12 Vt. 381 | Vt. | 1840
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— The defendant, upon the trial below, insisted that the rule of damages, upon a breach of the covenant of warranty, was the consideration in the deed and the interest, and no more. Whether the court gave the true rule of damages, in their charge to the jury, is the question now before us. The argument has taken a somewhat wider range and it has been contended that there has been no eviction so as to give a remedy on the covenant of warranty, and several cases have been referred to, where it has been said, there can be no recovery on the covenant for quiet enjoyment unless there has been an eviction. Those remarks were true, as applicable to those cases. When the grantee goes into possession under his deed, he can maintain no action on this covenant, unless there is an eviction. Speaking technically, there has been no eviction here, because an eviction means an entry and expulsion.. But there are many cases where an action may be maintained on this covenant, without such an eviction, when the granleehas been prevented from entering and enjoying the premises. In arguing the case of Whitbeck v. Cook, 15. Johns. 483,
On the subject of damages, the rule has been different in different states, and wherever the subject has been discussed, many fancied inconveniences and hardships have been supposed, as a reason for adopting one rule, rather than the other, and, particularly, it has been supposed that the rule which has prevailed in this, and some of the neighboring states must, in the fluctuations and changes in value to which lands are exposed, be ruinous in its consequences. In answer to this, I can only say that the rule of damages, in actions on covenants of warranty, was established at an early day in this state, as we leam from the case of Strong v. Shumway, D. Chip. R. 110, and none of these inconveniences or ruinous consequences have been experienced. The rule is, to give the value of the land, at the time of the. eviction, without regard to the consideration of the deed, and it may be more, or less, than the consideration ; and, to me, it appears to be more in consonance with the principles of law, as applicable to other subjects, and more just and equitable in its application than any other rule.
The general rule, in all actions of covenant, .is, to make the party good, or place him in as good a situation as he would have been in had the covenant been performed. The covenant of warranty is both for the title and possession, and is prospective. It is similar to the covenant contained in the charter of feoffment, or more like the covenant contained in a fine In Wotton v. Hele, 2 Saund. 175, there is a declaration on a covenant of warranty contained in a fine, where the warranty is nearly in the same words as used in our deeds of conveyance. It imposes an obligation on the party covenanting to establish and prove a lawful right and title to the premises, when called on, legally, so to do, and, in this respect, it is similar to the ancient warranties. Lord Ellen-borough, in the case of Howell v. Richards, 11 East, 633, considered the covenant for quiet enjoyment, as “ an assurance against the consequences of a defective title, and of any
It may, however, be immaterial, at this day, to determine how the value was ascertained in the writ of warrantia chartcs ; perhaps there was no case where the land had risen in ■value so as to render the enquiry of any importance. In the action of covenant, in England, it does not appear to be settled that the rule of damages is the consideration of the deed, ■with the interest, though it may be the value at the time of making the covenant. Yet the rulei? settled here, and we are not at liberty to alter it and make a new law upon the subject. The practical effect, under our betterment act, is only to give the value of the land in the situation it was in, when granted, as the buildings and improvements are usually paid for by the owner of the land when he ejects the person in possession, who entered under a deed. The judgment of the county court is therefore affirmed.