1 Cal. 129 | Cal. | 1850
By the Court,
On the 11th day of October, 1849, Laffan made his bond to Tewksbury conditioned to exe-
There is no ground for any action whatever in this case. The only thing to which Laffan bound himself was, to give a quitclaim deed. The period for executing that has not arrived, and there is no pretence of any breach of this condition. The action seems to have been brought upon the supposition that a bond to give a quit-claim deed implies a covenant, not only to deliver possession, but to protect and insure the obligee against trespassers. But an agreement to give a quit-claim deed cannot surely confer greater rights than would be acquired under a deed containing express covenants of warranty, seisin, and quiet enjoyment; and the facts of this case are insufficient to sustain an action even upon a deed embracing all these covenants. (Gardner v. Ketteles, 3 Hill, 330; Sedgwick v. Hallenbeck, 7 J. R. 376.)
The certificate does not help the plaintiff. It was executed long after the bond, and forms no part of the original contract. It is not in itself an agreement upon which an action can be based ; there is no mutuality, no consideration. It purports to be simply a recital of a stipulation in a previous agreement,
Rut further, conceding that this stipulation formed a part of the original contract in writing, the result would be the same. It imports nothing more than a privilege or license to the plaintiff to take possession of the lot before the expiration of the period for executing the quit-claim deed; but it does not imply that the defendant, in case a third person held the lot, or a portion of it, should either deliver possession, or be liable for damages in the event of the plaintiff being unable to secjuire possession.
Judgment reversed, with costs to the defendant in both courts.