71 N.Y.S. 1041 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The State of New York, by letters patent dated July 26, 1845, granted to Daniel Cady lot No. 58 in the Canastota tract in Madison county, containing seventy-one and two-tenths acres.
Daniel Cady devised lot No. 58 to his daughter, Margaret McMartin, through whom, by mesne conveyances, Thomas Killam, the claimant, and Jason H. Howard, in 1863, acquired the title to lot.No. 58 that was conveyed to Cady.
In January, 1864, while Killam and Howard were in possession, under the deeds to them, an action was brought against them by
On June 3, 1882, Howard assigned to Killam, the claimant, all his interest in any claim by reason of failure of title to the land.
Under chapter 510 of the Laws of 1889 the claim of Thomas Killam against the State for damages arising out of the failure of title was presented to the Board of Claims, and ¡the board refused to make an award to the claimant, on the ground that “ the facts proved would not create a legal liability against the. State were the same established in a court of justice against an individual.” That .statute provided that no award should be made unless the facts proved would create such a liability.
Under chapter 155 of the Laws of 1897 the claim was again presented by .Killam to the Court of Claims, and ■ from its judgment dismissing the claim this appeal is taken.
Chapter 155 of the Laws' of 1897 confers' jurisdiction on the Board of Claims “to hear, audit and determine the claim of Thomas Killam against the State of New York for damages alleged to have been sustained by him, arising from or in conseqitence of the failure ■of title to land situate in the so-called Canastota tract in the county •of Madison and State of New York, granted to Daniel Cady under the great seal of the State by letters patent, dated the twenty-sixth •day of July, one thousand eight hundred and forty-five, * * including the actual costs and expenses incurred by the said Thomas Killam in defending such title; ” and provides that “ If the facts proved before said board shall establish that damages have been sustained by said claimant, arising or resulting as hereinbefore stated, said board shall determine the amount of such damages and award to him such sum therefor as shall be just and equitable.” The act does not contain the provision as to legal liability that was contained in the act of 1889.
The consideration for the grant of the seventy-one acres by the State to Cady is not expressed in the letters patent and does not appear in the evidence, although the counsel for the respondent
The only authority of the Court of Claims to award damages to the claimant is derived from the statute. That authority is, in substance, to determine the amount of damages sustained by the claimant in consequence of the failure of title to the lands and to award to him “ such sum therefor as shall be just and equitable.” If the word “ damages ” in the statute be construed in its legal sense of injuries sustained by a breach of the contract, the judgment dismissing the claim of the claimant was unquestionably right. There was no breach of the contract on the part of the State. The grant to Cady did not contain any covenant of warranty, and no such covenant can be implied. Damages for failure of title to land can be recovered only on express covenants contained in the deed. (1 R. S. 138, § 140; Burwell v. Jackson, 9 N. Y. 541.)
But if the word “ damages ” be construed in the broader and more liberal sense of pecuniary loss sustained, I think the same result must follow. The Court of Claims is authorized to award only such damages for failure -of title “ as shall be just and equitable.” It must be conceded that the principles of justice and equity applicable to this claim are no different from those that could be invoked if the claim were against an individual, and the question presented, in its simplest form, is whether justice and equity require a grantor in a deed not containing any covenant to make pecuniary compensation to a grantee for loss sustained by him through failure of title. That there is no such legal liability on the grantor is well settled, and I think it equally cleár that there is no just or equitable requirement. The grantee gets all that he bargained for, that is, such title as his grantor has to the lands conveyed. He has ample opportunity for an examination of the records, and thus equal means of knowledge with the grantor as to the title, and if he accepts a deed without covenants he fully understands that he does: so at his own risk. He does not bargain for a covenant of warranty
Having reached this conclusion, the consideration of. the constitutionality of the statute in question is unnecessary.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs.