144 Mo. App. 114 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This action was brought to recover attorney’s fees paid by plaintiff in the defense of title to land he had purchased of defendant. There was a demurrer to the petition on the ground that it did not ■state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained and plaintiff refusing to amend, judgment was rendered for defendant.
The petition alleges a sale of lots in Kansas City, Missouri, by defendant to plaintiff, the conveyance, by a general warranty deed dated the 22d of March, 1894, containing a clause that defendant would warrant and defend the title against “the lawful claims and demands of all persons whomsoever.” It is further alleged that the lots thus conveyed were a part of a large tract of land that was owned by one Thomas Jones, who died in 1843, leaving a widow, Martha, and nine children,' two of the latter being Elizabeth F. Jones and Nancy A. Jones. That the former married W. P. Linville and the latter James J. Priddy. It is then alleged that in the year 1852, there was a suit in partition of said lands and that a fifty-three acre tract was set off to the widow as her dower, and that she died prior to the 22d of March, 1894, the date of defendant’s deed to plaintiff.
It is further alleged that defendant’s title to the lots so conveyed to plaintiff came by mesne conveyances from the widow and children, including said Elizabeth and Nancy. That the latter, in conjunction with her husband, conveyed a part of the land to one Lott Coffman on the 9th of October, 1852, and acknowledged it before a justice of the peace of Jackson county, and that Nancy and Elizabeth on the 4th of May, 1853, conveyed other parts of the land and acknowledged the deed before the Mayor of Kansas City, these deeds being made subject to the widow’s dower.
It is then averred that Nancy Priddy and Elizabeth Linville died; and that long afterward a certain Linville claiming to be the heir of Elizabeth, com
It is then alleged that by reason of the reversal of the judgment in the Supreme Court, it-thenceforth appeared that the heirs of Nancy Priddy and Elizabeth Linville had a “substantial and lawful claim” to the property conveyed by defendant to plaintiff.
It is then averred that the heirs of Nancy Priddy and Elizabeth Linville brought an action in ejectment against this plaintiff to determine the title to the property conveyed by defendant to plaintiff, and that thereupon plaintiff notified defendant of the action, requiring him to defend if he would. It is then averred that he did not do so but that plaintiff employed attorneys for the defense of the case; that a defense was made and judgment obtained in favor of this plaintiff’s title, thus defeating the title claimed to be in,the heirs of Nancy Priddy and Elizabeth Linville. It is then averred that although it was determined in said suits that the plaintiffs therein were not entitled to the land, yet their claims, by reason of the matters herein set out, were “among the class and kind of claims that the defendants covenanted and warranted against.” The amount of the attorney’s fees and costs are then set out and stated to be reasonable, and judgment asked.^
Plaintiff’s claim is that the warranty clause in a Avarranty deed, against 'the laAvful claims of others, means a good faith claim that appears to be formidable
Counsel are, agreed that attorneys fees may be recovered of a warrantor who has proper notice from his grantee of action against his title in which the claimant is successful (Hazelett v. Woodruff, 150 Mo. 534; Long v. Wheeler, 84 Mo. App. 101; Pineland Mfg. Co. v. Trust Co., 139 Mo. App. 209), and we will therefore proceed to state our view of the question of law above noted.
We think it would be neither just nor safe to adopt the view asserted by plaintiff. To allow the mere good faith of the grantee, based on the formidable appearance of the claim made by one assailing his title, to be the criterion governing the liability of the warrantor on his warranty against “lawful claims,” would render the position of such warrantor exceedingly hazardous. The warranty is intended to cover real claims and not those which only appear to be real. The claim of the claimant must be superior to the title conveyed. It is said in 1 Jones on Real Property, sec. 985, that: “The grantor does not warrant that no one shall make a claim of adverse title, but only that no one shall make a claim which shall be adjudged valid and paramount to the title conveyed by his deed.” And the same is said in Tiedeman on Real Property, secs. 618, 619, and 8 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 98, 101. “The covenant does not protect against any but lawful claims which negative the title that the deed purports to convey.” [Smith v. Parsons, 33 West. Va. 644.] The same view is expressed in Kane v. Fisher, 2 Watts 246, and Thorne v. Clark, 112 Iowa 548.
It is often said in speaking of such covenants, that there must be an eviction or what is equivalent thereto,
The judgment is affirmed.