56 Ga. 515 | Ga. | 1876
The plaintiff, as the administrator of W. F. Willis, sued the defendants on a promissory note given by them to his intestate for the sum of $833 33. The defendants pleaded that the note was given for a part of the purchase money of a certain described tract of land purchased by them 'of the plaintiff’s intestate in his lifetime, who, by his deed of conveyance of said land to them, covenanted and warranted the title thereto to be free and discharged of, and from all manner of incumbrances whatsoever. The defendants allege that said covenant was broken in this, that at the time of making said deed the said bargained premises were not free from incumbrances, but on the contrary, before the making of said deed, for a long time, there had been, and then was, and ever since
The court charged the jury “that if the defendants knew, at the time of the purchase of the land, that there was a road existing upon it, either a public or a private road, they cannot avail themselves of the warranty against incumbrances.” A general warranty of title to land against the claims of all persons includes in itself covenant of a right to sell, and of quiet enjoyment and of freedom from incumbrances: Code, section 2603. The question made by the record in this case is, whether a public road on the land, which fact was known to the purchaser at the time of his purchase, is, in this state, a breach of a covenant of warranty against incumbrances ? The decisions of the courts of this country are not uniform upon this question, but the weight of authority, we think, is that the existence of a public road on the land, known to the purchaser, is not such an incumbrance as would constitute a breach of the covenant of warranty. This view of the question is sustained by the better reason, especially as applicable to the condition of the people of this state. To hold that a public road running through a tract of land, which was known to the purchaser at the time of his purchase thereof, is such an incumbrance on, the land as would constitute a breach of a covenant of warranty against incumbrances, would pioduce a crop of litigation in this state that would be almost interminable. It is true that the court charged the jury if there was a private road on the land, that would not be a breach of the warranty against incumbrances, but that part of the charge did not hurt the defendants, inasmuch as they admitted in their plea that the road on the land in controversy was a public road. "Whether a private road on land
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.