Citation Numbers: 98 S.E. 451, 177 N.C. 190, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 99
Judges: WALKER, J., after stating the case:
Filed Date: 3/12/1919
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 4/15/2017
On 12 February, 1911, John R. Barden, being the owner in fee simple of the tracts of land in controversy, conveyed the same to R. C. Pridgen for the consideration of $2,000, his wife joining in the deed, which was duly recorded on 6 September, 1911; and on 12 February, 1911, R. C. Pridgen reconveyed the same land, by way of mortgage, to John R. Barden to secure ten notes of $200 each due at stated times from 1911 to 1920. This mortgage was registered 9 March, 1911. *Page 202
On 5 September, 1911, R. C. Pridgen conveyed the same land to J. P. Long, in consideration of $3,000, and the deed was recorded on 7 September, 1911. On 5 September, 1911, J. P. Long and wife, Willie Long, reconveyed the land to R. C. Pridgen by a mortgage to secure $2,500, evidenced by ten notes due on different dates between January, 1913 and 1922. R. C. Pridgen, then, on 15th September, assigned the ten notes and mortgage to J. R. Barden, who paid him for the same, but Pridgen did not transfer the legal title which he held as mortgagee. Long took possession of the property and remained there until about the first of November, 1911, and then surrendered the possession of the land to Barden under an agreement, as alleged by Barden, that Barden was to make improvements and was to sell the land, Long to give him a deed for his equity of redemption, and under this agreement Barden went into the actual possession of the land and remained in possession until 11 November, 1915, when Barden and wife conveyed to the defendant Nelson P. Jarman and wife, Marie C. Jarman, and Barden put them in possession of the premises, and they have remained there ever since without being disturbed by any one.
On 10 July, 1915, J. R. Barden and R. C. Pridgen instituted a suit in the Superior Court of Duplin County against J. P. Long and Willie Long, and duly filed their complaint on 10 July, 1915, in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court. Long and his wife filed their answer on 21 August, 1915, and at the March Term, 1917, the case came on for trial between Pridgen and Barden as plaintiffs and Long and wife as defendants, and at this term the court ordered a mistrial and made Jarman and wife parties to the action.
On 4 April, 1917, the defendants Jarman and wife filed their answer and therewith commenced proceedings for arrest and bail against John R. Barden, alleging that they paid Barden $3,500 for the land and took his deed with full covenants of warranty and seisin, and further that Barden "specifically and emphatically" declared to them and to their attorney, Frank L. Potter, that he was the absolute owner of (192) the lands in fee simple, and that there were no encumbrances or liens upon the same, which assurances and representations were relied upon by these defendants, and were false and fraudulent.
The plaintiffs, Pridgen and Barden filed replies thereto, denying that any false representations were made, and upon all these pleadings the case came on for trial at the August Term, 1918, when the court submitted the three issues set out in the record, to which the plaintiff John R. Barden excepted.
This action, it is alleged, was brought by Pridgen and Barden for the purpose of foreclosing the mortgage made by Long and wife, and to acquire the equity of redemption of the mortgagors for the purpose of *Page 203 perfecting the title in Barden and for the benefit of Jarman and wife. The defendants Jarman and wife filed an answer, setting up the fraudulent representations and alleging that Barden was not seized and possessed of any interest whatever in the said lands, and also alleging that John R. Barden delivered to the defendant Jarman and wife the notes and mortgage given by J. P. Long to R. C. Pridgen and assigned by the latter to him.
Among other instructions, the court charged the jury as follows:
"The deed from the plaintiff Barden to the defendant Jarman conveyed nothing, in so far as the land referred to therein is concerned, but only had the effect of transferring to the defendant Jarman his rights as owner of the notes in question, and no title to the land was conveyed thereby. So I charge you, upon the admitted facts in the pleadings, that in so far as Barden was not the owner of the said land at the time of the sale to Jarman, and inasmuch as he covenanted in the deed that he was seized of said lands, as set out in the answer of the defendant Jarman, there was a breach of said covenant immediately upon the execution of the said deed — that is, the said covenant of seisin — and that the defendant Jarman is therefore entitled to recover of the plaintiff Barden such damages as arose naturally from said breach of covenant just referred to. I charge you further that the defendant Jarman had a right to buy any outstanding title to said lands, in order to protect himself against encumbrances, and that the measure of damages in this case is the amount paid by Jarman in order to protect his title, so long as it does not exceed the total purchase price paid to plaintiff Barden."
The jury returned the following verdict:
1. Did the plaintiff Barden, at the time of the sale of the lands in controversy to the defendant Jarman, falsely and fraudulently represent to the defendant Jarman that he was the absolute owner of the land in controversy, and that the same was free of all encumbrances? Answer: "Yes."
2. Did the defendant Jarman rely upon said representations and purchase said land, believing that Barden was the owner (193) thereof in fee simple? Answer: "Yes."
3. What damage, if any is the defendant Jarman entitled to recover of the plaintiff J. R. Barden? Answer: "$800, with interest."
Judgment upon the verdict, and appeal by John R. Barden, one of the plaintiffs.
The other facts are stated in the opinion of the Court. The court was trying an issue of fraud, whether the plaintiff John R. Barden had falsely and fraudulently represented that he had a good and indefeasible title to the land. The intent of Barden to deceive and cheat the defendant Jarman was an essential ingredient of the alleged fraud. This allegation of fraud was the only one submitted to the jury. The question, therefore, was whether there was a false assertion of title made which was calculated to deceive, and with intent to deceive, the defendant, and upon the truth of which the latter relied and was misled thereby to accept the title to his injury. The important element, as to the fraudulent purpose, required that all the relevant facts bearing on it should be submitted to the jury, and the court committed error when it excluded the evidence as to the dealings of the plaintiff with the defendant Long, in regard to the delivery of possession by him to Barden, for the purpose of selling the land and exercising a general control over it, as if he were the absolute owner.
There was some evidence, too, of a settlement, or adjustment, between the parties, Jarman and his attorney agreeing to accept a transfer of the notes and mortgage by Barden to Jarman in full settlement, as appears in the statement of the case.
Barden denied all fraud and testified that he thought he had a good title, and had conveyed such a title to Jarman. It was not good in law, but he may have honestly believed that it was, being a lawman and having no technical knowledge of the law or of what was required to constitute a good title. It was not inexcusable ignorance of the law for him to suppose that a transfer of the notes and the mortgage securing them would vest the legal title in him. This would be so in some jurisdictions, where a mortgage is regarded only as a security, and some of the profession may have taken this view prior to the decision in Williamsv. Teachey,
But the appellant contends that the court stated the wrong rule as to the measure of damages when it charged that the jury would allow as damages what the defendant Jarman had paid to Long, who held the equity of redemption. This was not the correct rule. Where a covenantee buys in an outstanding paramount title, the measure of damages in an action for breach of the covenant of seisin in his deed is the *Page 205
reasonable price which he has fairly and necessarily paid for such title, not to exceed the original consideration paid by him. 11 Cyc., p. 1162;Price v. Deal,
The usual recovery for breach of a covenant of seisin, or for one of right to convey, is the purchase money paid by the covenantor, and interest thereon; but where the vendee is induced to purchase by the fraudulent representations of the vendor as to his title, he may, upon eviction by a better title, recover of his vendor all the damages naturally resulting from the fraud, although the land was conveyed by deed with warranty. The action in such case is upon the fraud, not upon the covenants of the deed, and the rule of damages for breach of the covenant does not apply. 11 Cyc. 1163.
The court applied the latter rule, where there is fraud, to the breach of an ordinary covenant of seisin, and then directed the jury to assess the damages at the amount paid by Jarman, which, of course, meant that this should be done whether it was or not a reasonable amount which was fairly and honestly paid. If this were the rule a covenantee might pay a very exorbitant price for the encumbrance or paramount title and recover the full amount from his covenantor without regard to the question whether he exercised prudence in making the purchase, or whether he could have acquired the title for a less sum. There is no finding here as to whether the price paid by Jarman to Long for the equity of redemption was excessive or moderate. There is evidence that it is far beyond what should have been paid, but only evidence, the plaintiff Barden having testified that Long had offered to take one hundred dollars for his equity and sign the Jarman deed. There is also other testimony that goes to show a lower value of the equity than eight hundred dollars.
Reverting to the nature of these covenants, as bearing upon the damages for a breach, we find it to be generally settled that a plaintiff cannot recover in an action for a breach of covenant for quiet enjoyment without showing an eviction from the possession under a paramount title, and the measure of damages in such cases is the price paid for the land, with interest. Williams v. Beeman,
In an action upon the former covenant, an eviction must be alleged in the complaint or declaration, but in an action on the latter it is only *Page 206 necessary to negative the words of the covenant and to allege that the grantor had no seisin or title to the land. 4 Kent Com. 479; Richest v.Snyder, 9 Wend. 416. And, as a general rule, the measure of damages (purchase money and interest) is the same for a breach of covenant of seisin as for a breach of covenant of quiet enjoyment. Wilson v. Forbes,supra. This rule of damages is applicable to those cases where there is an eviction from the whole of the land conveyed, or a want of title to the same, but where there is an eviction from a want of title to only part of the land conveyed, and the plaintiff has been put to the necessity, as in this case, of advancing money to remove an encumbrance, the measure of damages is more difficult to be fixed.
With reference to the last statement, it was said in Price v. Deal, 90 N.C. at p. 295: "We think his Honor very properly refused to give the instructions asked for by the defendant, upon the question of damages, but we are also of the opinion that there was misdirection in the instruction which he did give to the jury. It is well settled that a party who purchases land with covenants for seisin or quiet enjoyment may protect himself by buying in the outstanding title. Faucett v. Woods,
The defendant relies on Lane v. Richardson, 104 N.C. at p. 650, but the case is distinguishable, for there the Court was speaking of judgments as encumbrances, and not of a defect in the title to the fee. The amount of a judgment, mortgage or other lien is easily ascertained, and the amount being a certain one it necessarily fixes the measure of the recovery.
The covenant of seisin is broken when the deed is delivered, as it implies that the covenantor then had not only the possession, but the right of possession, and the right of property. This is the primary (196) meaning of seisin; its secondary meaning is possession alone. 5 Modern Am. Law, sec. 593. It is a covenant of title in this State, and not merely one of possession, and is synonymous with the covenant of right to convey (ibid., sec. 595), which also is broken as soon as made.
The plaintiff Barden offered evidence to the effect that the defendant Jarman had undertaken to make an independent investigation of the *Page 207
title before he purchased, and that he did so, and he concludes, therefore, that he acted upon his own investigation, or information therefrom, or from his attorney who made it, and not upon the representations of Barden. He claims that because of this he is discharged from blame, and cites in support of this position 12 R.C.L., sec. 111, p. 357, and also Shappiro v.Goldberg,
Plaintiff Barden also contended that there had been a settlement between him and the defendant Jarman of their differences in regard to the fraud and breach of the covenant, the latter accepting the notes and mortgage, which were duly transferred to him, as a full accord and satisfaction. If there has been a settlement between the parties it may be pleaded and a corresponding issue submitted so that the jury may determine the question under proper instructions.
Before parting with the case, it may be well to recall some general principles recognized by this Court in regard to the liability of a party who practices such a fraud, as is alleged in this case, in the sale and purchase of land. Walsh v. Hall,
For the reasons assigned there must be a new trial of all the issues.
New trial.
Cited: Newbern v. Hinton,