83 F. 793 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington | 1897
This is an action at law to recover damages for the breach of a covenant of general warranty of title
When an estate is conveyed Toy a deed describing it so that the parties must understand therefrom that the (state is subservient to a superior title, which cannot he extinguished nor acquired, the grantee talas its cum onere, and no right of action can accrue in his favor upon the covenants in the deed, unless in the covenant the grantor specifically agrees to stand liable for losses resulting from the assertion of such superior title, if not mentioned in the covenant, it wall he presumed that the parties have made allowance for a. known defect of title in fixing the purchase price, and the grantee, having only paid for what he gets, cannot afterwards he heard to complain that he lias been damaged by a broken contract on the part of the grantor. This case is distinguishable, by its peculiar facts and circumstances, from all precedents to which my attention lias been directed; but the above propositions are applicable here, and the same are, in a measure, supported by the following authorities: Co. Litt. (Butler & Hargrave’s Notes; 1st Am. from 19th London Ed.) 381a; 2 Sugd. Vend. (Bill. Am. Ed.) 230; Montgomery v. Heed, 69 Me. 510-516; Piolines v. Danfort.li (Me.) 21 Atl. 815; Alee v. Mason, 101 Pa. St. 17; Kutz v. McCuue, 22 Wis. 628; Barre v. Flemings (W. Va.) 1 S. E. 731. The words of the covenant seem to indicate an intention in the minds of the parties to restrict the covenant to correspond to the known situation of the premises, so that the liability of the vendor shall not be greater than would be reasonable for her to assume. The covenant is not to defend against all lawful claims, but against all persons lawfully claiming or to claim. Now, the commonwealth is not a person, and its claim of title is not mentioned specifically, nor is it within (he general terms of the covenant, If the words are to be considered as having been selected to accurately express I he intention of the parties. Rawle, Cov. (5th Ed., p. 171; McBride v. Board. 41 Fed. 17; In re Fox, 52 N. Y. 535 : U. S. v. Fox, 94 U. S. 315-321. If the defendant, by her covenant, became broadly liable, as the plaintiff now insists, the contract was ill-advised and improvident on-her pari, because she at once parted with her possession, and became liable to return the purchase money with interest; and the liability was not contingent, but absolute. This should not. free her from an obliga I ion plainly expressed in her contract; but the unreasonableness of the contract, if construed as tin; plaintiff insists that it should be, may fairly be taken into account in drawing a conclusion as to the meaning of the words employed. There is no rule to justify a construction of the contract., whereby a sub-