Dickinson v. Bain

921 S.W.2d 189, 1996 Tenn. LEXIS 265
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 921 S.W.2d 189 (Dickinson v. Bain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickinson v. Bain, 921 S.W.2d 189, 1996 Tenn. LEXIS 265 (Tenn. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

REID, Justice.

This appeal presents for review the judgment of the Court of Appeals determining the measure of damages due the grantee under a covenant of general warranty, in an action against the grantor for breach of warranty of title to real property. The judgment of the Court of Appeals determining the measure of damages is reversed.

I.

Valley View Lodge, Inc., the appellee, (Valley View), executed and delivered to William Horton Bain and Doris M. Bain, the appellants, a general warranty deed which purported to convey to the Bains the fee simple unencumbered title to two certain lots of land located in Gatlinburg, Tennessee. The deed contained covenants of title, including the covenant that “[t]he grantor will forever warrant and defend the title thereto against all lawful claims.”

Subsequent to the conveyance, the Bains removed some trees and made excavations on the property described in the deed, as part of their plan to develop the property.

Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson and Louise Creekmore Senatore, non-resident adjoining landowners, filed a suit against the Bains, asserting that a portion of their adjoining property was included in the conveyance to the Bains. The relief sought was a temporary injunction, adjudication of the boundary line and incidental damages. The Bains, represented by counsel, responded to the suit by denying Dickinson’s and Senatore’s claim and, also, by initiating a third-party action against Valley View for indemnity for any loss sustained by the Bains as the result of the suit.

The trial court found that more than one-half of the land included in the conveyance from Valley View to the Bains was owned by Dickinson and Senatore, and established the boundary line accordingly. There was no appeal from that decision.

On the third-party action, the court found that Valley View had breached the warranty of title and awarded damages. As modified by the Court of Appeals, the judgment includes $21,300.00, which represents the pro rata portion of the purchase price, and interest on that amount from the date the Bains were evicted. This appeal relates to only two items of damages. The Bains claim as error the Court of Appeals’ refusal to include as damages attorney’s fees and attorney expenses in the amount of $7,599.23 incurred in defending the title, and Valley View claims as error the award of $3,250.00 for damage to the property caused by the Bains’ development activity.

II.

Among the most recent cases in which this Court has discussed the measure of damages for breaeh of a covenant of title are Williams [191]*191v. Burg, 77 Tenn. 455 (1882); Brown v. Taylor, 115 Tenn. 1, 88 S.W. 938 (1905); and Mengel Box Co. v. Ferguson, 124 Tenn. 433, 137 S.W. 101 (1911). Valley View contends that those decisions resolve the issue in its favor; the Bains contend that, notwithstanding those decisions, the Court should adopt the rule followed in most jurisdictions and include attorney’s fees in the award of damages. Resolution of the issue will begin with an examination of those prior decisions.

The issue presented in the instant case was before the Court in Williams v. Burg. In that ease, the purchaser, after giving the seller notice of the suit, unsuccessfully defended a suit by the holder of paramount title. In the purchaser’s subsequent suit against the seller for breach of warranty of title, the purchaser claimed as damages the amount expended for legal representation in defending the prior suit and the amount of court costs assessed against the purchaser in that suit. In discussing those items, the Court stated:

This brings us to the errors assigned by complainants. First, that they were not allowed to recover the taxed costs in the ejectment suit as part of the damages. We are not aware that this question has been passed upon in this State. The authorities seem to sustain the claim. See them collated in Rawle on Cov., 304; Sedgewick on Meas.Dam., p. 315, et seq. And in principle it seems to us that the claim should be sustained. The theory upon which the covenantor is held bound by the judgment in favor of a party setting up a paramount title, of the bringing of whose suit he has had notice, is, that he thereby becomes a privy in interest and in effect a party to the action. If he fails to defend and his covenantee makes the defense properly, it would seem to follow logically that if the covenantor is bound to make good the recovery, that the costs are as much a part of the recovery as the land itself. The only way the covenantee could avoid the costs, would be to surrender the possession to the claimant of the paramount title without suit; but if he do this, it is at his peril, and it would be unreasonable to require him to do so. We are of opinion that the taxed costs incurred in a proper defense should constitute part of the damages.
Upon the question of counsel fees, the authorities, according to Messrs. Sedge-wick and Rawle, in their respective works upon the subject where they are cited, are shown to be in conflict, and we have no reported decision upon the question in this State.
If the employment of counsel be necessary, upon principle it is not easy to see why the expense is not as much a legitimate part of the damage sustained as the costs of the cause. The common law doctrine, that the services of a counselor are honorary and gratuitous, does not prevail in this State. Newman v. Washington, M. & Yer., 79. Yet if such expense is put upon the same ground as the costs, the plaintiff would in every case recover his necessary counsel fees incurred in protecting a rightful claim against a defendant, precisely as he recovers his costs. There would be some justice in the claim, and in some States and in the Federal courts a tax fee is in some instances allowed. But such fees have never been allowed in the courts of this State. It is within the recollection of some members of the court that we have decided against the claim in a case precisely of this character.

Williams v. Burg, 77 Tenn. at 464-66. The decision in Williams v. Burg to treat attorney’s fees and court costs differently, it seems, was based on the “recollection of some members of the Court,” even though there was “some justice in the claim” that attorney’s fees be treated the same as court costs.

The facts in Brown v. Taylor were significantly different from those in Williams v. Burg and the case presently before the Court. In Brown, a covenant against encumbrances was breached by the existence of a gardener’s lease of which the purchaser had knowledge and which would expire a few months after the date of the conveyance. The grantee’s attorney’s fees were incurred in a futile proceeding before a justice of the peace to remove the lessee prior to the expi[192]*192ration of the lease. In denying the allowance of attorney’s fees, the Court stated:

The remaining question that arises is in respect of the proper rale for admeasurement of damages. The trial judge adopted as a measure of the damages the rental value of said property for the unexpired term at $8 per month. He also allowed counsel fees, amounting to $10, incurred by Brown in a misdirected action before a justice of the peace to evict the lessee from the premises.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
921 S.W.2d 189, 1996 Tenn. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-v-bain-tenn-1996.