159 N.W. 74 | N.D. | 1916
This is an action to foreclose a mortgage which was given to secure part of tbe purchase price of several city lots. The defense is that tbe grantor, who was tbe vice president of tbe plaintiff bank, was not the owner of said lots or any part thereof, and that tbe plaintiff bank bad full knowledge of this fact at tbe time that tbe mortgage was taken. Tbe answer, however, does not ask for a rescission of tbe contract of purchase, nor does it offer to restore the property, nor does it contain any allegation of any ejection, actual or threatened, nor of an assertion of any paramount title, nor was there any proof upon tbe trial of any of these facts.
All that tbe proof showed or tended to sbow was that some time in tbe eighties, tbe lots were sold to tbe county of Mercer for taxes; that in 1906 all of the books and records of tbe register of deeds of Mercer-county were destroyed by fire, and if any tax deed was issued to tbe county, there is no record thereof; that later, and on tbe 28th day of April, 1909, tbe county of Mercer quitclaimed tbe premises to B. G.•Letzring and Adelia Letzring, his wife, and that said deeds contained the following statements of a resolution passed by tbe board of county commissioners: “Whereas tbe records in tbe auditor’s office sbow that certain lots in tbe village of Stanton were deeded to Mercer county by
Not only is there no offer in the answer to return the premises, nor •any allegation or proof of the assertion by anyone of any adverse title, and not only is there no proof of any attempt to rescind the contract, but there is proof that the defendants Bert A. and Effa I. Hayes remained in the possession of the premises either by themselves or by their tenants up to the time of the trial, and at the time of the trial wei’e collecting the rents therefrom, and stated that they intended so to do, and the only complaint is that if no tax deed was issued and the ■county of Mercer obtained no title through the tax sale, the record title would be in the names of some third parties, the original owners ■and defaulting taxpayers, the McGraths.
There was also on the trial some attempt to prove tliat the sale to the Hayeses was fraudulently made, and that they expected to receive the whole of lot 18, rather than a half thereof. The proof, however, ■does not sustain this claim or allegation.
The question then before us is this: Can a purchaser of land which .the record shows was sold to the county for taxes, though there is no proof of the issuance of a tax deed, and which has afterwards been «conveyed by the county to another by a quitclaim deed which recites that a tax deed had been issued to the county therefor, and which is •occupied by such other for five years and improved by him by the
We are satisfied that the defendants can avail themselves of no such defense: “It is true,” said this court in the case of Dahl v. Stakke, 12 N. D. 325, 96 N. W. 353, “that a total failure of title in many cases is not ground for resisting payment of the purchase price if the purchaser remains in possession of the premises, and is not threatened with dispossession, and does nothing towards protecting himself against such adverse title, and is not in any way disturbed or damaged by such outstanding title, it not being hostilely asserted against him. The grounds upon which such cases turn are that such possession may ripen into a good title by the lapse of time, and that the law will not countenance a purchaser in accepting and holding possession and title which are not attacked and to perfect which the purchaser has done nothing, and at the same time refuse to pay for the land.”
“We recognize,” says the supreme court of Georgia in the case of Sanderlin v. Willis, 94 Ga. 171, 21 S. E. 291, “that the purchaser of land who enters into possession under a warranty deed or a bond for titles cannot, before eviction, defeat an action for the purchase money, unless there has been fraud on the part of the vendor, or the latter is insolvent, or there is some other ground which would in equity entitle the purchaser to relief.”
These quotations express the law as announced by the overwhelming weight of authority. See also Bowne v. Wolcott, 1 N. D. 415, 48 N. W. 336; Abbott v. Allen, 2 Johns. Ch. 519, 7 Am. Dec. 554; Dunn
Parties who claim breach of warranty may do one of two things. They may rescind or they may stand on their contract and sue for damages for the breach. They cannot do both.
. Not only is this the case, but the defendants are entirely lacking in' their proof. The note and mortgage import a consideration, and the burden of proof is upon them to show that none was forthcoming. There is no proof that the original owners of the property have been heard from since the time of the tax sale. The quitclaim deed from the county recited that a deed had been given. Purchasers under this quitclaim deed are allowed to remain in possession for five years and erect valuable buildings, and these purchasers are allowed to deed to still other purchasers, and these other purchasers to still others, who are allowed to remain in possession for nearly two years, and who as far as we know are still in possession, and collecting the rents and profits from the premises, and this without the original owners asserting any interest or title whatever. AYe are not, in short, satisfied that the defendants have proved that there is any outstanding title in the premises which can be asserted in a court of equity, and which any court of equity would deem paramount to their own.
AYe are not unmindful of the cases which are cited by counsel for the respondents. In the case of Bedding v. Lamb, 81 Mich. 318, 45 N. AY. 997, the defendants had purchased in an outstanding title, and when sued for the purchase price sought to offset what they had paid. This of course may be done. In the case at bar, however, though there may be a paper blemish to the title, no third party has asserted any claim; no third party has been paid anything for any claim; the third parties are not parties to the action before us, and we have no proof of any breach of the, covenants of either seisin, possession, or warranty. The judgment in the case of Dahl v. Stakke, 12 N. D. 325, 96 N. W. 353, was rendered merely on account of the fact that the blemishes were encumbrances, and that the purchasers had the right to offset the value of these encumbrances against the purchase price. A clear distinction,
The case of Zent v. Picken, 54 Iowa, 535, 6 N. W. 750, is similar to that at bar, in that a breach of the covenants of seisin and possession was interposed as a defense in an action to foreclose a mortgage. In that ease, however, not merely the title, but the possession, was at the
The case of Allen v. Allen, 48 Minn. 462, 51 N. W. 473, holds, among other things, that a covenant of seisin is broken if the covenantor has not the possession, the right of possession, and the complete legal title, and that when the covenant is broken, an immediate cause of .action arises. It does not hold, however, that a party in the possession, and who elects to retain the possession, may refuse to pay the purchase price. The case of Batterton v. Smith, 3 Kan. App. 419, 43 Pac. 275, was merely one in which, in an action for the purchase price, the defendant was allowed to recoup his expenses in perfecting his title. In the case of Bolinger v. Brake, 4 Kan. App. 180, 45 Pac. 950, there was no possession in the grantors at the’time of the conveyance.
We have analyzed enough of the cases to show their general holding. The criticisms offered on those analyzed is applicable to practically all, if not all, those cited by the respondents. We have in short no criticism of the doctrine, that covenants of seisin do not run with the land, and if the grantor has no seisin at the time of the conveyance,
The judgment of the District Court is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment according to the prayer of the complaint.
The respondents will pay the costs and disbursements of the appeal.