57 Mo. App. 462 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
— The * plaintiff in his petition states substantially that on the twenty-eighth day of November, 1892, the plaintiff and defendant entered 'into a contract whereby the defendant agreed with the plaintiff to furnish plaintiff with an abstract of title to certain land in Vernon county, then owned by one Roodhouse, and which land plaintiff was about to purchase and subsequently did purchase from Roodhouse; that in pursuance of said contract defendant made and delivered to said Roodhouse as the agent of plaintiff an abstract of title to said land; that through the negligence of defendant said abstract was falsely made, in this, that it failed to show certain judgments pending in the circuit court of said county against said Rood-house, which judgments were a lien upon said land, and which said judgments plaintiff was compelled to and did pay off, to his damage.
Defendant’s answer was a general denial. The case was tried by the court, sitting as a jury, who made the following finding of facts: “The court finds from the evidence that the abstract and certificate were made by the defendant for one Roodhouse, and not for the plaintiff, nor for Roodhouse as the agent of plaintiff; and further finds that the defendant in making said abstract, negligently failed to include the judgments introduced in evidence. The plaintiff on account of said failure and negligence, was compelled to pay the same, and that the said plaintiff was injured thereby. That the finding of the court will be for the defendant, the evidence showing no contractual relations between the plaintiff and defendant.”
At the request of defendant the court also gave the
I. It seems to be the purpose of appellant’s brief to convince ms that the trial court was in en’or as to the facts found, and that for that reason the judgment ought to be reversed. This effort must be futile here, and for two obvious reasons. In the first place, since this case was tried before the judge, sitting as a jury, we should defer to his finding of facts and settlement of all conflicts in the testimony, and should not interfere except in a case of manifest prejudice or misconduct; and, in the second place, we should not attempt to revise the findings of the trial court, unless all the evidence is brought here for our consideration. The plaintiff’s abstract (to which alone we must look) makes no pretense of presenting the evidence in full, but contains only such portions as plaintiff’s counsel deemed material or proper for the purposes of their argument. ¥e can not, from this, undertake to deny the conclusions of fact arrived at by the trial judge.
We shall, then, assume the facts to be as declared by the trial court — that is, that defendant was employed by one Roodhouse to examine the records and report by abstract the state of the title to certain lands; that in so doing the defendant negligently omitted to note the existence of ’ certain judgments which were liens on the property, and that on account of this omission plaintiff (who bought the land from Roodhouse) was afterwards compelled to pay said judgments.
Under this state of facts the plaintiff can not hold the defendant liable, and the judgment of the lower
In a well considered case from New Jersey the court says: “It is not every one who suffers a loss from the negligence of another that can maintain a suit on such ground. The limit of the doctrine relating to actionable negligence is, that the person occasioning the loss owes a duty, arising from contract or otherwise, to the person sustaining such loss. Such a restriction on the right to sue for want of care in the exercise of employments, or the transaction of business, is plainly necessary to restrain the remedy from being pushed to an impracticable extreme. There would be no bounds to actions and litigious intricacies if the ill effects of the negligences of men could be followed down the chain of results to the final effect.” Kahl v. Love, 37 N. J. L. 5. The following decided cases are as well in point: Savings Bank v. Ward, 100 U. S. 195; Dundee Mortgage Co. v. Hughes, 20 Fed. Rep. 39;
It will he seen, too, from these and other cases, that the above rule applies with like force even where the abstractor or examiner has knowledge that the certificate as to title is t,o be used in a sale or loan to advise the purchaser or loanor.
In the case at bar the pleader seems to have had about this same idea of the law, for in the plaintiff’s petition it is alleged that the plaintiff had a contract with the defendant to furnish him (plaintiff) an abstract showing incumbrances, etc., on the land, but that defendant failed, etc. However, the evidence did nob sustain the allegations of the petition, as is shown by the court’s finding of facts. . The defendant furnished an abstract, not under contract with the plaintiff, but as requested by, and at the- expense of, Roodhouse. , There was, then, fio, pfívrty of contract between the plaintiff and the defendant* The defendant therefore owed the plaintiff no duty, and the defendant’s failure to observe due care in searching the records was the violation of no obligation he owed the plaintiff.
The case was tried on a proper theory of law, and > the judgment will be affirmed.