Barker v. Blanchard

5 Ohio N.P. 398
CourtHuron County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 398 (Barker v. Blanchard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Huron County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. Blanchard, 5 Ohio N.P. 398 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

This is an action to foreclose a mortgage given by the defendants, Albert S. Blanchard and Julia A. Blanchard, to the-plaintiff, to secure the purchase price of about forty-three acres of land. The defense is an alleged breach of warranty in. the deed, the defendants asserting a right to rescind the transaction and, upon re-conveyance of the property, have a cancellation of the mortgage.

The facts, as claimed by the defendants Blanchard, are that at the date of the deed the grantor was not in actual possession of a scrip of the land conveyed —about four acres, — and that the strip, was adversely held, under a claim of right, by Elizabeth Artman and Michael Artman, her husband. It is not alleged, that this claim was well founded,and the' evidence in the ease indicates that it was not.

As one of the proceedings in the action, the Artmans were made parties defendant on the application of the original defendants Blanchard, but were subsequently dismissed from the case at the-request of the same original defendants.

The case has been heard on the controversy between the plaintiff,, mortgagee, and the defendants Blanchard, the-mortgagors. The contention of these defendants is that the covenant of seizin expressed in the deed to them was-broken at its date by the adverse possession, whether tortious or otherwise, said to have been then held by the Art-mans. On the other hand it is urged by the plaintiff: (1), that at'the date of the deed the Artmans were not in fact in possession of the four acres ; (2),. that a warranty of seizin is not broken by any adverse possession unless the same is-based upon a valid title paramount to that of the warrantor; and (3), that in no event are the defendants entitled to the relief asked by them, the rescission of' their contract and cancellation of their mortgage.

Considering first the last of these three-propositions, it is clearly sustained by principle and authority. The theory of the defendants is that the covenant of warranty was broken as soon as made, and that the adverse possession constituted an eviction from the four acres. It is not suggested that there was any eviction from the residue of the land. In harmony with the general rule of damages for breach of warranty, the measure-is only the actual loss sustained by the purchaser. If, by a purchase of the adverse claim or other extinguishment. [399]*399it, Mrs, Blanchard can become possessor of all the land attempted to be conveyed, her loss would seem to be no •more than the expenditure necessary to attain that end. And her just claim -againsther warrantor maybe even less than that. In case of eviction from all the land conveyed, a covenantee is entitled to reimbursement for .the sum expended in procuring the outstanding title or in removing an outstanding encumbrance, if such sum exceeds the purchase price of the land in the sale by the covenantor. A like rule must be applied to an eviction from a part only of the land, and the measure of damages in such case must not exceed the proportion which the purchase price •of the part bears to the purchase price the whole, with such interest as under the circumstances of the case may be just.

The rule seems to be settled by the adjudications in our supreme court. Without reviewing them they may be cited as follows: Backus v. McCoy, 3 Ohio, 211, 221; King v. Kerr’s Admr., 5 Ohio, 154, 160; Foote v. Burnet, 10 Ohio, 317, 330; Clark v. Parr, 14 Ohio, 118, and Wetzell v. Richcreek, 53 Ohio St., 62, 74.

By a fair construction of the defendants’ cross-petition however, whole a rescission of the contract and cancellation •of the mortgage are plainly sought, the •prayer is broad enough to entitle the defendants to recoupment for any damages which they have sustained as properly measured, if there has been a breach of the plaintiff’s warranty of seizin. •

As to the facts in evidence, it is beyond dispute that at the date of the deed and for some time before and after, Michael Artman was asserting a title to the four acre strip in himself or his wife, and was strenuously endeavoring to maintain a possession of it. The evidence is not so clear that he was in actual possession, either for himself or as agent- for his wife, at the date of the deed. There was no house on the strip, and Albert Blanchard himself testifies that on the '24th day of August, 1894, the date of the conveyance, there was neither any crop on the strip nor any continuous fence separating it from the rest of the land described in plaintiff’s deed.

A part of the strip was prepared for and sown to wheat the same fall, and Artman subsequently harvested the crop; but there is some confusion in the evidence as to what, if any, part of the plowing to fit the ground had been done prior to August 24th. Nor is it clear that if any of the ground had thus been plowed, it had been done by Artman or any one claiming adversely to the plaintiff. On a part of the strip was an apple orchard, -from which, in October of the same year, Artman attempted to gather the fruit. 'The attempt was successfully resisted by •the plaintiff, and a son of the defendants, Blanchards and Artman, with his ladders and his empty baskets, was driven off the premises, or, deeming discretion the better part of valor, voluntarily and in good order, retired.

True it is that at some time prior to the date of the deed,and probably as late as the month immediately preceding, Artman was in the exclusive possession of the four acres. It is equally true that we find him again in like possession at a later date, sturdily, and literally vi et armis, maintaining his claimed rights.

But the important query, so far as the facts of the case are concerned, is not what had been the condition of affairs or what was it to be, as regards the occupancy of this disputed territory, but what was the condition, at the very date of the deed? Were the Artmans, husband and wife, or was either of them, in its actual possession on the 24th day of August, su as to exclude the Blanchards therefrom. If not, and there was nothing to prevent the occupancy of the lana by Mrs. Blanchard, there was clearly no breach of the warranty of seizin. The covenantor is not liable for any adverse occupancy before the making of his covenant, or for damages caused by any subsequent trespass.

I am disposed, however, to look further into the case, in view of the interesting legal question presented, which seems never to have been directly answered by an Ohio court in any reported ease.

The defendants’ cross-petition complains of no breach of any covenant, save that of seizin, and recites no other, as written in plaintiff’s deed. The reliance upon the theory of the defendants’ counsel is correctly placed on that covenant. If an adverse possession is not a breach of the covenant of seizin, there is no breach of any warranty in the conveyance. Unlike the usual form of a lease, a warranty deed does not ordinarily contain an express warranty of quiet enjoyment. Even if it did, it by no means follows that under the judicial definitions of the two phrases, anything would be added.

Counsel for the defendants, with much force, urge the recognized double meaning of the term “seizin”: There is seizin in fact or deed, defined as actual possession, and there is seizin in law,, or a legal right to possession.

The detírmination of the legal issue submitted hangs upon the answer to the question as to which of the two definitions of seizin is understood in the ordinary covenant of warranty.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-blanchard-ohctcomplhuron-1898.