an appeal to the equitable power of the court to grant relief for frand, misrepresentation, or mistake as to the quantity of land conveyed by the deed. Though appellee alleges that appellant, in selling said land and making the deed, “either fraudulently or by mistake represented and warranted said tract of land to contain the quantity of four hundred and ninety-eight acres,” evidently there are no facts and circumstances set forth to show the alleged fraud or mistake entitling him to equitable relief. Obviously appellee supposed that the general covenant of warranty authorizes an action for a pro rata part of the purchase-money, if there is a deficit in the quantity of land mentioned in the deed. Unquestionably, where land is sold by the acre, and in many cases when the sale is in gross, and through fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake there is a material error in the quantity of land conveved by the deed,
When the covenant is for quantity as well as for title, if there is a deficit, whether there is fraud or mistake is immaterial. The fact of deficit alone would entitle the purchaser to recover. Undoubtedly the parties, if they think fit, might put a covenant of this kind in the deed. But we cannot agree that the covenant of warranty of title imports such an undertaking. The cases in this court in which relief has been had on account of a deficiency in the quantity of land sold have all shown some equitable ground for redress. So intimation is found in any of them that an action on account of such deficit could be maintained on the covenant of warranty of title. (Smith v. Fly, 24 Tex., 345; Weir v. McGee, 25 Tex. Supp., 20.)
The court also erred in not construing the deed. The jury should have been told, that warranty of title did not operate as a warranty of the quantity, and that appellant was not personally liable on it. And they also should have been instructed that the contract shown by it was for the sale of land in gross, and not by the acre. For, as is said in the case of Weir v. McGee, (supra,) “ On a question whether a sale of land was by the acre or in gross, and the contract is proven by a deed, it is the province of the court to construe the deed, and it was not proper for the court to
An inspection of the deed in question in this case plainly shows, we think, that the sale was in gross. It is for “ a certain tract or parcel of land decreed by the county,” &c. It is described “as share No. 4 in the division,” &c., “being the four hundred and ninety-eight acres out of a tract designated in the plat of said Daughtrey tract in Austin county as No. 4, containing six hundred and forty-six acres, and being the balance left after taking off the one hundred and forty-eight acres, as set forth in share No. 2 in the division of said estate.” Then follows the metes and bounds of the four hundred and ninety-eight acre tract conveyed. Unquestionably the leading idea expressed in the deed is to convey, not a specific number of acres of land, but a tract designated in the partition of his mother’s estate, and set apart to the vendor as the four hundred and ninety-eight acre tract No. 4. And the court should have so construed the deed.
Reversed and remanded.