20 F. 39 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1884
This action is brought to recover, among other tilings, damages to the amount of $5,312.35, for losses alleged to have been sustained on two loans on note and mortgage, amounting to $3,800, upon the certificate of the defendant, as an attorney at law, concerning the title of the borrower to the mortgaged premises and the condition of his estate therein. From what I conceive to be the legal effect of the statement of the first cause of action in the complaint as amended, it appears that “about” April 28, 1877, the Oregon & Washington Trust Investment Company was a corporation formed under the laws of Great Britain, and resident in Dundee, Scotland, and engaged in loaning money in Oregon upon note and mortgage; that the defendant, who was then a practicing attorney in this state, was employed by said corporation to examine the title and condition of the real property offered as security by any one applying to said corporation for a loan; that at this time a loan of $3,000 was made by said corporation to C. W. Shaw, on liis promissory note, payable to its order on June 1, 1882, with interest, at the rate of 10 per centum per annum, and secured by a mortgage on certain real property then owned by said Shaw, upon which the defendant certified there was no prior lien or incumbrance; that on December 19, 1879, said corporation “amalgamated” with the plaintiff and “assigned” thereto “all its mortgages,” including “all claim, right, and interest to or in or
In the first'statement it is alleged that the loss arising from the insufficiency of the security for the loan was sustained by the Oregon & Washington Trust Investment Company, and that the defendant now owes to said corporation the full amount thereof, to-wit, $4,794.35; and it is also alleged that the plaintiff is now “the owner and holder” of the mortgage, notwithstanding it appears that the same has been “foreclosed” and merged in a decree of this court and partly satisfied from the proceeds of the mortgaged premises; and notwithstanding the further allegation that the defendant “now owes” the amount of this loss to the Oregon & Washington Trust Investment Company. But none of these contradictory allegations are admitted by the demurrer, except such as the law adjudges to' be true, (Freeman v. Frank, 10 Abb. Pr. 370,) and those which are mere conclusions of law and not thereby admitted at all. Branham v. The Mayor, etc., 24 Cal. 602; Hall v. Bartlett, 9 Barb. 297. This action is brought upon the hypothesis that the defendant is now liable to the plaintiff for this loss; but the allegation that he “now owes” the amount thereof to the Oregon & Washington Trust Investment Company is utterly at variance therewith. He cannot be liable on this account to both of them at the same time.
Again, it is alleged that the defendant “guarantied” that the Shaw property was clear of incumbrance. But this is a mere conclusion of law, and the facts stated do not support it. Upon these, the transaction is simply an employment of the defendant by the Oregon & Washington Trust Investment Company to examine and report upon
It is admitted that if the Oregon & Washington Trust Investment Company had sustained a loss by the negligence or want of skill on the part of the defendant in this matter, the right to recover damages for the same might be assigned to the plaintiff, and it could maintain an action thereon. But taking the facts of the case according to their legal import, and construing contradictory allegations according to the law of the case, the plaintiff does not sue as the assignee of a cause of action accruing to the Oregon & Washington Trust Investment Company during its existence and ownership of the Shaw note and mortgage. The only thing assigned by the latter was this note and mortgage, and, nothing appearing to the contrary, presumably the consideration, therefore, was equal to its par value. It does not appear, then, that the assignor ever lost anything by reason of the incorrectness of the defendant’s certificate. Ñor could the insufficiency of the suiety be absolutely, if at all, determined until the maturity of the note in 1882, while the assignment to the plaintiff was made in 1879.
The only question, then, really in this case is whether the defendant is liable, on this certificate, to any one but his employer, the Oregon & Washington Trust Investment Company. The defendant maintains that he is not, while the plaintiff contends he is; not on the ground of privity of contract between them, or that it was aware of the existence of the certificate, or ever acted on it, or was misled by it, but on the ground that the certificate was a necessary preliminary to the contract of loaning, and therefore an integral part of that contract, operating, of course, as an assurance or security to the person about to make the loan, but as much a part of the transaction as the mortgage itself. This question has been decided by the supreme court in Savings Bank v. Ward, 100 U. S. 195. The case was this: A., an attorney employed by B. to examine and report on the tille of the latter to a certain lot of ground, certified that it was “good, ” upon which certificate B. procured a loan from 0., and gave a mortgage on the property as security. It turned out that B. had parted with the title to the properly prior to the date of the certificate — a fact that, in the exercise of reasonable care, might have been learned from the records. The security having proved worthless, and B. being insolvent, 0. lost his money, and brought suit against A. for damages. The court held, in the language of the syllabus, “that there being neither fraud, collusion, nor falsehood by A., nor privity of contract between him and C., he is not liable to the latter for any loss sustained by reason of the certificate.”
The ruling is also maintained in Houseman v. Girard M. B. &. Ass’n, 81 Pa. St. 256, in which it was held that while the recorder of deeds is liable in damages for a false certificate of title, but only to the party who employs him to make the search, and not his assignee or alienee. And in Winterbottom v. Wright, 10 Mees. & W. (Exch.) 109, it was held that although the maker of a carriage is liable to the person for whom he makes it, for any loss or injury arising directly from negligence it its construction, that he was not so liable to any third person who. might use the same, for the reason there was no privity of contract between them.
The statement of the second cause of action is of the same character as the first; and it is also defective in not stating absolutely that the certificate is untrue. The allegation that in 1888 the bank “found out” that Howard did not own the property, is not in form or effect an averment that he did not own the same and had not title thereto at the date of the certificate. It does not appear to have been “found out” in any judicial proceeding that the certificate was untrue in this respect; and while it may, nevertheless, be shown in this action to be a fact, it must first be alleged, so that issue can be taken on it.' Because in 1883 the bank was of the opinion that How
The demurrer is sustained to both statements.