Lead Opinion
This action was brought to recover the sum of eight hundred dollars, paid by the plaintiff to the defendant on a contract for the purchase of a lot of land in the City of San Francisco. The contract between the parties was in writing, the concluding clause of which on the part of the defendant, the bargainer, is in these word's : “ I warrant an indisputable
The objection made to the title, and which the Court below held well founded, was that the conveyance by the Eacouillats was to Louis Blanchard & Co. and John Antoine Coutto
The fact that these several conveyances were made to certain persons whose names were mentioned with the words “and Company" annexed thereto, seemed to have been regarded as passing the title, not alone to the grantees named, but also to persons not named, but represented by the word “ Company,” and that the deeds of the persons thus represented were necessary to transfer the entire title of the property to a subsequent grantee; and that as “ Company” was a word of indefinite and uncertain import, it could not be known to the purchaser that Paris and Porta were respectively members and the only members of the firms of Blanchard & Co. and Couttolene & Co.
The doctrine on this subject is well expounded in Arthur v. Weston and Strode, 22 Missouri, 378, in which case it appeared that in 1832 one Holcomb, from whom both parties claimed title, conveyed certain lots of land to W. W. Phelps & Co., and that in 1838 Phelps and Oliver Cowdry and John Whit-more conveyed the same lots to Arthur, the plaintiff. In the meantime, in 1835, the defendant Strode purchased the property and obtained a deed of the same under an execution sale, upon a judgment against Phelps and Cowdry. At the trial Arthur offered to prove that when the conveyance was made to Phelps & Co., “ said firm was composed of Phelps, Cowdry and Whitmore;” but the Court rejected the offered evidence, holding the law to be that “ the deed tb W. W. Phelps & Co. operated to vest the legal title in W. W. Phelps alone, and that the entire title passed by the Sheriff’s deed under the execution sale," and gave judgment accordingly.” Upon writ of error the Supreme Court sustained the decision of the Court below, holding that the deed to W. W. Phelps & Co. did not take effect as a legal conveyance of the premises to Phelps, Cowdry and Whitmore jointly, but that it operated to convey
If the defendant’s title to the lot was a good and valid title, as it appears to have been, without reference to any extrinsic evidence, the purchaser, as a reasonable man, should have been satisfied with it. The defendant’s title to the lot being good and valid, it was, in the sense of the defendant’s warranty, an indisputable title, and the plaintiff* was in duty bound to be satisfied with it. A purchaser under such circumstances cannot, because he may have become tired of his bargain, or for any other insufficient cause, say he is dissatisfied and thus avoid his contract. In this case the purchaser may have supposed he had sufficient ground to decline consummating his contract, and to recover back the money paid on account of it, inasmuch as counsel learned in law advised that defendant’s title was defective. But of the correctness of this advice he took the risk. The opinion of the person who passed upon the question, however reliable his opinions in general might be, was not conclusive of the parties’ rights in the premises. The question presented for decision in the Court below was whether the defendant’s title was good or bad. If it was good, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover back his deposit; if it was bad, he was entitled to the money that he had paid on account of it. We think upon the face of the record the defendant’s title was “ indisputable and satisfactory ” in law, and that the Court erred in deciding otherwise. We also hold that it was erroneous to obtain from the witness his opinion respecting the title. Whether it was good or bad was the question, and the main question to be passed upon by the Court. (Romilly v. James, 6 Taunt. 274; Kent v. Allen, 24 Mo. 106.)
The judgment must be and is .hereby reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
The question is not whether defendant could convey a good title, but whether he had “ an indisputable and satisfactory title.” Admitting that a conveyance to “Louis Blanchard &