Ewell v. Miller

2 Va. Col. Dec. 249
CourtGeneral Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1739
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. Col. Dec. 249 (Ewell v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering General Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ewell v. Miller, 2 Va. Col. Dec. 249 (Va. Super. Ct. 1739).

Opinion

The Pit. declares in Cov’t upon a Deed from the Intestate to the Pits. Father dated in 1708. whereby in Cons, of 150 £. he sells to him certain Lands & covenants to warrant defend save harmless [250] & keep indemnified the said Land to the Grantee ag’t all & every pson & persons whatsoever that should thereafter make any Claim or pretend any Title And avers that the Estate [sic] or the Defts. have not defended saved harmless &c. (in the very Words of the Cov’t) And that so the Intestate or the Defts. have not kept the Cov’t of the Intestate but broke the same

The Defts. plead that the Fit. & his Fa’r from the making of the Deed to the bringing of this Suit have peaceably enjoyed without the Molestation Interruption or Hindrance of any pson w’tsoever

The Pit. replies that the Intestate & his Wife were seised in Right of the Wife & made the Deed af’d which they acknowledged but there is no Record of her privy Examination And that so the Intestate or the Defts. have not defended saved harmless & kept indemnified the said land ag’t the Claim & Title of the Wife And to this Repl. the Deft, demurs

I think I might with Reason in this Case find fault with the Declaration for that the Assignment of the Breach is too general And also with the Repl. as it is no Answer at all to the Defts. Plea Inconsistent upon the Face of it & a Departure from the Decl. as I think But I will wave all cavil & Exception to the Pleading And confine myself to speak to the Merits of the Cause alone by endeavouring to shew that taking this Case as it appears upon the Pleadings there is no Breach shewn of the Cov’t upon which the Pit. declares

The Case upon the Pleadings is in short this A Man & his Wife seised in Right of the Wife sell & convey Land by Deed which they ackn. but there is no Record of the Wifes Exam. There is a Cov’t in the Deed to warrant defend save harmless & keep indemnified the Land ag’t the Claim & Title of all psons. [B269]*B269This Deed has been, made almost 30 Years And the Pit. & his Father have peaceably enjoied without the Claim or Disturbance of the Wife or any other ever since And the Question I take it properly is

Whether the Pit. can maintain an Action on the Cov’t to warrant save harmless &c. because the privy Exam, of the Wife is not rec’o for that is all the Breach assigned

The very State of the Question in my humble Opinion shews the Absurdity & ill Ground of the Pits. Action Cor where is the Sense or Propriety to say we have not warranted saved harmless &c. because the Clerk omitted to rec’o the Wifes Exam An act not in our Power to compel him to And which [251] it was the Business of the Purchasor to look to Especially when it is not pretended that the Pit. has at all suffered by this Omission but it is admitted that the Wife has never disturbed him He & his Father have had quiet Possion these 30 Years Cov’ts are to be considered. 1. According to the Force & Operation of the Words in Law 2. According to the Intention of the Partys Now a Cov’t in these Words To warrant &c. have no further Operation in Law than to subject the Covenanter to make good all Damages that the Covenantee sustains by Reason of lawful Evictions Sr. E. Cokes Opinion in 1 Br. 21. is express that in a Cov’t to warrant & defend there must be a Title paramount & a lawful Eviction before an Action will lie So that a Title alone with’t Eviction will not do And there is this plain Reason for it perhaps the Title may never be exerted The Case of Foster a Wilson in On. 100. proves the same Point as to the Words save harmless & indemnified A Man made a Lease & covenanted to save harmless ag’t P. B. In an Action of Cov’t the Breach assigned was that P. B. entered & ejected him but not sayed with Title And it became a Question whether the Covenanter was to indemnifie ag’t all Entrys of P. B. whether by Right or Wrong And a Difference is there taken & settled that where a Cov’t is gen’l ag’t all psons there it shall be extended only to Evictions with lawful Title but where it is special ag’t A. B. there it shall be extended to all Evictions of A. B. either rightful or wrongful Which fully proves there must be some Eviction before an Action will lie

But the Case of Griffith a Harrison 1. Sal. 196. is more express in the Point A Man assigned a Lease & covenanted to keep indemnified ag’t all Arrears of Rent There was Rent in Arrear [B270]*B270but the Pit. had never been sued for it Yet brought an Action on this Cov’t And adjudged the Action would not lie For in all Cov’ts to save harmless there must be an actual Damnification before there can be sayed to be a Breach To apply this Case Here they say the Wife not being exam’d her Title is lying out ag’t them & they are liable to be evicted which is true But they never have been evicted or disturbed these 30 Years Therefore the Pit. is not damnified What Right then has he to this Action

Another strong Case & which seems the very parrallel of this is Grocock a White Mo. 175. Debt on Bond with Condition to save harmless & defend certain Land ag’t J. S. & all others The Deft, pleaded as we have done that the Pit. was never lawfully disturbed The Pit. demurred And adj’d for the Deft. [252] that the Plea was a good Bar Indeed it was not so much as pretended that the Action would lie with’t some Disturbance but the Question & Doubt was upon the Word lawfully Whether the Obligor was not obliged to defend ag’t unlawful as well as lawful Disturbance Now here we have pleaded the Pit. never was disturbed at all without distinguishing between lawful & unlawful Disturb’a And so our Case is stronger it being admitted that the Pit. never has been disturbed at all

These Cases I hope fully prove that there must be an Eviction or other Damnification before a Man can have an Action on a Cov’t of this kind Indeed if there were no Authoritys in Law The Reason of the Thing in my Opinion speaks plainly enough Shall a Man have an Action before he is injured And when perhaps he never may be What Rule or Measure can there be for a Jury to assess Damages The Chancery indeed by an extraordinary Power will sometimes allow of a Bill qui a timet as it is called because the Pit. is apprehensive of Danger but I never yet heard of such an Action at Law. In Chancery it is only to have Security but here Damages must be given for a Thing that may or may not happen & before the Pit. has suffered any Wrong or sustained any Damage

And as it is very clear that this Action cannot be maintained form the Force & Operation in Law of the Words of this Cov’t So there is as little Reason to support it from any supposed Intention of the Partys But upon Cons, of the whole Deed I think it is evident there co’d be no such Intention in making this Cov’t Because there is another proper Cov’t to provide ag’t any Defect in the Conveiance (as this Circumstance of the Wife [B271]*B271not being exam’d must be allowed to be one) And that is a Cov’t for further Assurance This is an usual Cov’t in Deeds & inserted for the very Purpose in Case there be any Defect in the Conveiance to compel the Grantor to perfect it But the Pit. has not thought fit to ground his Action upon this Cov’t perhaps for a Reason that I shall have Occasion to remark presently But this Cov’t for furth’r Assurance is I think a full Demonstration that it was not the Intention of the Partys in making the Cov’t the Pit.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Va. Col. Dec. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewell-v-miller-vagensess-1739.