194 Mo. 630 | Mo. | 1906
This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Barry county, Missouri, sustaining a demurrer to the petition of the plaintiff and rendering final judgment thereon for the defendant. The appeal in the first instance was taken to the St. Louis Court of Appeals and the judgment of the circuit court affirmed, but one of the judges of the said court being of the opinion that the judgment of the court was in conflict with a prior decision of the said court, it was ordered that the cause be certified to this court for determination under the provisions of the Constitution. The facts of the case fully appear in the opinion of Judge Goode in the St. Louis Court of Appeals. The opinion is as follows:
“On February 1,1893, John Bayless, Thomas Allen and their wives, executed a deed to W. A. Stilley, which purported to convey the title to certain lands in Barry county, Missouri, to the grantee Stilley. The granting clause in the deed recites that the grantors ‘ do by these presents grant, bargain and sell, convey and confirm unto the said party of the second part, his heirs and assigns the following lots, tracts and parcels of land, ’ describing the same. Following the description is a habendum clause of the following tenor: ‘ To have and to hold the premises aforesaid unto said party of the second part and unto his heirs and assigns forever; that the said premises are free and clear of any 'incumbrances done by them and it is expressly understood in this conveyance and in the covenants herein that the grantors will warrant and defend the title to said premises unto the said party of the second part and unto his heirs and assigns forever against the lawful claims and demands of themselves, their heirs, or those through whom they claim, except for taxes to become due.’
“After Stilley bought the land it passed by mesne conveyances, mostly in the nature of general warranty deeds, to the plaintiff Miller, who acquired the title July 11, 1898.
‘ ‘ The petition states the execution of the deed containing the covenants in question and alleges that it contained the covenants implied from the words ‘ grant, bargain'and sell’ and of general warranty; that by its terms the defendants covenanted that they were seized of an indefeasible estate in fee simple in the premises conveyed and had good right to convey the same; that Stilley paid one hundred dollars as a consideration for the land. Mesne conveyances are then stated which sufficed to pass whatever title Stilley acquired to the plaintiff, the petition alleging that they also passed to the plaintiff the covenants of seizin and general warranty, so that these covenants became operative in favor of plaintiff.
“It is next averred that the said covenants were broken and violated by the defendants in this: that defendants did not have the legal right to the premises at the date of their conveyance nor the right to the possession nor the possession thereof; hut that the land was then in a raw, uncultivated state, in the possession of no one, and remained in this condition until August, 1897, when one F- R. Cartwright purchased the outstanding title, which was held by T. J. Corpeny at the date of said conveyance by the defendant.
“The petition avers that Cartwright, after purchasing the land, immediately entered into1 possession and excluded the plaintiff from possession under a better title to said premises held by him than plaintiff had or then had been derived from the defendants.
“The petition avers that at the date of the execution and delivery of the deed to Stilley containing the
‘ ‘ The demurrer filed by the defendants states two grounds: that the plaintiff had no capacity to sue; that the petition does not state sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action against the defendants.
“The deed executed by the defendants to Stilley was called for in the petition, attached as an exhibit to it in appellant’s abstract of the record and is treated by both parties in their briefs as being before this court for its consideration in determining the propriety of the judgment of the circuit court.
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“Plaintiff’s petition, taking the view most favorable to him, counts on covenants of seizin and of general warranty. The covenant of warranty actually contained in the deed, which we have recited above, is a special and not a general warranty and bound the defendants to warrant and defend the title to the premises conveyed only against the claims and demands of themselves, their heirs or those through whom they claimed. Inasmuch as the failure of plaintiff’s title was due, according to the petition, to a paramount title superior to that of the defendants’ and was not due to any act of the defendants, their, heirs or other persons claiming under them, no breach of the special covenant of warranty is stated.
“It has been determined in this State and by this
“Speaking for myself, I must say that the reason-' ing on which such decisions are based is not entirely satisfactory, inasmuch as the words ‘grant, bargain and sell’ constitute the ordinary formula for the conveyance of real estate and are generally employed mechanically in writing conveyances; whereas a covenant of special warranty, restricting the liability of the grantor to the hostile acts and demands of designated individuals, clearly bespeaks an intention on the part of the grantor to decline the responsibility for adverse demands of titles made or held by persons not designated. But the rule is settled the other way in this State as well as in other states, and we would have to regard it as binding on us in a c'ase falling within its scope. [Tracy v. Greffet, 54 Mo. App. 562; Rowe v. Heath, 23 Tex. 614; Brown v. Tomlinson, 2 G. Greene (Iowa) 525; Gratz v. Ewalt, 2 Binn. (Pa.) 98; Funk v. Voneida, 11 Serg. & R. 111; Roebuck v. Dupuy, 2 Ala. 541; Stewart v. Anderson, 10 Ala. 504; Winston v. Vaughan, 22 Ark. 72; Prettyman v. Wilkey, 19 Ill. 235.] The contrary ■rule seems to have been adopted in Mississippi. [Weems v. McCaughan, 7 Sm. & Marsh. 427; Bush v. Cooper, 26 Miss. 599.]
“The doctrine of the courts is that general covenants whether they be expressed on the face of the deed or raised by implication of law from the words ‘grant, bargain and sell’ are not restricted in their operation by limited special covenants unless the different covenants are so irreconcilable that they cannot all have their full force, or unless the limited covenant refers to or is connected with the general covenants in such a manner
“But it is also the law however general and far-reaching the force of any covenant (whether expressed in the conveyance or implied by the law) might be if it stood alone, if it is connected with restrictive language in the deed which shows clearly that the grantor intended to qualify and limit his responsibility on the covenant below its usual sense, the operation of the covenant will be determined, not in its usual sense, but from the entire contents of the deed. This simply means that the intention of the parties to an instrument is gathered from its four corners, and when thus gathered will be enforced; and it may be said that that rule of construction is now as applicable to conveyances of land as to any other sort of contracts and is no longer hampered by those ancient rules which made the different clauses of a deed depend on whether they preceded or followed each other in the instrument, rather than on the plain intention of the parties. [Gainsford v. Griffith, 1 Saund. 60; Foord v. Wilson, 8 Taunton 543.] In the first of those two decisions in considering when a special covenant restrained a general one, it was said: ‘Every case must depend on the particular words used in the instrument before the court and the jurisdiction will be found to be very nice and difficult.’
“The rule that covenants are taken most strongly against the covenantor is reversed in the case of statutory covenants because they are implied and are in derogation of the common law. [Douglass v. Lewis, 131 U. S. 75.]
“Many of the authorities on the question of whether a special covenant embraced with general ones in a deed will control the operation of the latter, are collected in Rawle on Covenants of Title (5 Ed.), sec.
“As no breach of the covenants, when correctly understood, was stated in the petition, the demurrer was rightly sustained and the judgment is affirmed.”
It is unquestionably the law of this State, as stated by Judge Goode in his opinion, that general covenants in a deed of conveyance, whether they be expressed on the face of the deed or raised by an implication from the use of the words “grant, bargain and sell,” as provided by section 907, Revised Statutes 1899, are not