135 N.Y. 219 | NY | 1892
The deed from Emanuel Durnherr to the defendant recited that it was given in payment of a debt owing by the grantor to the grantee of $660, "and the further considerations expressed herein." The grantee covenanted in the deed to pay all incumbrances on the premises "by mortgage or otherwise." This constitutes the only "further consideration" on his part expressed therein. The deed also declared that the wife of the grantor (the plaintiff) reserved her right of dower in the premises. The conveyance contained a covenant of general warranty by the grantor, and the only legal operation of the clause respecting the dower of the wife was to limit the scope of the warranty by excluding therefrom her dower right. By the foreclosure of the mortgages on the premises existing at the time of the conveyance, in which (as is assumed) the wife joined, the title has passed to purchasers on the foreclosure, and the inchoate right of dower in the wife has been extinguished. This action is brought by the wife on the defendant's covenant in the deed, and she seeks to recover as damages the value of her inchoate right of dower, which was cut off by the foreclosure.
The courts below denied relief, and we concur in their conclusion. The covenant was with the husband alone. He had an interest in obtaining indemnity against his personal liability for the mortgage debts, and this, presumably, was his primary purpose in exacting from the grantee a covenant to pay the mortgages. The cases also attribute to the parties to such a covenant the further purpose of benefiting the holder of the securities, and the natural scope of the covenant is extended *222
so as to give them a right of action at law on the covenant, in case of breach, as though expressly named as covenantees. (Burr
v. Beers,
*223
(
The order should be affirmed, and judgment absolute ordered for the defendant with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed and judgment accordingly.