Dodd v. Williams

3 Mo. App. 278, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 9
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 31, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Mo. App. 278 (Dodd v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodd v. Williams, 3 Mo. App. 278, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 9 (Mo. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On December 14, 1869, there was filed for record, in the proper office of St. Louis County, a deed of that date for [280]*280certain real estate in the city of St. Louis, made by William T. Mason and wife to a person named tí erein as trustee. This deed was to secure the payment of a promissory note therein described, and was in the form usual in this State for deeds of trust given to secure the payment of money, containing a provision that the deed should be void and the premises described released if the note was duly paid, and that the premises should be sold at public auction, on notice, if there was any default in payment of the note. The deed contained such covenants of warranty as are implied by the use of the words “ grant, bargain, and sell.”

At the date of the record of this deed there was nothing on record showing that the grantor, Mason, had any right, title, or interest in the premises described in it.

One year after the record of this deed, on December 15, 1870, a deed from Voorkis and Meyers to Mason, for the same property, dated June 4, 1870, was recorded.

On April 11, 1871, there was recorded a deed from Mason and wife to Daniel Cobb, for the same property, dated January 8, 1871. This deed was a warranty deed, and contained no mention whatever of the deed of trust for the same property previously executed by the grantor.

Afterwards the plaintiff, desiring to purchase the premises from Cobb, applied to defendants, who were then attorneys at law in St. Louis, engaged in the business of examining titles to real estate and furnishing abstracts of title, and malting that business a specialty, for an abstract of title to the premises described in the deed from Mason to Cobb, showing all incumbrances and liens thereon. Defendants undertook to furnish the abstract, for which he paid them $50. The abstract is dated May 27, 1871, and by it defendants certify that, “ as per the county records and the county index to said records, the title'to the real estate in question was on that day good in Daniel Cobb, and that there was no incumbrance thereon, nor any lien thereon excepting for certain taxes therein specified.” The amount [281]*281of taxes was small. The abstract makes no mention whatever of the dee 1 of trust given by Mason, and it is admitted by defendants that they were wholly ignorant of its existence. Relying upon this statement, the plaintiff, on the same day, purchased said premises from Cobb, paying him full value for them, and took a warranty deed from Cobb.

On April 2, 1874, the premises described in the deed of trust were sold by the trustee for non-payment of the note, and bought in by one Davis, acting for the plaintiff, Dodd, for the sum of $1,900, which is admitted to have been the lowest sum for which the premises could have been relieved of the alleged incumbrance ; and this action is brought for that sum and interest, as the damages sustained by respondent by reason o'f the misfeasance of appellants in furnishing the abstract of title, which is said to have been incorrect in that it omitted all mention of this deed of trust.

The facts as above stated, so far as not admitted by the pleadings, were admitted at the trial.

The cause was tried before the court sitting as a jury. Several instructions were asked for defendants, which were all refused ; but it is not necessary to set them out. There was a finding and judgment for plaintiff. It is claimed by defendants that, on this state of facts, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

The question to be determined in this case is whether the deed of trust in question was, at the date of the certificate of defendants, an incumbrance against the property described, appearing to be such by the records of the county. If it was so, it was the duty of defendants to note it. By their profession they are bound to have a sufficient knowledge of law to know what is and what is not a lien upon real estate in this county, and to use sufficient diligence to find any such incumbrance when properly made matter of record, so as to affect all parties interested with notice. It is not pretended that this deed of trust was not properly en[282]*282tered on the indexes in the office of the recorder of deeds at the time it was filed for record.

An attorney is not liable to his client for a mere error of judgment. Especially is he not liable if he mistakes the law in a matter of difficulty where the law is not well settled. But where one who proposes to make a specialty of examining titles, in the course of his business, having been paid for his services, gives a certificate that he has made examination and finds no incumbrance against certain property, he will be liable if the incumbrance is of record in such a way as to give constructive notice to every one interested, and actual notice to every one looking for it in the proper way.

What is a lien upon real estate maybe a difficult question, in some cases, to decide ; but an examiner of titles to real estate is bound to know the state of the law on the subject, at least sufficiently to put him on his guard; and, where there may be a reasonable doubt as to whether such or such a recorded instrument is a lien, if he choose to resolve the doubt he does so at his own peril. If, for instance, it be possible that a deed given and recorded before the grantor has any record title can be good against a subsequent purchaser, without actual notice, of the same property from the same grantor, the examiner will be bound to look for all conveyances of every grantor in the chain of title, up to the time the title passes out of such grantor* or alienor ; and, if he fails to do so, and the party employing him is injured by this neglect, this is negligence ■ for which the examiner of titles will be liable. If he does not choose .to assume this liability, he may easily avoid it by noting in his certificate every question which arises upon the title as to which there cam be the slightest doubt in the legal mind, or by giving a list of deeds and incumbrances, and abstaining from expressing any opinion as to their legal effect. In the case at bar, had the defendants said in their certificate, in effect, this : “It is maintained by some lawyers that a deed made before the alienor has the record title may affect the title of [283]*283the subsequent purchaser; but we have not thought it necessary, in this case, to examine for deeds of any person through whom the title passes before the date of his record title,” this would have been notice that the examination was imperfect on a recognized theory of the law of conveyances and the registration acts ; but they chose to certify that the title was good, in total ignorance of the existence of a deed, duly indexed and recorded, which, on the theory of plaintiff, was a lien upon the property they were employed to examine. If this deed was in fact a lien, they were clearly guilty of negligence, and are liable in this action.

There can be no doubt about the proposition that there is grave authority for the view that a deed recorded before the grantor has any record title may be safely disregarded in examinations of title, under the system of registration and notice adopted in the different States of the Union; that it is not constructive notice to any innocent purchaser.

Speaking of a certain application of the doctrine of estoppel, so careful an author as Mr. Eawle, in the last edition of his work on Covenants of Title (Eawle on Cov.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Mo. App. 278, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodd-v-williams-moctapp-1877.