Barlow v. Delaney

40 F. 97, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2442
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri
DecidedNovember 4, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 40 F. 97 (Barlow v. Delaney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barlow v. Delaney, 40 F. 97, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2442 (circtedmo 1889).

Opinion

BkeweR, J.

This case is now submitted for final hearing on pleadings and proofs. It was before this court on demurrer to the bill a year ago, and an opinion was filed by my Brother Ti-iayer, in which several questions were considered and decided. 36 Fed. Rep. 577. For a history of the facts out of which this litigation arises, see that opinion, and the case between the same parties, 86 Mo. 588. A restatement of the facts is therefore unnecessary.

Counsel for the defendants have challenged the conclusions expressed by my Brother Thayer, and have reargued to some extent the questions then decided. We have together examined those questions as well as the others in the case, and have reached the following conclusions :

It may be stated generally that the claim of complainants is that a covenant in a deed from Mrs. Boyce has been broken, and this bill is filed to recover on account of that breach. It is, in the first place, insisted by defendants that there is no equity in the bill, because the extent of Mrs. Boyce’s title was disclosed by the public records, of which complainants’ ancestor, Mr. Barlow, was charged with notice. In other words, the claim is that a covenantee cannot recover of the covenantor for breach of covenant if at the time of the execution of the covenant he knows of the defect covenanted against. A statement of this proposition carries its own answer. The very purpose of the covenant is protection against defects;-and to hold that one can be protected only against unknown defects would be to rob the covenant of more than one-half its value, besides destroying the force of its language. If from the force of a covenant it is desired to eliminate known defects, or to limit the covenant in anyway, it'is easy to say so. General in its language it reaches to all defects within its terms, known or unknown.

Again, it is insisted that the covenant relied on is void because the covenant of a married woman. The property conveyed was a part of her separate estate in equity. I do not know that I can add anything to what has been so well said on this subject in the opinion heretofore filed. The invalidity of covenants affirmed in section 669 of the Missouri Revised Statutes refers by the terms of the section to covenants in a joint deed by husband and wife of her statutory estate. By no reasonable or proper grammatical construction can the words “such deed,” in the last clause of the section, refer to other than the joint deed named in the first clause. The deed here was no such joint deed. It was the separate deed of the wife and her trustee, conveying a lot belonging to her separate estate in equity. That she had power to make such a conveyance without her husband, and that she can make any contract with respect to that separate estate as freely as a -feme sole, must now be considered as settled by the decision of the supreme court in Turner v. Shaw, 96 Mo. 22, 8 S. W. Rep. 897. This is the declaration of that court upon the question:

“But it may be urged that this deed was utterly invalid, because it was executed by the wife alone. However this may be as to mere statutory estates, which require a joinder of husband and wife in order to their valid execu-[99]*99lion, it will not hold as to separate estates in equity, which the wife may charge, mortgage, or convey without let or hindrance from her husband. With regard to such property she is, in equity, a feme sole, and has the jus disponendi, which is the inseparable incident of ownership. By virtue of this she charges, she incumbers, or she absolutely disposes of it, or she binds it by her parol agreements, just as any other owner would. This position is sustained by abundant authority, both here and elsewhere. Livingston v. Livingston, 2 Johns. Ch. 537; Whitesides v. Cannon, 23 Mo. 457; King v. Mittalberger, 50 Mo. 182; McQuie v. Peay, 58 Mo. 56; Claflin v. Van Wagoner, 32 Mo. 252; Schafroth v. Ambs, 46 Mo. 114; Kimm v. Weippert, Id. 532; Lincoln v. Rowe, 51 Mo. 571; De Baun v. Van Wagoner, 56 Mo. 347; Gay v. Ihm, 69 Mo. 584; 1 Bish. Mar. Wom. § 853; 2 Bish. Mar. Wom. § 163; Taylor v. Meads, 34 Law J. Ch. 203. ”

Again, it is insisted that the covenant was void because commencing by disseisin, and made for the purpose of giving effect to that disseisin. There is much curious and intricate learning in the old common law respecting real estate, much of which is without force or significance under the changed rules of to-day respecting real estate and Its modes of conveyance. This old doctrino of the invalidity of warranties commencing by disseisin had reference principally to the matter of estoppel, ami its effect upon the title; while the modern covenant is not so much for the purpose of establishing title as for protection in case of failure or defect thereof. But further, by section 7, c. 108, of the Revision of 1865, it was provided that—

“Section 7. Lineal and collateral warranties, with all their incidents, are abolished; but the heirs and devisees of every person who shall have made any covenant or agreement [shall be answerable upon such covenant or agreement] to the extent of the lands descended or devised to them, in the cases and in the manner prescribed by law.”

This seems to affirm the validity of a covenant such as this at least, made by one rightfully in possession and owning a limited estate. Indeed, I think it would be rarely found that any of the ordinary covenants in a deed made to-day by one sui juris would be declared void on account of any of the old technical rules of the common law respecting warranties and covenants.

Again, it is insisted that, even if the covenant were valid, it would not extend to the defendants’ title. Mrs. Boyce had a life-estate, her children the remainder. These estates were created by the will of Ann Biddle, the same instrument creating both estates; and it is urged that it would be an absurdity to say that she warranted against the very instrument under which she herself derived title. The covenant was as follows:

“And the said parties of the first part, O. Boyce and Julius S. Walsh, hereby covenant for themselves, their successors, heirs, * * * to warrant and defend the said real estate unto him, the said party of the second part, and his heirs and assigns, forever, against themselves, the said parties of the first part, * * * and all acts done or suffered by themselves, the said parties of the first part, or John Mullanphy, or Bryan Mullanphy, or Ann Biddle, from whom the said Octavia Boyce derives title.”

[100]*100The meaning of that is plain. She warranted against any act done or suffered by herself. Would it be for a moment thought that that covenant was not broken by the execution of a prior deed by her, and, if that were true as to herself, would it not be equally true as to any conveyance (and the will in this respect is nothing more than a conveyance) made by Ann Biddle or either of the other parties specially mentioned in the warranty? Obviously the covenant was an assurance that no act or deed or omission of either of the parties specially named limited or impaired the full title which she was purporting to convey. No other meaning can be given to this language.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 F. 97, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barlow-v-delaney-circtedmo-1889.