OPINION
This appeal arises from a suit for damages brought by a purchaser of real estate (appellee) against the seller and title insurance companies (appellants) when the City of Houston demolished a structure on the property after the purchase by appellee. Judgment was entered for appellee against the title companies based on her claim of negligence and against the seller for violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices-Consumers Protection Act and Fraud in Real Estate and Stock Transactions statutes. *326 The issues before us are whether title insurance companies have a duty to discover and disclose to the buyer as the insured the existence of a recorded building order affecting the premises, and whether such a recordation is a seller’s defense to the purchaser’s claims under the DTPA and real estate fraud statutes. We hold that appel-lee’s claims are barred as a matter of law and reverse the trial court’s judgment.
The facts relevant to our disposition are undisputed. The property the subject of this suit is located at 1815 Southmore Street in Houston, Texas. Prior to 1979 the property, containing a house, was owned by Evance and Johnnie Captain. Earlier there had been a fire in the house and it was abandoned. On January 2, 1979, an Order of the Building Official was signed by Horace Cude, Administrative Assistant to the Director of Public Works for the City of Houston, in which the remaining structure was determined to be dangerous. The Order mandated the posting of the house as a dangerous building and gave the owners until February 10,1979, to submit plans for repairs to comply with all applicable laws and ordinances; if no such plans were submitted, the Order authorized the City of Houston to demolish the building and place a lien on the property for the demolition costs. This Order was filed in the Official Public Records of Real Property of Harris County, Texas, on January 22, 1979.
On September 28,1979, the property was conveyed by general warranty deed from the Captains to appellant William J. Wise Developments, Inc. Shortly thereafter, ap-pellee and her husband, residents of Mexico City, decided to purchase a home in kous-ton to live in during their frequent trips to acquire medical treatment for Mr. Toca’s mother. In October of 1979 appellee was shown the house on Southmore and in November signed an earnest money contract with appellant Wise in which she agreed to purchase the property and improvements for $23,000.00 and further agreed to remodel the house within 12 months. The closing took place on November 15, 1979, with the property conveyed by general warranty deed with an owner’s policy of title insurance issued by the appellant title insurance companies; neither the deed nor the policy mentioned the condemnation Order.
Immediately after the closing appellee parked her car in the garage on the property and returned to Mexico. On March 10, 1980, the house was demolished pursuant to the city’s Order. When appellee returned in July 1980 she found only the garage with her car and a lien for demolition costs placed against the property. She then brought suit against the title companies alleging misrepresentation of the property’s condition, negligence and gross negligence, violations of the DTPA and real estate fraud statutes, and breach of fiduciary trust. Against Wise and his company she alleged the same causes of action in addition to breach of earnest money contract and general warranty deed. Trial was to the jury, which found in answers to special issues that both the title companies and Wise/Wise Developments were negligent in failing to disclose the Order and that this failure was a violation of the DTPA. The jury further found that Wise’s failure to disclose was a violation of the statutes governing fraud in real estate transactions. The Modified Final Judgment deleted the DTPA grounds for recovery against the title companies, and ordered judgment against all for $19,037.95 plus prejudgment interest. The judgment further ordered Wise/Wise Developments to pay $2,000.00 in DTPA damages, $5,000.00 in exemplary damages, and attorney’s fees. It is from this judgment that both the title companies and Wise/Wise Developments appeal.
In their first point of error appellants Houston Title Company and Title Insurance Company of Minnesota contend the trial court erred in entering judgment against them based on the jury’s findings of negligence because the title companies had no duty, as a matter of law, to discover the Order of the Building Official, and therefore the failure to disclose the Order cannot form the basis for a negligence cause of action. We agree.
The duties owed by a title insurance company to its insured have been well
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documented and are more easily understood in terms of the relationship between the two. The title insurance company is not, as is an abstract company, employed to examine title; rather, the title insurance company is employed to guarantee the status of title and to insure against existing defects. Thus, the relationship between the parties is limited to that of indemnitor and indemnitee.
Tamburine v. Center Savings Association,
Appellee relies on two cases that may be distinguished on their facts. In
Gibbs v. Main Bank of Houston,
We sustain the title companies' first point of error and hold that the trial court erred in entering judgment against them based on the jury findings of negligence because no duty was owed by them to discover and disclose to appellee the existence of the Order of the Building Official.
Wise and Wise Developments contend in their first point of error that the trial court erred in denying their Motion for Instructed Verdict as to the DTPA claim because the recordation of the Order in the county records is a defense to that action as a matter of law.
We sustain this point of error. The Order of the Building Official was recorded in the real property records of Harris County on January 22, 1979, months before appel-lee’s purchase of the property in September 1979. This recordation is constructive notice to all persons of the existence of the instrument. Tex.Prop.Code Ann. § 13.002 (Vernon 1984). The constructive notice provided by a recording statute is a defense to an action under the DTPA.
Medallion Homes, Inc. v. Thermar Investments, Inc.,
In their second point of error Wise and Wise Developments contend the trial court erred in denying their Motion for Instructed Verdict on appellee’s statutory fraud claim because the recordation of the Order is a defense to that claim as a matter of law.
The jury found that the failure by Wise and Wise Developments to disclose the existence of the Order constituted fraud in a real estate transaction. However, a purchaser of land has constructive notice of all information contained in his grantor’s chain of title, and he is bound by every recital, reference and reservation contained in or fairly disclosed by any instrument which forms an essential link in that chain.
Westland Oil Development Corp. v. Gulf Oil Corp.,
The trial court erred in entering judgment against Houston Title Company and Title Insurance Company of Minnesota based on the jury’s finding of negligence, and in denying the Motion for Instructed Verdict of William J. Wise and William J. Wise Developments, Inc., as to appellee’s DTPA and fraud in real estate claims, as such claims are barred as a matter of law. We therefore reverse the trial court’s judgment iand render judgment that appellee take nothing.
J. CURTISS BROWN, C.J., not sitting.
