MEMORANDUM
Presently before this Court is the Motion to Dismiss the Joinder Complaint filed by the Additional Defendant Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“Freddie Mac”), and the Response of Defendant 1417 Spruce Associates, L.P. (“Spruce”). For the following reasons, the Motion is granted.
I.BACKGROUND
This action arises from a December, 1994 conveyance of the property located at 1417 Spruce Street in Philadelphia, PA (“the property”) from Freddie Mac to Spruce.
In June of 1994, the property was encumbered. Plaintiffs Steven and Sally Woolf (“the Woolfs”) held a record lien on the property, (Pis.’ Mem. Opp’n Mot. Dismiss at 9), and the owners of the property at that time (“prior owners”) held the property subject to a mortgage owned by Freddie Mac. Id. at 3. Freddie Mac filed a complaint against the prior owners for delinquent mortgage payments, and obtained a court order directing the United States Marshal to sell the property at a public judicial sale. Id. Freddie Mac bought the property at the Marshal sale and, thereafter, conveyed the property to Spruce by special warranty deed. Id. at 4.
In April, 1999, the Woolfs filed a complaint in foreclosure against Spruce in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, alleging that their lien on the property continued because Freddie Mac allegedly failed to serve proper notice to them of the Marshal sale. Id.
Subsequently, Spruce filed a Joinder Complaint against Freddie Mac in the state action, alleging that Freddie Mac must defend Spruce’s title pursuant to the terms of the special warranty deed, (See Pis.’ Compl.), which Freddie Mac removed to this Court in August, 1999. Freddie Mac then filed the present Motion to Dismiss the Joinder Complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
II.STANDARD
A motion to dismiss, pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), tests the legal sufficiency of the complaint. Conley v. Gibson,
III.DISCUSSION
There is a paucity of case law concerning the obligations created by the conveyance of property through a special warranty deed. Moreover, the existing authority does not squarely address the precise issue of whether a grantor who conveys, via special warranty deed, property encumbered by a preexisting lien must defend against a subsequent foreclosure action.
A special warranty deed is “a clause of warranty inserted in a deed of lands, by which the grantor covenants, for himself and his heirs, to ‘warrant and forever defend’ the title to the same ... against all persons claiming ‘by, through, or under’ the grantor or his heirs. If the warranty is against the claims of all persons whatso
The Pennsylvania Superior Court outlined the elements of a special warranty deed in Leh v. Burke,
In the instant case, the relevant language contained in the deed by which Freddie Mac conveyed the property to Spruce is as follows:
Grantor does hereby bind itself and its successors and assigns to WARRANT SPECIALLY all and singular the property unto Grantee its successors and assigns, against every person lawfully claiming by, through, or under Grantor, but not otherwise; provided that this conveyance and the warranty of Grantor herein contained are subject to ... any and all matters of record.
Special Warranty Deed at 1 (emphasis added). A fair reading of the plain language of the deed, informed by the logic of the Superior Court in Leh as well as the general definition of a special warranty deed, yields the conclusion that because the Woolfs’ lien preexisted Freddie Mac’s possession of the property, and was therefore created without Freddie Mac’s knowledge, fault, consent, or acquiescence, it did not constitute a claim arising by, through, or under the grantor. Therefore, Spruce’s claim against Freddie Mac is without basis in the law.
Spruce, however, focuses on the Leh Court’s use of the phrase “created or allowed,” even though the Superior Court did not elaborate upon the meaning of the term, in support of its assertion that Freddie Mac is obligated to defend against the Woolfs’ lien. Specifically, Spruce argues that if Freddie Mac failed to give the Woolfs proper notice of the Marshal sale, he failed to extinguish their lien, thereby “allowing” it to burden the property at the time of the transfer to Spruce. As such, Spruce argues that dismissal of its claim against Freddie Mac is premature, since the factual dispute as to whether Freddie Mac took adequate steps to extinguish the Woolfs’ lien by giving proper notice of the sale has yet to be resolved.
Spruce’s proffered interpretation of Freddie Mac’s obligations under the special warranty deed is unpersuasive. As such, Spruce makes no claim against Freddie Mac for which legal relief could be granted. Accordingly, the Joinder Complaint is dismissed with prejudice.
An appropriate Order follows.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 4th day of October, 1999, upon consideration of the Motion of Additional Defendant Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“Freddie Mac”) to Dismiss the Joinder Complaint of Defendant 1417 Spruce Associates, L.P. (“Spruce”), and Spruce’s Response thereto, it is hereby ORDERED that Freddie Mac’s Motion is GRANTED and the Join-der Complaint is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
Notes
. Pennsylvania law recognizes the distinction between the ''special” and the "general” warranty. See Clark, Ladner, et.al. Land Conveyancing in Pennsylvania, § 9.05 at 29 (4th ed. rev.)
. Briefly addressed in the parties' briefs is the fact that the Freddie Mac/Spruce deed provided that Freddie Mac would be responsible for all claims arising by, through and under the grantor, except for "any and all matters of record.” Freddie Mac points out that the Woolfs’ lien was a matter of record of which Spruce had notice, as it was levied in 1984, 10 years before the Marshal sale. Spruce counters by asserting that "the Marshal sale was also a matter of record at the time the
