45 S.W. 994 | Tex. | 1898
The Court of Civil Appeals have certified to this court the following explanatory statement and questions:
"This suit was brought by the appellant, the Rancho Bonito Land and Live Stock Company, against the appellee, William F. North, for $917.68, on account of alleged breach of covenant of warranty in a deed executed by North to Maddox Bros. Anderson to the Jane Williams survey in Menard County, described in the deed as 1280 acres of land, and the Thomas R. Webb survey in Menard County, described in the deed as 640 acres of land, the deed of date July 15, 1884, containing a covenant of general warranty of title to the land, alleged to have been sold by the acre at $2 per acre. It is alleged that the covenant of warranty is broken by the fact that North did not own the fee simple title to all the land conveyed by his deed; that 237.84 acres of the Jane Williams survey were in conflict with older patented surveys, and that 221 acres of the Thomas R. Webb survey were in conflict with older patented surveys. *74
"The Jane Williams and Thomas R. Webb surveys of 1280 and 640 acres respectively, were, as alleged, conveyed by North on July 15, 1884, to F.M. Maddox, John W. Maddox, and C.E. Anderson by deed with covenant of general warranty, and F.M. and John W. Maddox and C.E. Anderson conveyed the same land by general warranty deed August 1, 1885, to the plaintiff. All the land is of the same value per acre. There was a conflict, as alleged, with older valid surveys, patented to other parties.
"At the time of the conveyance by North to F.M. and John W. Maddox and C.E. Anderson, the vendees, Maddox Bros. Anderson, owned all the land in conflict with the Webb and the Williams surveys, except section 114, which was then owned by North and was conveyed by his deed to Maddox Bros. Anderson.
"When Maddox Bros. Anderson conveyed the Williams and Webb surveys to the plaintiff they in the same deed conveyed the land in conflict with the Williams and Webb, and none of the parties, neither Maddox Bros. Anderson, the plaintiff, nor North, had any notice of the conflict in the surveys.
"On the 18th of March, 1886, plaintiff executed a deed of trust with covenants of general warranty of title, to secure money loaned to it by Francis Smith Co. and subsequent to this suit the land was sold to Francis Smith Co. under the deed of trust, in accordance with its terms, to whom a general warranty deed was made August 18, 1894.
"The plaintiff is and was a private corporation, organized by John W. Maddox, F.M. Maddox, and C.E. Anderson, and they own all its stock, and owned all of it when they conveyed to the corporation the land, and were all of its officers when they in person so conveyed in consideration of all the stock of the corporation, and at the time of the institution of this suit they were the sole owners of all the stock.
"No other facts of outstanding title are shown against plaintiff's title under its deed from North, nor has there been any eviction or threat of eviction, except as stated.
"The following questions arise upon the facts stated in the foregoing case, now pending in the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third Supreme Judicial District of the State, which are certified to the Supreme Court of the State for decision:
"1. J.W. and F.M. Maddox and C.E. Anderson being the owners in fee of all the land in conflict with older surveys except what was owned by North, at the time of the conveyance by him to them, there being no eviction or threat of eviction, was there a breach of the covenant of warranty in North's deed to them, upon which suit can be maintained by the corporation, composed as it is by John W. and F.M. Maddox and C.E. Anderson, by whom the land was conveyed to plaintiff, the corporation?
"2. Where the vendee himself owns the superior title to the land conveyed to him by deed with general covenant of warranty of "the premises," is there a breach of the covenant of warranty, such as will *75 support an action for the breach of the covenant by the covenantee or his vendee?"
The cases in which the vendee has been allowed in this State to defend against or cancel purchase money notes by showing the existence of a superior outstanding title have been decided upon principles of equity. Tarpley v. Poage's Admr.,
We do not regard the case of Doyle v. Hord,
The case of Groesbeck v. Harris,