Ewell v. Weagley

13 F.2d 712, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3655
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1926
DocketNo. 2485
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 F.2d 712 (Ewell v. Weagley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ewell v. Weagley, 13 F.2d 712, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3655 (4th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

ERNEST F. COCHRAN, District Judge.

The plaintiff in error was the plaintiff in the District Court and will be referred'to here as the plaintiff. The defendants Clinton B. Weagley and M. Frank Holter are the executors, and the defendants H. Helen Kefauver and Olive P. Kefauver, the wife and daughter-in-law, of D. Edward Kefauver, deceased. The declaration states in substance that the deceased advertised a farm for sale, stated ■in the advertisement to contain 124 acres, and offered to sell it for $175 per acre; that the plaintiff saw the advertisement and the deceased offered to sell the land to the . plaintiff, representing that he owned and had for sale 124 acres of land, at $175 per acre; and that the plaintiff relying upon the offer and representations made by the deceased, purchased the 124 acres at $175 an acre, or for the aggregate sum of $21,700; and that thereafter the deceased, together with his wife and daughter-in-law, delivered a deed to the plaintiff, which deed is set out in full in the declaration. The deed recites that it is in consideration of the sum of $10 and other good and valuable considerations and has the usual granting clause. The deed describes the premises conveyed as “part of a tract of land called Joseph’s Park” and then sets forth a description by metes and bounds, courses and distances, and calls for certain natural and artificial monuments,, concluding with the following words, “containing 214.75 acres of'land.” The deed then excepts from the land previously described, four tracts, which are specifically described and stated to contain 4.76 aeres, 2Ó acres, 63.225 acres, and 3 acres; making a total of 90.985 acres which are excluded from the deed. The deed then states it to be the intention of the instrument [713]*713to convey all the property conveyed to the deceased, D. B. Kefanver, by Clarence D. Kefauver and wife, by a deed described by its date and date of record in the land records of Montgomery county, M'd. After the habendum clause, the deed contains the following clauses: “And the said parties of the first part covenant that they will warrant specially the property hereby conveyed; that they are seized of the land hereby conveyed; that the said party of the second part shall quietly enjoy said land; that they have done no act to incumber said land; and that they will execute such further assurances of said land as may be requisite.” (All italics ours.) The declaration then further alleges that the said defendants covenanted in said deed that they were seized of the 214.75 acres of land, excepting therefrom the four smaller portions of land aggregating 90.985 acres of land previously conveyed, and further covenanted that they would warrant specially the said tract of land “containing 214.75 acres of land,” excepting therefrom the said four smaller portions of land previously conveyed; that the defendants by the said deed did not convey to the plaintiff a tract of land “containing 214.75 acres of land” excepting therefrom the said four smaller portions of land, but said deed contained only 87 and a fraction acres of land, there being a deficiency of 36 acres of the 124 acres purchased and paid for by the plaintiff as aforesaid, and that the defendants were not seized of the 214.75 acres of land excepting therefrom the said four smaller portions aggregating 90.985 acres previously conveyed, as in said deed covenanted and specially warranted, and as so offered to and purchased by the plaintiff.

The defendants filed six pleas. The first plea was a plea of res judicata. The second, the statute of limitations, it being alleged that the cause of action did not accrue within three years. Tho remaining pleas were to-the effect that the defendants never promised and never became indebted as alleged.

The plaintiff filed a replication to the defendants’ second plea alleging that the plaintiff’s declaration set forth a cause of action based upon a deed and that the right to sue thereon was not barred by limitation until after the expiration of twelve years from its date, and not three years as erroneously stated in the second plea. The defendants thereupon demurred to the replication. The District Court held that the demurrer to the replication successively raised the question of the sufficiency of the replication of the second plea, and finally of the declaration itself; and that the declaration was an action, for a breach of the covenants of the deed,' and showing on its face that there had been no breach, it was held to be insufficient, and the plaintiff declining to amend the declaration, final judgment for the defendants was’ duly entered.

Under the eo-mmon-law rules of plead-1 ing, when a demurrer is interposed to any. pleading, the court will consider the whole record and give judgment for the party who on the whole appears entitled to it, provid-' ed the objection be matter of substance and; not an objection in respeet to- mere form,1 which should have been brought forward by' special demurrer. 4 Min. Inst. 998, 999. It1 was conceded by both parties, in this court' that the rule of the common law still prevails • in Maryland, and as expressed by the counsel for the plaintiff, the demurrer to the rep-' lication mounts to the first error in the' pleadings, and therefore the sufficiency of' the declaration was properly before tho Dis-‘ triet Court and before this court.

In considering whether the declaration ( states a cause of action or not, it will be nee-7 essary first to consider the nature of the ease., The District Court held that the action was,' not for a breach of the agreement of sale but for a breach of the covenants in the deed.. In this wo think the court was correfet, While there are certain allegations in the"' declaration referring to representations by,' the grantor of the quantity of land ho sold, and the reliance on these representations.by the plaintiff, from which it might be possible1 to conclude that the declaration was an action for a breach of the original contract' of, sale, there are other allegations which 'indi-1 cate that it is not such an action but an ae-' tion for a breach of the covenants in the” deed. It is clear that if the declaration sets ' up both causes o-f action, it would be bad for'' duplicity under the rules of practice prevail-1 ing in Maryland. However, any uncertainty ' as to the nature of the case as set forth in. the declaration is relieved by the concessions' of the plaintiff. In the -plaintiff’s replication ' it is expressly stated that the “declaration „ herein is a cause of action based upon a deed,” and both in the oral argument in this; court and in the plaintiff’s brief it wa.s stat-' ed that the plaintiff relied upon tho declara1 ‘ tion as setting forth a cause of action for 1 breach of the covenant of seizin in the, deed.* We quote from the plaintiff’s brief in this' court as follows: “That the declaration eon'-1' tains all of the essential elements of a breach [714]*714of the covenant of seizin in the deed declared upon, we think, cannot be seriously questioned; if there are in the declaration additional and unnecessary elements, under the familiar rules of pleading, recognized generally, such elements would be treated merely as surplusage, and the elements essential for the breach of the covenant of seizin will stand.”

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Bluebook (online)
13 F.2d 712, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewell-v-weagley-ca4-1926.