4 Vt. 247 | Vt. | 1832
pronounced the opinion of the Court.— We are called upon,, by these pleadings, to- decide what is intended by some expressions in the section of the statute of limitations, which has been read by the plaintiff’s counsel. The Court have had some difficulty upon this section before ; and it is not very easy to give it any practical construction, that is perfectly free from all doubt, as to what was intended by the legislature.
The question is, whether the action upon this covenant is barred in eight years from the breach of the covenant j. that is from the date of the deed,, according to the first clause of the section : or, whether it is a case only barred in ten years after a decision-against the title of the grantor, according to the after provisions of the same section- If it comes within the latter clause, the rejoinder is a good answer to the replication, which presents the statute as a bar: for the statute would net commence running in such a ease, till there had been a decision against the title of the grantor-Otherwise,, if it comes within the first clause of the section ; because that clause has no reference to a decision against title, but only to the time when the cause of action shall have accrued : and' that, upon the usual'covenant of seizin,, is at the date or execution, of the deed, if ever. The covenant is, that, at the ensealing of the deed, he is well seized, &c., not that he will be so at any future time.
Upon reading this statute, it is manifest, that the question, already stated, must be decided by deciding one in different shape, to wit, whether the covenant declared upon in this plea in offset, is a covenant for securing the title of land, conveyed by said deed, within the meaning of this section of the statute ? It is a covenant in a deed of conveyance of land ; and it is a covenant of, or about tide. Still the question remains, is it. what the legislature term, a
The whole statute in question seems to have been intended to limit all kinds of actions, or nearly so. Almost all are expressly enumerated. The description in the section, creating a bar to actions of covenant, is so extensive as necessarily to include all possible covenants. And the general enacting clause, if we leave odt the exception therein contained, creates a bar in eight years from the time of the accruing of the cause of action ; and this would extend to all actions of covenant whatever. Those actions, which come within this exception, are barred in ten years from
Again, the usual course is, and ought always to be, soto frame statutes of limitations, that they run against a claim, only from the time, when the cause of action is matured, and the party might sue, if he pleased. This should be so ; first, because no person should be barred of his rights, without having first a reasonable time in which he might secure them; 2d, because no presumption ef payment, or settlement, can begin to arise from any neglect to prosecute, until the party has aright of action.
It is further observable, that the action upon a covenant of seizin must be brought in the name of the grantee, and cannot be maintained in the name of the assignee. This covenant, being broken at the execution of the deed, becomes a mere chose in action, and cannot be assigned, by any law in force here, so as to enable the assignee to recover upon it in his own name. Such original grantee may commence his suit as soon ash'e pleases y and there is no greater hardship in his being barred, if he neglects his rights, than for him to be barred of his remedy upon any other contract. And it makes no difference in the hardship, whether there are other covenants in the deed or not.
If the legislature attached any definite meaning to the expressions they used, they must have intended this distinction ; that those covenants of warranty, which are considered as broken, only by a judicial decision against the title of the grantor, are covenants to secure title, and may be sued at any time within ten years from a final decision against such title ; and that those covenants, which are considered broken without any such judicial decision, of which the covenant of seizin is clearly one, must be sued within eight years from the time of the breach ; that, though such covenants are in a deed of conveyance of land, they are not covenants to secure the title, but only covenants to secure the recovery of damages on account of the failure of title. The statute might have been so framed as to provide, that covenants
The judgement of the county court, which was in favor of the plaintiff, is affirmed.