124 Mo. App. 394 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
(after stating the facts.) — As appears from the finding of facts made by the learned trial judge, which we have deemed proper to incorporate as a true and accurate statement of the case, the action is on the covenant of indefeasible seizin implied in the statutory words “grant, bargain and sell” (sec. 907, R. S. 1899) and on an express covenant of warranty of usual import in the deed, and for the breach of both of said covenants, which breach is an eviction, operated by the purchase of the interests of several devisees in the paramount title, after its paramountcy was established by judgment in ejectment against the plaintiff grantee. The case at bar is a suit on the same and identical covenants involved in a former action between the identical parties, wherein a recovery for substantial damages was had and the judgment therein affirmed, as will more fully appear by reference to the case of Leet v. Gratz, 92 Mo. App. 422. In the former case, after judgment in
The defense interposed and sustained in the circuit court was that the present action is barred by the former recovery; or in other words, the learned counsel for defendant asserts that the plaintiff has split his cause of action and the rule with respect to such matters is invoked to preclude a recovery in the case now in judgment. The proposition thus presented is the only question on which the opinion of the court will be given.
The argument advanced upon behalf of the defendant is predicated upon the proposition that there was but one breach Of the covenants and therefore but one recovery is permissible. We are inclined to the opinion that the proposition asserted as a predicate is unsound in principle under the adjudicated law of this State with respect to such covenants. In order to set forth the reasons which have impelled us to this conclusion,, it will be necessary to notice the rule in Missouri, established by our courts and in part, the rule elsewhere, on the two covenants involved, and point out such distinctions as we have observed in this most intricate and technical branch of the law. We will examine the two covenants,
Now the covenant of indefeasible seizin goes to and operates as an assurance of indefeasible title in the grantor and, generally speaking, like a covenant of good right to convey, and the covenant against incumbrances is regarded and treated as being a covenant in praesenti and therefore broken, if at all, when made. This proceeds in full accord with the rules of logic, for it must be true that if a grantor covenant with the grantee that he has an indefeasible estate when in fact he has mo estate or the estate is defeasible, then this covenant is technically breached upon the delivery of the deed, and the same is true with respect to the covenants of good right to convey and against incumbrances, for in each instance it must follow if the grantor have no right to- convey or the estate conveyed be then subject to incumbrances outstanding, such covenants are breached when made; that is, upon the delivery of the deed. These covenants are therefore said to be in praesenti and ordinarily the rights and liabilities flowing therefrom are measured and ascertained in accordance with the principles of law pertinent to such fundamental notion. For instance, the right of action for the breach of such covenants therefore accrues on the covenant instanter and it is said that the covenant thereupon becomes merged in a mere right of action and in some jurisdictions, this right after the covenant is extinguished by the merger, is not assignable. It must therefore be asserted or otherwise slumber and die in the hands of the covenantee. [See Rawle on Covenants (5 Ed.), sec. 208; Ogden v. Ball, 40 Minn. 94-99; Dickson v. Desire, 23 Mo. 151; 8 Amer. and Eng. Ency. Law, (2 Ed.), 90, 91, 141, 151; Leroy v. Beard, 8 How. (U. S.) 451; Mosely v. Hunter, 15 Mo. 322.] This
As indicated above, the rule respecting the implied covenant of seizin; that it is a covenant in preasenti and broken, if at all, when made; and the essential consequences of its strict application to the effect that there is but one breach for which but one recovery is permitted, does not obtain in Missouri. On the contrary, it has been settled with us from an early period in the judicial history of the State that the covenant of indefeasible seizin implied in the statutory words “grant, bargain, and sell” is more than a covenant in praesenti • it is in fact when either some title, although defeasible, or possession of the premises accompanies the deed, a continuing covenant of indemnity having capacity to run with ■the land, annexed and incident to the indefeasible estate, if it be such (Dickson v. Desire, 23 Mo. 151), or if it be defeasible and some title is conveyed, then to the defeasible estate (Chambers v. Smith, 23 Mo. 170), or if pos
Tbe two cases of Dickson v. Desire and Chambers v. Smith, supra, were argued, considered and determined at the same term of our Supreme Court in 1856, as appears from tbe opinions which were prepared in each case by tbe very learned and accurate Judge Leonard, tbe one Dickson v. Desire, announced and established tbe doctrine that tbe implied covenant of seizin is more than a covenant in praesenti; that it is a continuing covenant
2. Another thought as to the asserted splitting of demands. True, it is a maxim of the common law that '“no one ought to be twice vexed for one and the same cause,” and it is indeed a matter of concern to the State, in the interest of the peace and repose of society, that the citizen should not be unnecessarily harassed by several suits for the same cause of action. The general rule is that if a party have a cause of action which he may litigate and conclude in one suit and he separates it and recovers a portion, this judgment concludes him as, to the whole, and he will be barred in attempting thereafter to enforce the remainder. [Bank v. Tracy, 141 Mo. 252, 42 S. W. 946; Laine v. Francis, 15 Mo. App. 107.] The doctrine, however, applies only to the same cause' of action, and concludes such rights only as were then before the court or capable of being presented and adjudicated between the parties. Now, in the former suit, the plaintiff had been, by construction of law, evicted from the lands by the purchase of the interest in the paramount title held by certain devisees and his cause of action arose from that eviction which constituted the breach. Since, the judgment in the former case therefor, he has been evicted a second time bv the purchase of the interests in the title of other devisees and a new 'and distinct breach or cause of action accrued to him for such second eviction; so while both suits may in one sense have arisen primarily out of the same contract, that is, out of the same covenant, they are in no sense the same cause of action, for the cause of action is the several breaches occurring on the several evictions, nor were the rights here involved before the court in the former case, for the second eviction out of which arose the present cause of action, had not then taken place and it was therefore impossible to include it in the former recovery, and the former recovery in no sense could be
For the reason stated, the judgment will be reversed and,the cause remanded. It is so ordered.