34 Wash. 566 | Wash. | 1904
This was an action brought in the superior court of Spokane county on the 29th day of January, 1902, by James H. Litchfield, plaintiff and respondent, against Henry T. Cowley and Henry T. Cowley as executor of the last will and testament of Lucy A. Cowley, deceased, defendants and appellants, to recover damages for
, On the 4th day of December, 1891, respondent, James H. Litchfield, and his wife, Jane A. Litchfield, entered into a written contract with Edith Clara Cowlev, who acted on behalf of the above named Henry T. and Lucy A. Cowley (husband and wife). By the terms of this agreement, the Litchfields agreed to convey the above real estate to the Cowleys by a good and sufficient, deed of general warranty, free from incumbrances. The Cowleys agreed to pay for such real estate $4,000 on or before December 4, 1893, with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, said installments of interest being “evidenced by four certain promissory notes, dated respectively December 4, 1891, June 4, 1892, December 4, 1892, June 4, 1893, and December 4, 1893, of two hundred dollars each, said notes being signed by Edith C. Cowley, and payable to James H. Litchfield and Jane A. Litchfield.” This contract was signed by the Litchfields and Edith C. Cowley, but it is admitted by the pleadings that the latter party executed this agreement on behalf of Henry T. Cowley and Lucy A. Cowley, now deceased. The Cowleys further agreed “to pay all taxes and assessments that may be levied or assessed upon said property during the said term of two years.” By the subsequent agreement of the parties, the time for the performance of this contract was extended two years — that is to say, until January 1, 1895.
The complaint alleges, that on the 17th day of Hay, 1895, the respondent paid to the county treasurer the
The appellants demurred to the 'complaint, and, among other grounds, alleged that the action was not commenced within the time limited by law. The trial court overruled such demurrer, and appellants excepted. The appellants thereupon answered, and, among other defenses, set up the six year statute of limitations. [Respondent demurred to this defense. This demurrer having been sustained by the lower court, appellants excepted. It is admitted by the pleadings that the Cowleys did not pay the purchase money for this property, as provided in the contract. The cause went to trial on the issues as thus formulated by the pleadings, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for respondent, as above stated.
The appellants’ assignments of error present but one
The argument of appellants, as we understand it, is based upon the proposition that the covenant of the Cowleys to pay these taxes and assessments was primary, affirmative, and positive in its language, and not secondary or collateral; that the respondent could have sued the Cowleys for breach of this covenant on January 2, 1895, and recovered substantial damages, without having first paid such taxes and assessments; that hence this cause of action accrued at that time. The respective counsel for appellants and respondent have cited no authority bearing directly on this question, which seems to be somewhat involved and not free from difficulty. The case of Donovan v. Judson, 81 Cal. 334, 22 Pac. 682, 6 L. R. A. 591, cited by appellants’ counsel, was an action to recover on an independent covenant for the payment of the purchase money named in the agreement for the sale of real estate. The time of payment was fixed by the terms
The respondent presses upon our attention the case of Post v. Campau, 42 Mich. 90, 3 N. W. 272, as an authority in point sustaining the ruling of the court below on the question of the statute of limitations, contending that the covenant in question is one of indemnity, not affirmative and positive in terms, and not entitling respondent to sue thereon until he shall have suffered damages by payment of the above taxes and assessments. This authority last cited was an action on a covenant contained in a deed.
“The said parties of the first part for them'selves, heirs, executors and administrators, do covenant, grant, bargain and agree to and with the said party of the second part, his heirs and assigns, that they, the said parties of the first part, have not heretofore done, committed, or wittingly, or willingly suffered to be done or committed any act, matter or thing whatsoever whereby the premises hereby granted or any part thereof is, are or shall or may be charged encumbered in title or estate or otherwise.”
This deed was made to defendant in error, Daniel J. Campau, by deceased, Theodore J. Campau, and others, of a tract of land, on December 19, 1866. Prior to that
“As the terms of the covenant sued upon were falsified by facts existing at the time, a technical breach may be said to have then taken place; but as no damage followed from this breach, until the claimant purchased from But*572 ler more than ten years afterwards, the rule that tire claimant’s right of action shall be deemed to have arisen at the delivery of the deed involves this manifest absurdity, that the claimant’s remedy was barred before he was damnified — a result that can scarcely be consistent with any just or proper rule of law.”
and expresses it as his opinion that, though there was a technical breach of the covenant when the deed was delivered, there was no substantial damage until the claimant paid the above sum of money, and that therefore the statutory limit had not expired when this claim was presented. Just before concluding the opinion, Judge Cooley says:
“So far I have expressed my own views, and have not spoken for any one else. My brethren think that the broad question I have discussed is not involved. They are of opinion that the covenant is special, and that it looks to the future, and promises indemnity for damage?that may at any time in the future result from the breach. In this view it is immaterial whether the ordinary covenant against encumbrances would or would not be broken finally, if at- all, at the delivery of the deed containing it.”
The covenant in this last case seems to have been one of indemnity against incumbrances,- rather than one to do specific acts similar to the payment of taxes and assessments that may have been levied between certain periods of time. The language of the covenant in the above deed seems to be general in its terms, whether applied to existing incumbrances, or to those that may arise or become crystallized in the future from a source existing anterior to the execution of'the deed of conveyance. Unquestionably, if the covenant involved in the present controversy is to be construed as one of indemnity, the respondent’s cause of action for substantial damages did not accrue till he discharged the taxes and assessments mentioned in his com
The case of Rector etc. of Trinity Church v. Higgins, 48 N. Y. 532, appears to have a more direct bearing on the facts involved in the case at bar than any other authority to which our attention has been directed. The syllabus thereof fairly states the points decided:
“A covenant in a lease whereby the lessee agrees to bear, pay and discharge all taxes and assessments which shall be imposed upon the demised premises during the term, is broken when the lessee neglects to pay a tax or assessment duly imposed. It is not simply a contract of indemnity, but by it the tax or assessment, as between the parties, becomes the debt of the lessee. The lessor therefore can maintain an action thereon without first paying the tax or assessment, and as damages he is entitled to recover the amount of such tax or assessment.
“Parties have the right to make a contract contravening the rule that actual compensation will only be given for actual loss, and when the intent so to do is expressed in apt and suitable language courts of justice will enforce it.
“The fact that neither the particular tax or assessment, nor the time of payment, nor the person or corporation to whom payable are stated in the covenant, does not make it one for indemnity merely. That is certain which is capable of being rendered certain.
“Hor is it an objection that there is a risk attendant upon the payment of the judgment without prepayment of the tax or assessment. The lessee can make payment even after judgment, and upon application to the court after such payment the collection of the judgment; except as to costs, will be stayed, and upon payment of costs satisfaction will be ordered.”
“The rule may be definitely drawn from numerous cases, that where indemnity only is expressed, damages must be sustained before a recovery can be had; but a positive agreement to do an act which is to prevent damage to the plaintiff, will sustain an action where the defendant neglects or refuses to do such act.”
Numerous authorities are cited in support of the position of the court in this respect. The principles of law enunciated in that case, as far as we are able to learn, have never been questioned by the court of last resort in New York, but have been sustained by numerous subsequent decisions of the courts of that state. In Smart v. Smart, 24 Hun 127, this rule of law was applied to an agreement for the sale of real estate.
It is true, as respondent contends, that no time is mentioned in the contract sued on for the payment of these taxes and assessments, and that the question as to the statute of limitations Was not involved in the case of Rector, etc., v. Higgins, supra. But the principles of law announced therein are significant, when we come to make the application to the facts in this controversy as presented by the record, in that the covenant' of the Cowleys to pay the taxes and assessments on this realty was one looking to the prevention of damage, and not an agreement of indemnity to pay damages that the Litchfields or respondent might suffer by reason of the default of the Cowleys in that regard. Bearing in mind the rule that that is certain which can be made certain, it would logically follow that respondent’s cause of action accrued when the above taxes and assessments became due, with
Applying these rules of law to the facts before us, we are of the opinion that respondent’s cause of action in the ease at bar accrued not later than June 1, 1895; that, as more than six years had elapsed between that date and the bringing of the present action, the statutory bar was complete, and that the superior court erred in sustaining the demurrer of respondent to the second defense of appellants’ answer setting up as a defense the statute of limitations.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the case renianded with instructions to overrule such demurrer, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.