146 A. 831 | Conn. | 1929
William August died in January, 1913, in the town of Simsbury. At his death he owned in his own right a certain piece of land there situated and also a half interest in a second piece, the other half interest being owned by his wife. She survived him, as did six children, all of age except one, Emma. He left no debts. About one month after his death all the children except Emma quitclaimed their rights in both pieces of land to their mother. About the same time a guardian was appointed for Emma, but no conveyance of her interest in the property was then made, nor thereafter except as stated below. In November, 1924, Mrs. August, in pursuance of an agreement with the plaintiffs to convey the lands to them by a good and sufficient warranty deed containing the usual covenants, did execute and deliver to them such a deed. About two years later, the plaintiffs, desiring to sell the lands, learned for the first time that no administration had ever been taken out upon the estate of William August nor any distribution of it made. Thereafter and before this action was brought, one of the plaintiffs, Mrs. Perkins, requested Emma to quitclaim her interest in the lands to them and this she did. About the same time Mrs. Perkins asked Emma to have the defendant institute probate proceedings upon the estate of William August, but Emma refused, *455 telling Mrs. Perkins that her mother was ill and unable to act. On April 30th, 1927, Mrs. Perkins herself applied for letters of administration, her application not stating the date of the death of William August, nor assigning any reason why they should be granted more than ten years after his death, nor does this lapse of time seem to have been brought to the attention of the Judge of Probate. He did grant letters of administration to an attorney, assigning no reason for doing so after the lapse of so many years from the death of the decedent. Thereafter the settlement of the estate proceeded in the usual course. This action is brought to recover probate, recording and attorney's fees paid by the plaintiffs in connection with the probate proceedings. The trial court gave judgment for the defendant and the plaintiffs have appealed.
The complaint is susceptible of a construction setting up a twofold claim by the plaintiffs, it seems to have been so treated at the trial, and is so presented to us by them. On the one hand, they claim a breach of the defendant's agreement to convey, and on the other a breach of the warranties in the deed they received from her. With reference to the former claim we will assume that, because the plaintiffs did not know of the failure to take out administration on the estate of William August when they received their deed, they might have sued for damages on account of breach of a term in the agreement of sale, despite their acceptance of the deed tendered without objection. The defendant's agreement to "make and deliver" to the plaintiffs "a good and sufficient warranty deed, containing the usual covenants in such deeds contained" meant not only that such a deed as there described was to be duly executed and delivered, but that such a title was to be conveyed as would meet the requirements *456
of that deed. Abendroth v. Greenwich,
The failure of the defendant to have acquired the share of Emma in the lands before she conveyed them to the plaintiffs was a clear defect in title, but this was cured by her deed of her interest to the plaintiffs before the action was brought At the death of William August, his title in the lands at once vested in those entitled to them under the statute of distributions, subject only to such rights as might arise out of the need to come upon them to satisfy debts and expenses of administration, and distribution was not necessary to confer title. Hotchkiss' Appeal,
The claim of the plaintiffs for substantial damages is thus reduced to the contention that the failure to have administration taken out upon the estate of William August caused such a break in the record title as to make it unmarketable. While it is frequently said that if parol evidence will be necessary to remove a doubt as to the validity and sufficiency of the vendor's title, the purchaser cannot be compelled to complete the contract, an examination of the cases will show that this is far from an invariable rule, where the agreement is one merely to give a good marketable title. Even in States where the vendor is held to as strict a rule in this regard as anywhere, title by adverse possession has been held sufficient. Conley v.Finn,
As regards the covenants in the deed, it is clear that there was no breach of the covenant against incumbrances, for the record discloses nothing in the way of an incumbrance upon the lands. Staite v. Smith,
The procedure adopted by the defendant and her children in this case cannot be approved. Every estate of a deceased person should be submitted to probate, not only that the provisions of the statutes concerning taxation of estates may be properly applied, but also because otherwise the long-established policy of this State that every title to land shall appear of record is violated. Goldberg v. Parker,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.