73 Mo. App. 316 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
The statute provides that in all conveyances of land in which an estate of inheritances in fee simple is limited, the words “grant, bargain and sell,” shall, unless expressly restrained, be construed
In support of the first breach the petition alleges that the Paulus and Williamson Architectural Company (hereinafter designated as the architectural company) was a former owner of the land; that the defendant claimed title to * the land through it; that while owning the land the architectural company contracted with the Eau Claire Lumber Company for certain lumber to be used in the construction of a building to be erected on the premises, and that prior to the conveyance to plaintiff the lumber was so used; that afterward a suit was instituted by the Eau Claire Lumber Company to enforce a mechanic’s lien against the, property for the price of the lumber so furnished; that the architectural company, the defendant Sharp and one W. S. Lefferty, a former owner of the land, were joined as defendants; that in said suit a judgment was rendered for $1,619.60 in favor of the plaintiff therein, and the judgment was declared to be a lien upon the premises, and that to protect the property from sale
As to the second breach it was averred that one August R. Shultz performed work and' furnished materials for the same building; that Shultz made his contract for the work and materials with the architectural company, while the latter was the owner of the premises ; that on the sixteenth day of August, 1892, Shultz brought suit against the architectural company and the defendant Sharp to enforce a mechanic’s lien against the premises for the amount due him under said contract; that on the twenty-fifth day of April, 1893, a judgment was rendered in the action for $392.71 and for the cost of suit, and that on the eighth day of May, 1894, the plaintiff paid $497.40 in satisfaction of this judgment.
The third breach was on account of an action by the Ringen Stove Company to enforce a mechanic’s lien against the same property. It is stated in the petition that this action was begun on the eighteenth day of August, 1892; that the Architectural Company, W. E. Lefferty 11 and others” were made defendants therein; that on March 20, 1894, judgment was entered in favor of the Ringen Stove Company for $1,210.53 and enforcing the lien, and that subsequently the plaintiff herein was compelled to pay the following amounts on account of said judgment, to wit, May 28, 1894, $321.05; August — , 1894, $318.96.
The answer admits the execution of the deed and “that said liens and judgments were filed and judgments were rendered at the times and for the amounts alleged.”
Relying on the admissions in the answer, the plaintiff introduced no evidence as to the mechanic’s liens of the judgments thereon. His evidence was directed
At the close of the plaintiff’s- evidence the defendant demurred because neither the pleadings nor the evidence showed a cause of action. The overruling of this demurrer is assigned for error. Under the instructions the jury returned averdict for the sum of $2,325.54, being the full amount sued for with interest. The defendant has appealed. It is conceded, although it does not definitely appear either from the plead-mgs or the evidence, that the mechanic’s ]jeng ref6rred to were filed after the conveyance to plaintiff. The position of counsel for defendant is that the mere right to file a lien is not an existing incumbrance, and that under a proper construction existing incumbrances of record only are included in the statutory covenant against incumbrances. Hence the argument is that there were no breaches of the covenant in the defendant’s deed, and for this reason the instruction for nonsuit ought to have been given. Prior to 1879 the statute provided that under the second covenant the grantor contracted that the land was free from incumbrances, “done or suffered by the grantor or any person claiming under Mm. ’ ’
In the revision of 1879 the statute was amended so as to make the grantor responsible for incumbrances, done or suffered “by any person under whom he claims.” In construing the old statute the court decided that this statutory covenant did not warrant against a deed of trust or other act done by the grantor’s grantor. Koenig v. Brown, 73 Mo. 634; Glore v. Graham, 64 Mo. 249. It was to remedy this injustice that the statute was amended. The covenant under the present statute is substantially the covenant against incum-brances as it exists at common law, and we agree with
Under these authorities we think it reasonably clear that the right of a mechanic to file a lien at the time a conveyance is made, is an incumbrance within the meaning of a covenant against incumbrances. It is urged against this that until the lien paper is filed the claim is a mere possibility and too remote and uncertain to be taken into account by the law. And further that until the lien papers are filed it could not be said that the incumbrances were known to the defend
In the Lafferty case the incumbrance was a contingent liability. At the time the deed was made the premises were subject to a contingent assignment for street improvements. The law under which the work had been done had been declared unconstitutional. There had been a curative act passed, which was afterward held to be valid. This decision was delivered after the conveyance. It was contended by the defendant that this contingent liability was not an incumbrance for the reason that at the time the deed was made it could not be known whether the property could be assessed or not, and hence there could not have been an action at once on the covenant. The defense was disallowed. The court held that at the time of the execution of the deed the contingent liability was a known incumbrance for the reason that it was evident that the improvement had been recently made and that it was known that the city had apparent authority to make the assess
The second ground of nonsuit is that the evidence was insufficient to warrant the judgment. As heretofore stated, the plaintiff introduced no evidence as to liens or judgments. In respect to these matters, reliance was placed on the admis-gions jn the answer. The petition only averred that certain suits were instituted to enforce mechanics’ liens against the property and that judgments were rendered thereon enforcing the liens! It was charged that Sharp was made a party defendant in two of the actions, to wit, the Eau Claire Lumber Company case and the Shultz case. It was neither averred nor proved that he was a party to the action brought by the Ringen Stove Company. The admission in the answer was that the suits were instituted and the judgments rendered “as alleged in the petition.” It is now insisted that the plaintiff was not compelled to pay the judgments and that his evidence was insufficient in that it did not show that the judgments were based on valid. liens, or that the. suits