39 Cal. 360 | Cal. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court:
. This is an action upon a covenant for quiet enjoyment. The complaint avers-that on the 13th of August, A. D. 1856, the defendant, for the consideration of $9,000, conveyed to
“ And the said Daniel N. Hastings and his heirs, the said premises in the quiet and peaceable possession of said parties of the second part, and their heirs and assigns, and against the said party of the first part, his heirs, and against all and every person and persons whomsoever lawfully claiming or to claim the same, shall and will warrant and by these presents forever defend.”
That the plaintiff and his co-tenants immediately entered into possession of the premises as conveyed under the deed; that plaintiff’s co-tenants conveyed to him, for a valuable consideration, their interest in the land on the 27th day of September, 1858, and plaintiff immediately thereafter took exclusive possession of the entire premises; that the only title claimed by the defendant at the time of his covenant, was through Vallejo, who claimed to own a large tract of land, known as the Suscol Rancho, of which the premises conveyed were a part, under a grant from Mexico, and that Vallejo had no other title save under said supposed grant.
That at the time of said conveyance by defendant, the petition of Vallejo for the confirmation of the grant was pending in the Courts of the United States, and was finally rejected on the 10th of June, A. D.' 1862, and thereby the title of the United States to the land declared paramount; of all of which facts the defendant had due notice and full knowledge.
The plaintiff thereupon requested the defendant to repay him the purchase money for said land, or to procure the title at his own expense, both of which the defendant refused tc do. The plaintiff thereupon submitted to the paramount title, and, in conjunction with others, who were holding under Vallejo, sent an agent to Washington and procured an Act of Congress to be passed on the 3d of March, 1863, granting the right of pre-emption to certain purchasers on the Suscol Rancho. The plaintiff, by reason of the conveyance from defendant, was one of the persons authorized to . purchase
To this complaint the defendant interposed a general demurrer, on the ground that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and also on the ground that the cause of action is barred by the Statute of Limitations. The demurrer was sustained, and the plaintiff declining to amend, final judgment was entered for the defendant, and the plaintiff has appealed.
The principal question involved in this appeal is, whether the acts set out in the complaint constitute a breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment. The defendant contends that there must have been an actual eviction by a title paramount under the judgment of a competent Court. Many early cases, especially in the State of New York, seem to sustain this view, and two cases are cited from our own reports. The first is the case of Fowler v. Smith (2 Cal. 39.) That was an attempt to resist the payment of purchase money for premises conveyed, without special warranty, prior to the adoption of the common law in this State, and it was claimed that by the civil law certain covenants were implied. Justice Murray, in discussing the question, said that no covenants were implied, except those for quiet possession, and that to constitute a breach of that covenant there must be an eviction under a judgment of a competent Court, founded upon a paramount title.
He relies upon the case of Waldron v. McCarty (3 Johns. 471.) In that case there was a foreclosure and sale of the premises under a mortgage which existed at the time of the covenant. The covenantee purchased at this sale and brought suit upon his covenant. The Court held that there had been no eviction. It was not necessary in that case to hold that the eviction must in all cases be by legal process^ This
Indeed, there are many cases where an eviction without process of law has always been considered a breach of the covenant, as in the case where the true owner at common law had the right to enter without suit, and where the covenantee was never able to obtain possession of the granted premises which were in possession of the owner of the paramount title.
The case of Waldron v. McCarty, as understood, is contrary to the doctrine laid down in Greenvault v. Davis (4 Hill, 643.) In that case Mr. Justice Bronson says : “There are some dicta in the books that there must be an eviction by process of law, but I have met with no case where it was so adjudged.” And again: “Upon principle, I can see no reason for requiring an eviction by legal process. When
“When the grantee surrenders or suffers the possession to pass from him without a legal contest, he takes upon himself the burden of showing that the person who entered had a title paramount to that of his grantor. But there is no reason why such surrender without the trouble and expense of a lawsuit should deprive him of a remedy on the covenant. The grantor is not injured by such an amicable ouster. On the contrary, it is a benefit to him, for he thus saves the expenses of an action against the grantee to recover the possession.
“It may be inferred in this case that the premises were unoccupied. Blodget then entered and still holds the land. This was an ouster or disseizin of the plaintiff, and he is well entitled to an action on the defendant’s covenant.”
In the case of Fowler v. Poling (6 Bart. 165), Mr. Justice Edmunds, after reviewing the decisions in that State, says : “From these conflicting authorities I deduce the true rule in this State to be that there must be an actual disturbance of the possession; and where the covenantee is rightfully out of possession, either by due process of law or by an entry of the rightful owner, or by a surrender to one having a paramount title, there is an eviction, the covenant is broken, and an action will lie.”
Mr. Bawls, in his treatise on covenants for title,. has reviewed the cases upon this subject at great length; and we think an examination of the authorities cited by him, as well as those cited by counsel in this case, fully justifies the assertion that “there can hardly be said to be a class of cases, now entitled to rank as authority, which hold that an actual dispossession by process of law consequent upon a judgment is necessary to a breach of the covenant of warranty. ”
The true rule deducible from the recent cases is, that the covenant is broken whenever there has been an involuntary loss of possession by reason of the hostile assertion of an
Nor can we perceive how the covenantor would be benefited by an eviction under a judgment. It was never considered necessary that the covenantor should have notice of the pendency of the suit. The judgment might be obtained without any real trial of the merits of the title; and besides, in the action upon the covenant, it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to establish that the title to which he has submitted is a paramount title.
Although there must be an eviction, it is not necessary that there should be an actual dispossession of the grantee. If the paramount title is so asserted that he must yield to it, or go out, the covenantee may purchase or lease of the true owner, and this will be considered a sufficient eviction to constitute a breach. He then no longer claims under his former title. So far as that title is concerned, he has been evicted, and is in under the paramount title. (Sugden on Vendors, 745 and note; Loomis v. Bedell, 11 N. H. 74; Hamilton v. Cutts, 4 Mass. 349; Turner v. Goodrich, 26 Vt. 709; Sprague v. Baker, 17 Mass. 586; Rawle on Covenants, 278, et seq. and cases cited; Noonan v. Lee, 2 Black, 507; Funk v. Creswell, 5 Clark, Iowa, 86; Brady v. Spurch, 27 Ill. 478; Stewart v. Drake, 4 Halstead, 139-275.)
The next question which arises in this case is, whether
This is almost a parallel case to many which are found in the reports as to the hostile assertion of the paramount title. Thus, in Loomis v. Bedell (supra), a prior conveyance had been made by the covenantor. Upon the death of. the prior grantee, the land was sold by his administrator at public auction, and púrchased by the plaintiff, and it was held that these facts constituted an eviction.
In Sprague v. Baker there was a mortgage upon the premises, executed by a prior owner. The holder of the mortgage threatened to take possession under his mortgage unless the amount due upon it was paid. It was paid by the covenantee, and this was held to be an eviction. (Bemis v. Smith, 10 Met. 194; see, also, Dupuy v. Roebuck, 7 Ala. 488; Brown v. Dickerson, 12 Penn. 372; Stewart v. Drake, supra.) We are therefore clearly of the opinion that the facts stated in the complaint show such an eviction as will constitute a
The transcript does not show when the suit was commenced, and, therefore, we cannot pass upon the question of the Statute of Limitations. The cause of action, however, did not accrue until an eviction, actual or constructive. In this case that would be at the time the plaintiff entered and began to hold under the paramount title.
It is well settled that the rule of damages, where there has been an actual loss of the premises, is the purchase money and interest. Where the plaintiff has purchased the paramount title, it is the sum actually and in good faith paid for the paramount title and the amount expended in defending his possession, provided such damages shall in no case exceed the purchase money and interest. The question as to whether the plaintiff can recover the costs of sending an agent to Washington to procure a law of Congress authorizing the plaintiff to purchase his land, cannot arise on this demurrer, which is general and to the whole complaint. On the facts stated, the plaintiff is entitled to recover the disbursements above mentioned, and the demurrer ought therefore to be overruled.
The judgment is therefore reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to overrule the demurrer.