This action was brought to recover of the respondents fifty vara lot Ho. 735, in the City of San Francisco. Hitchcock and Van Winkle being proprietors of the lot under an Alcalde
It appears, however, that on the 3d of May, 1851, Perkins, who then held what is known as a Colton grant, covering the lot, executed to one Minor a deed, thp terms whereof were as follows :
“This indenture, made and executed this 3d of May, 1851, between Dennis S. Perkins, of the first part, and Daniel K. Minor, of the second part, witnesseth: That the said Perkins, for the sum of $500 in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, has granted, bargained, sold and hereby conveys to the said Minor, his heirs and assigns, a fifty vara lot in the City of San Francisco, known on the plan of the said city made by one William M. Eddy, the Surveyor of said city, as lot No. 735, which fronts on Harrison street fifty varas, and on Fremont street fifty varas, with all its appurtenances thereto belonging, which lot I have built a house on, and have.full and peaceable possession of the same; to have and to hold, to the said Minor, his heirs and assigns, from claims of the said Perkins or his heirs; and the said Perkins covenants he has done no act to encumber or injure the title thereof. It is fully understood that as to title this is only a quitclaim deed.
“ Given under our hands and seals the day and year above written.
“ Dennis S. Perkins, [l.s.] ”
Minor conveyed the lot to Mrs. Wilson by a deed of like character on the 7th of May, 1851.
It is claimed by the respondents that the true title acquired
First—The thirty-third section of the Act relating to conveyances is as follows : “If any person shall convey any real estate by conveyance purporting to convey the same in fee simple absolute, and shall not at the time of such conveyance have the legal estate in such real estafe, but shall afterwards acquire the same, the legal estate subsequently acquired shall immediately pass to the grantee, and such conveyance shall be valid as if such legal estate had been in the grantee at the time of such conveyance.” (Acts 1850, p. 252.)
The first question is whether the deed by Perkins to Minor “ purports ” to convey the lot in controversy “ in fee simple absolute.”
The first clause in the deed bearing upon the question shows a bargain and sale of the lot, and, taken by itself, would establish beyond dispute that the intention was to con-, vey in full property. But in view of the clause with which the deed concludes, it is manifest to our judgment that the parties intended a quitclaim only.
The clause last referred to is not in the habendum of the deed, nor is it in either of the covenants; nor is the last clause superadded to the first as an alternative expression of the principal purpose, but is in its very terms an exposition of the sense in which the words making up the first clause are used by the parties. The second clause is but a videlicet. (Bogy v. Shoah, 13 Miss. 367; Jackson v. Myers, 3 John. 394.)
If contracting parties have power to define the words which they use, their definitions can never be attacked on the ground that they are repugnant to the words defined; and if the agreed definitions are free from ambiguity, then the only rule necessary to.be invoked is the one requiring contracts to be enforced according to the intention of the parties who made them. Two things distinct from each other are involved necessarily in the idea of repugnancy; but the meaning of a
The question then comes to this, have the parties to a written contract the right to set aside the' general sense of the words which they use, and for the purposes of the contract to assign to them another and different meaning by convention ? That they have both the right and the power to do this there can be no question. The meaning of language depends upon usage and .varies with it. If parties should insert a clause in their contract to the effect that the language used by them should be taken in a certain sense which had become provincial, or in the meaning borne by it in a particular trade, and particularly if they should proceed to state the agreed definition in detail, and the definition turned out to be clear and unambiguous, the general meaning would have to give way; and it follows that it must be considered that parties have the power to innovate upon the general meaning of words at large free from all legal restrictions. If they see fit to agree that mile shall stand for league, or grant, bargain and sell for quitclaim, or even black for white, however we might marvel at the caprice, we could not question the power.
Second—It is insisted that the first covenant is a .covenant of nonclaim, and that it operates by way of estoppel.
Though a covenant of nonclaim, still it operates-only upon the interests conveyed, viz: the Colton grant or on any other interest that the grantor had or may have claimed to have at the date of the deed. (Gee v. Moore, 14 Cal. 472 ; Kimball v. Semple, 25 Cal. 441.)
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.
Mr. Chief Justice Ccrrey expressed no opinion.