3 Cai. Cas. 111 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1805
This case resolves itself into these two points for inquiry. 1st, Whether, upon the covenants, the plaintiff be entitled to recover the value of the moiety of one lot at the time of eviction, or only at the time of the purchase, and to be ascertained by the consideration given? 2d, If the latter be the rule of damages, then, whether the plaintiff be also entitled to recover interest upon the purchase money, and the costs of the eviction ?
1 — There are two covenants contained in the deed ; the one,, that the testator was seised in fee, and had good right to convey ; the other, that the grantee should hold the land free from any lawful disturbance or eviction. The present case does not state distinctly, whether the eviction was founded upon an absolute title to a moiety of one lot, or upon some temporary in-cumbrance. But I conclude from the manner of stating^ the questions, and so I shall assume the fact to be, that the testator was not seised of the moiety so recovered when he made the conveyance, and had no right to convey it. The last covenant cannot then, in this case, have any greater operation than the first, and I shall consider the question as if it depended upon the first covenant merely.
At common law, upon a writ of luarrantia charta, the demandant recovered in compensation, only for the land at the time of the warranty made, and although the land had become of increased value afterward, by the discovery of a mine, or by buildings, or otherwise, yet the warrantor was not to render in value according to the state of things, but as the land was when the warranty was made. Bro. abr. tit. Voucher pl. 69. Ibid. tit. recouver in value. pl. 59 22 Vin. 144, 5, 6. Tb. pl. 1, 2, 9. Ub. pl. 1, 2, 3. 1 Reeves’ Eng. Law, 448. This recompense in value, on excambium as it was anciently termed, consisted of lands of the warrantor, on which his heir inherited from him, of equal value with the land from which the feofee was evicted. Glanville G. 3. c. 4. Bracton 384. a. b. That this was the ancient, and uniform rule of the English law, is a point as I apprehend, not to be questioned
Upon the sale .of lands the purchaser usually examines the title for himself, and in case of good faith between the parties {and of such cases only I now speak) the seller discloses his proofs and knowledge of the title. The want of title is therefore, usually a case of mutual error, and it would he ruinous and oppressive, to make the seller respond for any accidental or extra-dinary rise in the value of the land. Still more burthensome would the rule seem to be if that risp was owing to the taste, fortune or luxury of the purchaser. No man could venture to sell van acre of ground to a wealthy purchaser, without the hazard of absolute ruin. The hardship of this doctrine has been ably exposed by lord Kaimes in his examination of a decision in the Scotch law, that the vendor was bound to pay according to the increased value of the land, 1 Kaimes’ Eq. 284 to 303. 1 Ersk. 206.
If the question was now res integra, and we were in search of a fit rule for the occasion, I know of none less exceptionable than the one already established. By the civil law the seller was
2 — The next point arising in this case is, whether the plaintiff is entitled to recover interest upon the purchase money, and the costs of eviction ? It is evident, that originally the vendee recovered only what was deemed equivalent to the purchase money
As to the costs of suit attending the eviction stated in the case, it is very clear that the defendants are responsible under the covenant, for the testator was bound to defend and protect the plaintiff and his assigns in the title he had conveyed. At common law, he might have been couched to come in, and been substituted as a real defendant in the suit. But the defendants are not answerable for the costs of the suit for mesne profits, as there the testator was not bound to defend.
My opinion accordingly is, that the plaintiff in the present case is entitled to recover the consideration paid for the moiety of the lot evicted, together with interest thereon from the date of the purchase, and the costs of suit in ejectment for the recovery of the same.
Livingstone J. ' To find a proper rule of damage in a case like this, is a work of some difficulty; no one, will be entirely free from objection, or notat times work injustice. To refund the consideration, even with interest, may be a very inadequate compensation, when the property is greatly enhanced in value, and when the same money
The other judges concurred.