Dallas Title & Guaranty Co. v. Valdes

445 S.W.2d 26, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2480
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 30, 1969
Docket11698
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 445 S.W.2d 26 (Dallas Title & Guaranty Co. v. Valdes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dallas Title & Guaranty Co. v. Valdes, 445 S.W.2d 26, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2480 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

This is a suit brought against the grant- or and the insurer of title for breach of general warranty contained in a deed to real estate.

From a judgment after trial before the court awarding the grantee recovery of $12,000 from the grantor and the insurer jointly, the insurer has appealed and assigns eight points of error. The grantor did not appeal.

The principal question is whether the “correct survey” exception in the title policy relieved the insurer of liability.

We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

By general warranty deed dated August 14, 1964, John Flanagan purported to convey to Hattie Valdes, the appellee, real property described as:

“All of Lot 9, Block G, Summit Oaks Subdivision fronting on U.S. 183 Expressway and being the same as lot 9 in Plat Book 7, Page 183, Travis County Plat records and same fronting about 140 feet on said expressway.”

On the same date Dallas Title and Guaranty Company, appellant, issued a title policy in the sum of $12,500 guaranteeing “to Hattie Valdes * * * that she has good and indefeasible title to the” property described in the deed from Flanagan. The policy stated that it was subject to “Any descrepancies [sic], conflicts, or shortages in area or boundary lines, or any encroachments, or any overlapping of improvements which a correct survey would show.”

The lot described in the deed is shown by the plat of the subdivision to be a five-sided parcel of land having dimensions of 175 feet, 219.08 feet, 135 feet, 60 feet, and 191.66 feet. Some time after the conveyance from Flanagan to appellee, Mrs. Valdes discovered upon personal inspection that most of the lot was occupied by U.S. Highway 183. At the trial it was shown that the portion of the lot not under the highway consisted of a strip of land about 135 feet long with a depth ranging from fifty-three feet at one end to about thirteen feet at the other. The lot as originally laid out in the subdivision contained 39,248 square feet, of which 35,315 square feet had been incorporated in the highway right-of-way after condemnation proceedings tried in Travis County by which the State of Texas had acquired title to about nine-tenths of Lot 9.

The position of Appellee Valdes is that Flanagan conveyed Lot 9 to her under a general warranty for a consideration of $12,500 and that Flanagan did not have good and indefeasible title to the land described in the deed because only a relatively small portion of Lot 9 lay outside the highway right-of-way, and consequently the warranty was breached. Appellee contends the title policy issued by appellant guaranteed her good and indefeasible title to the property described in the deed.

Appellant’s position is that the guarantee of good and indefeasible title was subject to the “correct survey” exception, and that there was no failure of title to the land described in the deed and therefore no liability exists under the title policy.

A qualified appraiser testifying at the trial stated that the small strip of lan’d lying outside the right-of-way, consisting of about 3933 square feet, had a fair cash market value of $500 on the date the deed was made. In awarding recovery of $12,-000 to Mrs. Valdes, the trial court found that the difference in market value of Lot 9 as guaranteed by the title company and the tract as reduced by that portion “to which title failed was the sum of $12,000.”

Under the first three points of error, the title company seeks to avoid liability under the policy under its contention that the de *28 scription of the land contained in the deed of August 14, 1964, limited the conveyance, and the company’s liability, to that portion only of Lot 9 lying outside the highway right-of-way. This contention is in direct conflict with the undisputed good faith intention of Flanagan to convey, and of Mrs. Valdes to buy, all of Lot 9. The contention is also contrary to the description of the lot contained in both the deed and the title policy.

The trial court made findings of fact, among which were findings:

1) That when Flanagan conveyed to Mrs. Valdes on August 14, 1964, he represented in good faith that she was acquiring all of Lot 9, described orally by Flanagan as a commercial lot, about 150 feet by 200 feet, facing on the highway, and that Mrs. Valdes relied on the representations;
2) That Flanagan received the property from David L. Tisinger, under the same description found in the deed from Flanagan to Mrs. Valdes, by deed dated August 3, 1964, followed on August 13, 1964, by a second deed describing the property without reference to Highway 183.
3) That Flanagan had seen a plat of the subdivision as recorded, with the highway drawn across the plat so as to represent that its northern boundary coincided with the southern boundary of Lot 9, leaving Lot 9 intact.
4) That at the time of conveyance from Flanagan to Mrs. Valdes, she intended to purchase Lot 9 as shown by the plat records, and at that time Mrs. Valdes had not seen the property “on the ground.”

The evidence sufficiently supports these findings.

The title company contends that the “deed does not convey and does not purport to convey any portion of Lot 9 which lies within the right-of-way of U.S. Expressway 183” and that the company’s “liability is limited solely to the tract of land conveyed by such deed.” In this connection appellant argues that the “controlling portion of the description contained in the deed appears in these words:

‘All of Lot 9, Block G, Summit Oaks subdivision fronting on U.S. 183 Expressway * * * and same fronting about 140 feet on said Expressway.’ ” (Emphasis by appellant).
“This language,” the title company urges, “refers to frontage on the Expressway, not the entire lot. The words ‘fronting’ locate the tract conveyed in relation to the expressway and excludes any part of the lot which does not front on the expressway right-of-way.”

We do not agree with this contention. The deed recites conveyance of “All of Lot 9 * * * and being the same as lot 9 in Plat Book 7, Page 183 * * The description of the lot as one fronting on the highway is inaccurate, and following as it does an accurate and definite description of Lot 9, the language referring to highway frontage must be rejected. Haley v. Murray, 177 S.W.2d 333, Tex.Civ.App., Austin, writ ref. w. o. m. (1944); Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company v. Masterson, 160 Tex. 548, 334 S.W.2d 436 (1960). Identification of Lot 9 in Block G in the named subdivision as recorded in appropriate public records is specific, accurate, definite, and without ambiguity, in both the deed and the title policy.

The reference to frontage on the highway becomes inexact and indefinite by the language “about 140 feet on said expressway,” and the addition of this phrase should not be permitted to limit or impair a preceding description that is definite and certain. Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Co. v. Masterson, supra. The title company relies upon the holding in Edwards v.

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Bluebook (online)
445 S.W.2d 26, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-title-guaranty-co-v-valdes-texapp-1969.