32 Ky. 276 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1834
delivered the Opinion of the Court..
Taylor having sold and conveyed to Lyon, five hundred acres of land, represented to be included in Reiny’s survey, in fhe county of Laurel, and having afterwards obtained a judgment for about seven hundred and fifty dollars — all that remained unpaid of the consideration; Lyon enjoined the. judgment, and prayed for a rescission of the contract, — alleging that Taj lor lived in the state of Tennessee; that he made false and fraudulent representations respecting his title; that the only pretence of title which he ever had, he derived by intermediate conveyances under Remy’s patent; that Remy’s survey does not cover the five hundred acres; that he (Lyon) had never accepted the deed from Taylor; that he doubted the legality of his derivative right; and therefore calling on him to exhibit the muniments of his title.
Taylor, in his answer, denied the imputed fraud ; insisted that Remy’s survey included the five hundred acres sold to Lyon ; averred that Lyon had accepted the deed, and exhibited documents purporting to be a conveyance from Remy to Edwards, a deed from Edward’s heirs to Pearl, and a deed from Pearl to himself. But, as those documents had not been properly authenticated, and, moreover, as the deed from Edward’s heirs had not been fully executed, he filed a cross bill against Pearl, the heirs of Edwards, and the unknown heirs of Remy, for the purpose of confirming and perfecting the legal title.
Without disposing of the cross bill, the circuit court decreed a rescission of the contract between Taylor and Lyon; and the propriety of that decree is the main question now to be considered.'
But the decree rescinding the contract cannot be sustained.
The deed from Taylor to Lyon must, from the proof, be deemed to have been accepted; and, though it was not fully proved in time to be legally recorded, it is good and effectual between the parties; and it was Lyon’s duty, after accepting it, to have had it properly proved and recorded. There is no sufficient proof that Taylor was guilty of- any fraud in the contract. There is not a particle of proof tending to shew, that he knew or suspected that his title was, in any respect, defective or inferior. On the contrary, the long time during which the land had been occupied by those claiming to have been purchasers under Remy, without any question or doubt as to the validity of their title, and other more minute circumstances which appear, indicate satisfactorily, that Taylor, had never doubted the validity or the superiority of his legal right, and had acted in good faith in representing his title as a good one, and in selling and conveying it as such — The representation that his title was good cannot therefore affect the case, Carrico vs. Froman, 2 Littel’s Rep. 178.
The point to which the attention of the parties seems to have been chiefly, and almost exclusively directed in the preparation of the case in the circuit court, is, whether Rerny’s patent includes the land conveyed by Taylor to Lyon. Whether that patent includes the whole of that land, or only about one half of it, depends on whether the mouth ol Raccoon, as called lor in the survey, or the mouth of Pond creek, be the true beginning of Remy. Upon this point the prepara
Many cases to the same effect have been decided by this court. Miller vs. Long, 3 Marshall, 334; Golden vs. Maupin, 2 J. J. Mar. 239, and Simpson et al. vs. Hawkins and Cochran, 1 Dana, 303.
The unexpected insolvency or removal of the vendor, may, in peculiar cases, authorize an injunction against
It is to be presumed, that the purchaser examined the muniments of title before he accepted a conveyance. It was his duty to do so ; and, if he failed, he was guilty of what is denominated crassa negligentia. It is to be presumed, also, that he intended to look to the provisions and obligations of his contract, and not to a vacation of it, for indemnity for any deficiency in the title of his vendor. If he took no covenant of seizin, which would have enabled him without an eviction, to' put the title to a legal and decisive test at any time, he cannot call on the chancellor to supply such an omission in the contract, and, by anticipating an eviction, to decree a rescission. Why rescind? However defective the title may be, it is — even if the vendee could not have detected its true character by proper vigilance when he made his contract — only what the parties to every such contract must be presumed to have contemplated — that the title might, at some time, be discovered to be imperfect or inferior; for which contingency, when the purchaser does not intend to hazard it, he provides his own security, by the terms of his agreement; and which, in this case, has been provided for by the covenant of general warranty in the deed of conveyance to Lyon.
As then, there is no proof of fraud, the contract should not be rescinded for that only, which its very nature and terms prove that the parties contemplated as a possible contingency, and therefore provided for in the mode they thought fit to adopt.
But, even when there is no eviction, and no fraud, a purchaser, who shall shew that he is in obvious and imi
Lyon has not shewn any equitable right to an injunction, in consequence of the allegation that Remy’s survey does not include all the land conveyed to him by Taylor; because, were there no other reason, George Thompson’s patent, more than twenty years old, covers the whole five hundred acres, if Remy’s survey does not; and it may be presumed, that the adverse occupancy under Remy, for more than twenty years, would afford ample protection to Lyon, against the claim of Thompson, who, as this record shews, was still living after twenty years had run.
But, as it appears from the shewing of Taylor himself, that his legal title is not perfect and unquestionable, and as the statute of limitations would not affect the rights of any of the vendors who had not parted •with the legal title, and as it also appears, that Taylor has removed from Kentucky since the date of his conveyance, Lyon would be entitled to his injunction upon shewing reasonable ground for apprehending that any of those from whom Taylor claims to have derived his right may successfully assert title to the land, and bringing such persons before the court, to assert or relinquish their claims. He has not distinctly averred any such apprehension ; nor has he attempted to quiet or perfect his
Wherefore, it is decreed by this court, that the decree of the circuit court be reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to maintain the injunction, if Lyon should elect to amend his bill, as has been suggested, and to dissolve it, without damages, on the final hearing on that amendment, provided an unquestionable title be obtained : otherwise to perpetuate it, in the event of a virtual eviction by any of those through whom the title must pass before it can be safely and fully vested in him. But, in the event of his failing to take such steps in proper time, to dismiss his bill, with costs, and dissolve his injunction, with damages.