Guild v. Wallis

279 P. 546, 130 Or. 148, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 179
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 279 P. 546 (Guild v. Wallis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guild v. Wallis, 279 P. 546, 130 Or. 148, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 179 (Or. 1929).

Opinion

*151 BAND, J.

The plaintiff, Len W. Guild, and his brother, J. J. Guild, were the owners in fee as tenants in common with a tract of land in Washington County, each owning an undivided one-half interest therein. While so owning the land, they voluntarily partitioned it among themselves and each conveyed to the other all his right, title and interest in the part which had been so allotted to him. The deed from plaintiff to his brother was a quitclaim deed, the granting words being “remise, release and forever quitclaim. ’ ’ The consideration expressed in the deed, together with the granting clause, omitting therefrom the description of the land conveyed, reads as follows :

“Know All Men by These Presents, that I, L. W. Guild, unmarried, in consideration of one dollar, to me paid by J. J. Guild, and the further consideration and agreement on the part of said J. J. Guild, his heirs and assigns, to keep open and in good order two certain ditches over and across the land this, day conveyed to him by grantor herein, sufficient to carry off the water and enable the said L. W. Guild to properly drain the land this day conveyed to him by J. J. Guild which land adjoins the land herein conveyed, do hereby remise, release and forever quitclaim unto the said J. J. Guild and unto his heirs and assigns, all my right, title and interest in and to the following described parcel of real estate * * .”

The defendants were not parties to said deed but are the owners in severalty of different parcels of the land and between them own all of the tract which was thus conveyed by plaintiff to his said brother, they having subsequently acquired the same through conveyances from J. J. Guild. Plaintiff is the owner of the land of which he received a deed for an undivided one-half interest from his brother and for the *152 drainage of which his brother covenanted to keep open and in good order two certain ditches sufficient to carry off the water and enable him to properly drain the same. The defendants, the complaint alleges, have failed and neglected to keep,said ditches open and in good order and because of their said failure, it has caused the water to back up and flood plaintiff’s land to the great loss and damage of plaintiff.

This suit was brought to recover damages for the injuries thus far sustained and for a mandatory injunction requiring the defendants to keep said ditches open and in good order as covenanted in the deed by J. J. Guild, and failing the issuance of such order, that plaintiff be permitted to go upon said land and clean out said ditches and to have the costs thereof impressed as a charge against defendants’ lands. The defendants appeared and separately demurred to the complaint upon the ground that the complaint failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of suit. The learned trial court sustained the demurrers to the complaint and from a decree dismissing the complaint, plaintiff has appealed.

In support of their demurrers, the defendants contend that the covenant contained in the acknowledgment of the consideration for which the deed was executed, as expressed in the deed itself, was a personal covenant and not a covenant running with the land and was binding upon the grantor only and not upon subsequent owners of the land who acquired title through him. They seem to base this contention upon the claim that a covenant running with the land must be inserted independently of the consideration and in a subsequent part of the deed; that a covenant running with the land cannot be created by a *153 quitclaim deed, which they assert is a deed of release only and not a deed of conveyance; that a court of equity will not grant a mandatory injunction requiring the performance of ordinary personal services; that plaintiff has a full, complete and adequate remedy at law, and the Federal Land Bank for itself claims that it was created by an Act of Congress (Federal Farm Loan Act, 39 Stat. 360 [12 U. S. C. A., § 641]), and is a governmental institution which was created for the purpose of selling bonds and loaning money to farmers and could not be bound to perform the covenant even though it became the subsequent owner of the land.

Any words in a writing under the hand, whether sealed or unsealed, of a person importing an agreement is a covenant and, while ordinarily quitclaim deeds do not contain covenants, yet if one is clearly expressed in that form of deed, there can be no reason why it should not be as enforceable in that form of deed as in any other form of deed. The covenant involved here concerned the land which the defendants have since acquired by mesne conveyances from J. J. Guild and formed a part of the consideration for which plaintiff conveyed an interest in the land to his brother. Since the promise to perform the covenant was a part of the consideration for which plaintiff parted with an interest in the land, the covenant was properly inserted in the consideration clause of the deed. On its face the covenant purports to bind not only J. J. Guild but also “his heirs and assigns,” and by its very terms it is as binding upon all persons who have since acquired title to the land through J. J. Guild as it was upon J. J. Guild himself at the time he was the owner of it. This follows because all such persons are charged *154 with constructive notice of the quitclaim deed in question, it being one of the instruments making up their chain of title.

“Wherever a purchaser,” says Mr. Pomeroy, “holds under a conveyance, and is obliged to make out his title through that deed, or through a series of prior deeds, the general rule is firmly established that he has constructive notice of every matter connected with or affecting the estate which appears, either by description of parties, by recital, by reference, or otherwise, on the face of any deed which forms an essential link in the chain of instruments through which he must derive his title.” 2 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (3 ed.), § 626. In the following sections the same author says that the notice resulting from recitals contained in title deeds is absolute in its nature except as to matters which are wholly foreign to the nature and objects of the instrument or as to matters which are purely collateral and dealing with another subject matter. The reason for the rule that the notice of such recitals is absolute, he states, is that without such a rule “there could be no security in land ownership.” The rule applies, he says, to recitals in both recorded and unrecorded title deeds. To the same effect, see 2 Devlin on Deeds (3 ed.), Section 1000, where the author says that “the principle of equity is well established that a purchaser of land is chargeable with notice, by implication, of every fact affecting the title which would be discovered by an examination of the deeds, or other muniments of title of his vendor, and of every fact as to which the purchaser, with reasonable prudence or diligence, ought to become acquainted.”

The contention that the covenant in question is a personal covenant and not one which runs with the *155 land would be of no importance even if it were true. “The test,” said Cartwright, J., in Purvis v. Shuman, 273 Ill. 286 (112 N. E. 679, 682, Ann. Cas. 1918D, 1175, L. R. A.

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

Related

Palmer v. Johnston
823 P.2d 1024 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1992)
Kernan Livestock Farm, Inc. v. Multnomah County
355 P.2d 719 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1960)
Fitzstephens v. WATSON
344 P.2d 221 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1959)
Housley v. Linnton Plywood Ass'n
311 P.2d 432 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1957)
The Texas Co. v. BUTLER
256 P.2d 259 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1953)
Payette Lakes Protective Ass'n v. Lake Reservoir Co.
189 P.2d 1009 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1948)
United States v. Florea
68 F. Supp. 367 (D. Oregon, 1945)
United States v. Gossler
60 F. Supp. 971 (D. Oregon, 1945)
United States v. Aho
68 F. Supp. 358 (D. Oregon, 1944)
Cabell v. Fed. Land Bank of Spokane
144 P.2d 297 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1943)
Norby v. Section Line Drainage District
76 P.2d 966 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1938)
Guild v. Wallis
42 P.2d 916 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 P. 546, 130 Or. 148, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guild-v-wallis-or-1929.