Frost v. Raymond

2 Cai. Cas. 188
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1804
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 2 Cai. Cas. 188 (Frost v. Raymond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost v. Raymond, 2 Cai. Cas. 188 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1804).

Opinions

Kent, Oh. J.

delivered the opinion of the court. Several objections are taken to the validity of the declaration. We shall, however, confine ourselves to the first and only important one, viz.: that here was no implied covenant of title. It is exceedingly interesting to the community that this question should be clearly settled, and well understood. We are to examine,

1. Whether a sale of an estate in fee, by the formal and apt words of conveyance, and for a valuable consideration, does of itself imply a warranty or covenant of title. The counsel for the plaintiff contended upon the argument that it did.

2. If it does not, then whether there be any particular word or words in the deed, that by settled construction, have been deemed to amount to such covenant or warranty.

1. It seems upon the first impression to be highly reason .able and just that every person, who, for a valuable con-Bideration, conveys land as bis own, should be held to warrant the title he so undertakes to convey, or that he should render back the *money upon failure of the title. This was the rule of the civil law in respect to the sale of both- real and personal property, concerning which that system scarcely made a distinction, an adequate price implying a warranty. Cod. lib. 8, tit. 45, c. 6; Dig. lib. 19, tit. 1, c. 11, s. 2; Lib. 21, tit. 2; 1 Domat, 79, 82, 83 ; 1 Ersk. Inst. 203. In the early ages of the feudal law, it seems also to have been considered as an obligation upon the lord to give his tenant an equivalent in case of eviction. This appears clearly from the book of feuds, which gives the report of a cáse of an action by the tenant against the lord, for investing him with a feud belonging to another, and from which he was evicted. The lord was there held to restore him another fee of equal value, or the price of it in money. Feud. lib. 2, tit. 85, and 80. But, although the feudal writers speak generally of the lord’s obligation to give the tenant an equivalent in case of eviction, Craig, and after him Sir Martin Wright, thinks this obligation never could havé applied to pure feuds which were gratuitous donations for uncertain military services, without price or stipulated render; and that it could only have applied to improper feuds, where it was reasonable it should apply, as in those cases a price was given, or an equivalent contracted for. Inst, to the Law of Tenures, 27, 32, 39, 40. This very question, whether investiture alone, without any express promise, entitled the tenant on eviction to an equivalent, has, it is said, been much discussed by the foreign Civilians; that it is the prevailing opinion among them, that the seller, without any promise, is bound to give an equivalent, if the fief was originally granted for services done, or in the way of remuneration. Butler’s note 315, to Co. Litt.

But whatever may be our opinions on the point, as an abstract question, or whatever may be the decisions of the [191]*191civil law, or the feudal and municipal law of other countries, we must decide this question by the common, law of England. It was decided in the case of Seixas and Wood, (Ante, 48,) that, upon a sale of goods without warranty and without deceit, the purchaser took the soundness and quality of them at his peril. We think it is evident that caveat emptor has been always recognized in our law books as a fixed maxim, applicable equally to the transfer of lands and chattels.

It is a settled position that an estate in fee may be created by the usual and solemn forms of convey-anee, without any '^warranty express or implied, and that a conveyance in fee does not ipso facia imply a warranty. If it does, our books would be inconsistent and unintelligible on this subject. “If a man,” says Lord Coke, (1 Inst. 6a, and also say the judges in Buchhurst's case, 1 Co. 1,) “ maketh a feoffment in fee, without warranty, the purchaser is entitled to all the charters and evidences incident to the lands, to the end that he may defend himself; for, as the feoffor is not bound to warrant the lands, he cannot be vouched to warranty and to render in value, but the feoffee is to defend the lands at his peril.” In the case of Boswell and Vaughan, (2 Cro. 196,) in the exchequer, Tanfield, the chief baron, said, “ that if one should sell lands wherein another is in possession, or a horse whereof another is possessed, without covenant or warranty for the enjoyment, it is at the peril of him who buys, and not reason he should have an action by the law, where he did not provide for himself.” So, in the case of Medina and Stoughton, (1 Salk. 211,) Lord Holt observed, “ that if the seller of goods have not the possession, it be-hoves the purchaser to take care, caveat emptor, to hare an express warranty, or a good title; and so it is in the case of land, whether the seller be in or out of possession, for the seller cannot have them without a title, and the buyer is at his peril to see it.” In a much more recent case of Bree and Holbech, (Doug. 654,) the action was brought [192]*192to recover back money paid for the purchase of a mortgage deed, which afterwards turned out to be a forgery. Lord Mansfield, and the court of king’s bench, ruled for the defendant on this ground, that the assignment contained no covenant for the goodness of the title, except only against the acts of the assignor, and that it was incumbent on the purchaser to look to the goodness of it. This case was afterwards cited and sanctioned by Lord •Kenyon, (6 D. & E. 606,) who said that he did not wish to disturb the rule of caveat em/ptor adopted in that case, and in other cases, where a regular conveyance was made, to which other covenants were not to be added.

The case in Douglas may perhaps be thought to have the less weight as there was a covenant against the grantor’s own acts, and it is a rule that an express covenant will do away the effect of all implied ones. 4 Co. 80, 86; Vaugh. 126; Cro. Eliz. 674, 675; Butler’s notes on Co. Litt. 832; 2 Bos. & Pull. 26 ; 2 Cha. Cas. 19. But the court do not intimate that *they proceeded upon that ground. This they would have done had they relied upon the extinguishment of the implied covenant by means of the express one. They adopted the old rule, that if there'be no covenant of title in a deed, the purchaser takes, at his own risk, the goodness of the title.

After this rule has been so long understood and practised upon, it would be of the most mischievous consequence to establish a contrary doctrine. The parties to deeds know that a covenant is requisite to hold the seller to warrant the title, and they regulate their contracts accordingly. If there be any fraud in the sale the purchaser has his remedy. If one sell land, affirming he had a good title, when he knew he had no title, an action on the case for a deceit will lie. Com. Dig. tit. Action on the Case for a Deceit, A. 8. 1 Fonb. 366.

2. We are next to examine whether there be any particular words in the granting clause of the deed which im ply a covenant.

[193]*193Grlanville, lib. 7, c. 2, says, generally, that the beirs of donors are beld to warrant their gifts, “ donationss ;” and Braclon, lib. 5, fol. 388, b. 389, a, says to tbe same effect, that “ warranty belongs to all charters of simple donation, and that the donors and their heirs were held to warranty unless the deed expressed the contrary.- But a charter of' confirmation did not include a warranty, unless it contained a gift, and if the grantor say, do et

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