15 Ala. 378 | Ala. | 1849
The agreement between the plaintiff, and defendant, as described by plaintiff in his answer to the interrogatories, was, that if the defendant was legally compelled, and forced, to pay for the patent right of the saw, that such payment should be a charge against the plaintiff. Under this contract, the defendant yielded to the right'of the patentee, without suit, and paid him $ 100, and now insists on this payment, as an offset to the note given to the plaintiff for the saw. Did the court err in the charge, that the defendant was not bound to permit himself to be sued, but might pay the patentee, and insist on this payment as a defence to the note, if the defendant showed that the patentee was entitled to it?
If one purchase land of another, with warranty, and without suit yields to a paramount title, he may sue on the covenant, and if he show that the title to which he yielded, is paramount to the title of his vendor, he may recover. Dupuy v. Roebuck, 7 Ala. 485; 2 Greenl. Ev. 202; Hamilton v. Cutts, 4 Mass. 349; Tuft v. Adams, 8 Pick. 547; 5 Conn. 497; 9 Wend. 416. The vendee, however, assumes the burthen of proving, that the title to which he yielded is paramount to the title of the vendor, and thus, in the action of covenant, the right of his vendor, and the right of him to whom the vendee yielded, will be tried. We think the contract in this case, resembles, in this respect, a covenant of warranty; and that the defendant, upon demand, might yield to the right of the patentee, and pay the sum to which his right entitled him, without suit. The language of the contract is, that if the defendant was legally compelled to pay, that then the payment should be borne by the plaintiff.
In this case, the burthen of proof lay on the defendant, to show the right to which he yielded, entitled the patentee to recover; and it is therefore as effectually tried in this suit, as it would have been, had he permitted himself to be sued.
There is no error in the judgment, or in the ruling of the court, and the judgment is consequently affirmed.