147 N.W. 87 | S.D. | 1914
On the 27th day of January, 1906, one C. C.’ Robinson and wife executed and delivered to- W. J. and J. R. Smith a certain warranty deed, purporting to convey to- -said Smiths, with other property, a quarter section of land in Hughes County. On the 9Ü1 day of January, 1907, said Smiths executed and delivered to plaintiffs a warranty deed, purporting to convey
“Their heirs and assigns that they are well seized in fee of the lands' and premises aforesaid -and have good right t-o sell and convey the same -in manner and form -aforesaid,” and that “the above bargained and granted -lands and premises in quiet and peaceable possession of the said parties of the second part, their heirs and -assigns, -and against all persons lawfully -claiming or to claim the whole or any part thereof the said -parties of the first part will warrant and fo-rever defend.”
The deed from -the S-mit-hs to- plaintiffs contained ooven-ants of similar import.
After the .affirmance of the judgment quieting title to the said -premises in Vesey, plaintiffs1 commenced this- action against the defendant as administrator of the estate of the said C. C. Robinson, who 'had- died in the meantime, for the purpose of recovering on the above quoted covenants in the Robinson deed of January 27, 1906. During a-11 of this time, the land in queston was vacant an-d unoccupied. The Smiths were named as- defendants in the summons, but only one of them was ever served, and, as to him, theikction was dismissed. Plaintiff seeks to recover the amount Robinson -had received for the land with interest, together with -the expenses necessarily incurred in defending -the V-esey -case in ith-e circuit court, upon appeal to this court and upon motion for rehearing, including attorney’s fees- for -conducting -all of th-es-e proceedings. Plaintiffs had judgment in- the circuit court
Under a statute like ours it would appear that it is only the immediate grantee of the covenantor who can recover on this covenant. Plaintiffs oould have recovered from the Smiths upon the breach of this covenant, and they, in- turn, could have recovered from defendant, provided they brought their action within the period of the statute of limitations: 3 Wash. Real Property, 5th Fd. 504. But there was no such privity of contract between plaintiffs and defendant’s intestate as would entitle them to recover against defendant.
“You have not been disturbed in your rightful possession of' the land and you may never be disturbed-. While your deed may riot be -good, it -is yet color of title, and if you are not disturbed by Vesey within the- time for bringing an action for that purpose, your present title, although defective, will ripen into a title that can never be -disturbed by anyone. In other Words, you 'have no cause of action until you have been actually ousted by a decree of court.”
This would be a complete -defense to plaintiff’s demand, or the most -they could recover would' be nominal damages only.
That the proposition that covenants found in deeds purporting to convey title to land do not run with ■ the land unless the covenantor was possessed of some -estate in the land to which the covenant could attach is supported by many, if not the great weight of, judicial -decisions is not questioned. Notable am'ong the more recent decisions to this -effect is Bull v. Beiseker, 16 N. D. 290, 110 N. W. 870, and- reported with an extended note, in 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 514; Mygatt v. Coe, 147 N. Y. 456, 42 N. E. 17, a New York case; and Wallace v. Pereles, 109 Wis. 316, 85 N. W. 371, 53 L. R. A. 644, 83 Am. St. Rep. 898. In Bull v. Beiseker, supra, the court said:
*63 “The action was brought and 'the complaint framed' upon the mistaken theory that- the covenants contained in defendant’s deed to Johnson were covenants running with the land, and therefore passed to Washburn by the deed from- Johnson to him. This probably would be -true if any title or possession was transferred by such conveyances; but, under the facts alleged in the complaint, neither title nor possession, actual or -constructive, passed under the deeds, and hence there was nothing for the covenants to run with. There was a constructive eviction of the grantee immediately upon the execution and delivery of the deed to Johnson; and a cause of action for breach of the covenants in such deed at once arose in his favor against the Beisekers to recover damages therefor; and the deed from Johnson to Washburn did not operate to assign to the latter such cause of action.”
And, in Wallace v. Perles, supra, the Wisconsin court said:
“We therefore -hold that where the record -shows that the grantor 'had no title and no possession, and there is no proof that the grantee took -possession, the covenants of the grantor are personal to the grantee, and are not transmitted to subsequent grantees by a mere conveyance of the land.”
And, again, in Mygat-t v. Coe, -supra, we find:
“It must he regarded as the law of this case, that privity of estate is essential to carry covenants of warranty -and quiet enjoyment to 'subsequent grantees in order to- support a right of action by them against the original covenantor, when there is an eviction by paramount title.”
These cases are fully supported by very many, if not all, of the preceding decisions on the.same subject.
The covenants usually fo-un-d in -deeds of conveyance of real property are the subject of legislative -enactment in many of the states. Our statute, §1138 Rev. Civ. Code, reads as follows:
“Every -covenant contained in a grant of an -estate in real property, which is made for the direct benefit of the property, or some pant of if then in existence runs with the land1.”
§1139. “The last section includes covenants of warranty, for quiet enjoyment, or for further assurance on the p-art of a grantor * * *”
But these statutes -do- not seem to have changed the rulé -that, in order that the covenant -will run with the land so as- t'o inure
It seems to be generally held that, where the covenantor delivers the possession of the land to his grantee and he, in turn, puts his grantee in possession, this constitutes a privity of estate sufficient to carry the .covenant with the land. And it may be taken as true that the reason for the rule originated at a time when physical possession of land was the- chief muniment of title thereto. But- this reason no longer exists. A person who has a grant of land from 'the owner of the fee becomes the absolute owner 'thereof and is entitled to all tíre benefits that can be derived therefrom, even though neither of them was ever in the actual possession thereof. This being the case, why should it be necessary that actual, as distinguished from constructive, possession should be delivered in order to carry a covenant with the land when the covenantor was without title? It is for the purpose of protecting the covenantee and his grantees in their fight of possession of the land, and to protect them against defective title thereto that the covenant is made. The right of quiet enjoyment of a piece of land is- its most valuable attribute, and a covenant from a grantor that his grantee shall be protected in the quiet enjoyment thereof adds materially to -the value of the land itself, and a material portion of the consideration- paid for the grant may be, and as a rule is, paid because of the covenantee’s expectation of the right of quiet enjoyment of the demised premises. If a perfect title is passed to the grantee then he need never avail himself of the covenant in his deed, while, on the other hand,, if it should develop- that the covenantor had no estate whatever in the premises attempted to be^conveyed, the grantee could not, except as again-st his immed-iate"cO'Venantor, avail himself of the covenant. This, at least, is the logical conclusion to be drawn from the decisions -holding that a remote grantee cannot recover upon a covenant unless the covenantor had s-ome estate in the land when the covenant was made. Some cases, notably Kimball v. Bryant, 25 Minn. 496, and Iowa Loan & Trust Co. v. Fullen, 114 Mo. App. 633, 91 S. W. 58, hold that, although a covenantor must have some estate in land at the time -of making the grant to which covenants can attach in order to enable a remote grantee t-o recover on a breach of the covenant, yet, nevertheless, such grantee, however remote,
“A person who assumes to convey an estate by deed is estop-ped, as against the grantee, to assert anything in derogation of the deed. He will not be heard, for the purpose of defeating the title of the grantee, to say that at -the ¡time of the conveyance Tie had no title, or that none passed :by the deed; nor can he deny to the deed its full operation and effect as a conveyance.”
Where a grantor represents 'himself as the owner of the fee to a piece of land and agrees that he will protect his grantee and assigns in their peaceful possession thereof, and it afterward develops that he was not the owner of the fee and cannot defend his grantees in their possession of the land, and they call upon him to respond in damages, why should he not be estopped from saying that he did not have, and convey the constructive possession of the land as he represented he had and for which he had received a valuable consideration, and that, therefore, his covenant did not pass beyond his immediate grantee and that he is not liable to the party who -has suffered by his broken covenant? And why should the rule just quoted not apply?
True, no case has been called to our attention where a cov-enantor has been held to be estopped by his deed from claiming that he had no estate in the land, attempted to be conveyed, at the time he made the covenant, and thereby escape liability to a remote grantee who. had been evicted; but neither has any reason been suggested why this should not be done; and we bold that the defendant is estopped by the covenants in his intestate’s deed from denying that his intestate possessed any estate in the land in question at the time the deed was made; and that respondent is entitled to recover upon the broken covenant.
“Both with respect to counsel fees and such other expenses as are called variously in the cases 'necessary expenses/ 'reasonable costs attending litigation/ 'compensation- for trouble and expenses/ and the iike, these have in -some cases been refused1 unless notice has been given, and in others allowed where notice has been given, in others irrespective of notice, and in others where no notice has been given. * * *
“A consideration of these rather conflicting cases1 would seem to suggest as a rule to be deduced front them that the plaintiff’s rights to recover counsel fees as. a part of his costs should, in general, 'be limited to cases where he has properly notified the party bound by the covenant to come in and defend the title, but that the neglect or silence of the latter should inure to the benefit of the plaintiff rather than to his own.”
This, of course, is without reference to' any statute. In Dale v. Shively, 8 Kas. 190, Brewer, J., in discussing the liability of a covenantor, says:
“He may be charged with the costs and counsel fees paid by the grantee in defending the title conveyed against a suit by the true owner, or in prosecuting a suit to- obtain the possession which had been covenanted but never actually given.”
This is without reference to either statute or notice, and our attention has been called to no case that has been decided under a statute like ours. In the case at bar, the expenses of -defending the title attempted to be conveyed were clearly within the contemplation of appellant’s intestate when he made the covenant He knew that, if the title were not such as he covenanted it to be, his grantees would, in all probability, be called upon to defend as against the flightful owner. He. knew that, if such suit were commenced, his grantee must necessarily incur expenses and pay counsel fees. The statute fixed his liability, and this liability is not conditioned upon receiving notice from his grantees of the commencement of a suit by the owner of the paramount tiltle; and it does not now lie in -defendant’s mouth to say that, had he received such notice, he might have complied with his 'covenant by admitting -his liability and paying to 'his gran-tees the damages to which they were entitled, and thus prevented the incurring of the item's
The judgment should be modified in regard to the amount of interest allowed respondents as herein indicated, ¡and as so modified it is~affirmed_. - - ■