63 N.Y.S. 691 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
Whatever liability attached to the defendant uj reason of its undertaking to furnish a search of the premises in question was undoubtedly a contract liability, which, in its nature and scope, measured and interpreted by the language of the certificate, amounted to a guaranty to the person ordering the search, his heirs, devisees, and grantees, that the abstract contained and set forth an accurate and complete statement of any and all matters in any wise affecting or relating to the title of the premises against which the search was made. That the contract was broken in consequence of the failure of the abstract to correctly state the amount of a certain mortgage mentioned therein, is a fact about which there is no dispute; and it may be assumed for the purpose of this review that, as a result of such breach, the plaintiff suffered damage in the amount claimed by her. The more important question is, can she, with these facts conceded, maintain an action against this defendant founded upon the breach of a contract to which she was not a party, and in no way privy? The defendant is a corporation, the business of which, as indicated by its corporate name, is to furnish abstracts of title to real estate for a consideration paid by the parties ordering the same, to be in all respects accurate and reliable. Until recent years the business of searching titles was confined mainly to county clerks and recorders, and their certificate afforded a certain degree of protection to the party for whom the search was made, in that, if he suffered injury by reason of any negligent act or omission of the official making the search, he had his right to action therefor. But such right, it has been held, extended only to the person for whom the search was made. Day v. Reynolds, 23 Hun, 131; Houseman v. Association, 81 Pa. St. 256. In the present case, however, the contract of guaranty in form runs to Peacock, the party for whom the search was made, his “heirs, devisees, and grantees”; and upon the authority of the doctrine enunciated in Lawrence v. Fox, 20 N. Y. 269, and other kindred cases, it is contended that this language gives to the plaintiff, as grantee, the same right of action which Peacock acquired in virtue of the contract to which he was a party. This court has recently had occasion to determine in what cases the doctrine contended for has any application (Lyth v. Hingston, 14 App. Div. 11, 43 N. Y. Supp. 653), and, -in view of the examination which was then given to the subject, we deem it unnecessary to again enter into an extended discussion of the same. We then held that, before
Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.