197 Ky. 114 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
Appellant and plaintiff below, Brig H. Harriss, filed this ordinary action in tbe Boyd circuit court against tbe legatees and devisees of W. R. Music, deceased, to recover judgment for $800.00 against them, wbiob amount be alleged was due bim. (because of a 'breach of warranty contained in ¡a deed executed and delivered to bim on October 9, 1915, by defendant, Sophia Music, and ber ¡husband, W. R. Music, whereby they conveyed to bim a lot in Kenova, Wayne county, West Virginia, upon which was -located a business bouse ¡constructed of .stone. Tbe lot, as described in tbe deed, was lot No. 12, block No. 135, on recorded plat No. 3 of the city of Kenova, made by R. P. 'Carson, engineer for tbe Ken-ova-Huntington Land Company, ¡and was .supposed to be 25 feet wide and 58 feet deep'.
Tbe petition, as amended, averred that while tbe deed described tbe .property .as lot No. 12, which was of tbe
We are not informed as to the grounds upon which the court sustained the demurrer, but appellees’ counsel argue in support of the judgment that the domestic rule disallows this character of action, unless there has been a prior eviction, and a number of cases are cited in support of that proposition, which is not denied by counsel for appellant. Appellees’ counsel further insist that the cause of action is not affected or governed by the laws of West Virginia wherein the land conveyed is located, but that it is a personal action and is governed by the laws of the state where the covenant was made; but we cannot agree with that contention. The covenant sued on is what is known in law as a real covenant and runs with ■the land and the remedies thereon are necessarily governed by the laws of the state wherein the land is located, and if under that law an .action for breach of warranty could be maintained under the facts alleged without a prior eviction the courts of this state, through comity, will enforce the same right here.
In response to the first contention, that there was no warranty of any land except lot No. 12, counsel overlooked the fact that plaintiff’s pleading alleged that there
The exact point was before this court in the case of Cecil v. Ky. Live Stock Ins. Co., 165 Ky. 211. That action was brought as an ordinary one to recover a judgment on an insurance policy which the petition sought to reform on the ground that matters therein alleged had been left out of the policy by mutual mistake of the parties. The lower court sustained a demurrer to the petition and it was dismissed, and in the opinion, Judge Miller, writing for the court, said: “Taking the allegations of the petition as true, it clearly presents a case for relief. The fact that the action is at law and not in equity for the reformation and enforcement of the policy, does not make the petition bad upon demurrer, where, as here, it aptly states facts which authorize relief. Upon the return of the case, if the plaintiff should so desire, he should be permitted to have the ease transferred to the equity docket upon an amendment of his petition so as to .seek equitable relief.” We have examined the record in that case and find it in the exact condition of the instant one, and the court under the rule there announced should have overruled the demurrer and transferred the cause to the equity docket where the equitable issues could be disposed of, and judgment rendered for whomsoever the evidence authorized.