Harrington v. Bean

36 A. 986, 89 Me. 470, 1897 Me. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 18, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 36 A. 986 (Harrington v. Bean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrington v. Bean, 36 A. 986, 89 Me. 470, 1897 Me. LEXIS 7 (Me. 1897).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

The plaintiff in this case recovered a verdict for $350, as damages for a breach of the covenants of warranty-contained in a deed of real estate given to him by Francis Dexter, the defendant’s intestate, and the defendant alleged exceptions to the rulings of the presiding justice.

May 1, 1878, Dexter conveyed the premises in question to the plaintiff by deed of warranty. containing these covenants:— “And I do covenant with the said grantee, his heirs and assigns, that I am lawfully seized in fee of the premises; that they are free of all encumbrances; and further that I, and my heirs, shall and will warrant and defend the same to the said Augustus R. Harrington, his heirs and assigns forever, against the lawful claims and demands of all persons.”

[472]*472On the same day, Harrington reconveyed the premises to Dexter by deed of mortgage containing the same covenants, to secure the payment of a part of the purchase money.

It appears, however, that long prior to this transaction, viz: on the 2d day of November, 1854, Dexter had conveyed to other parties a perpetual easement in a portion of the estate in question, being the “full right and lawful authority to flow all the land on the northerly side of the brook” and on “the westerly side of the road” as high as a certain dam therein named, would flow.

The defendant contends, in the first place, that as the deed of the premises to the plaintiff and the mortgage back to Dexter, in 1878, contained the same covenants of warranty and were parts of the same transaction, and as the relation of mortgagor and mortgagee still subsists between the plaintiff and the defendant, this action for a breach of covenant of warranty cannot be maintained.

This precise question appears to have been directly raised and definitely settled in Hardy v. Nelson, 27 Maine, 526, and Hubbard v. Norton, 10 Conn. 422. In the latter case the court say in the opinion by Williams, C. J.: — “Unless all principles of common sense are disregarded, we must suppose that the deed of the defendants, conveying the land, in fact preceded that of the plaintiff, which was given to secure the consideration money for the land so conveyed. There must then have been a seizin in the plaintiff under and by virtue of the defendant’s deed to him.....If then we must consider the plaintiff’s deed as subsequent to that of the defendants, it can be no estoppel; because a warranty of -title by the plaintiff, in a subsequent deed, will not prove that the defendants had title when they conveyed to the plaintiff; for the plaintiff might at that time, or immediately after, have purchased in another title.....The construction contended for by the defendant would rather tend to defeat than to carry into effect the intention of the parties.”

In the former case the facts were exactly analogous to those in the case at bar, and the court held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. These authorities are conclusive upon this branch of the case.

[473]*473The defendant again contends that the rule of damages given to the jury was erroneous with respect to the allowance of interest.

The instructions given were as follows: — “ How much would that particular farm have been worth on the first day of May, 1878, provided there had been no right outstanding and existing in anybody else to flow it? ... . How much less was the farm worth, May 1st, 1878, by reason of this outstanding right to flow, by reason of this encumbrance? .... Settle that, in the first place, upon the evidence which has been introduced.....After ascertaining what the amount of the damage is, you may, by way of damage for the detention of the money belonging to the plaintiff, add a sum equivalent to interest from the time it was sold to the present time.”

The defendant insists that in such a case interest is allowable only from the time of demand, and as there is no evidence of a demand in this case prior to the commencement of the action, that interest should have been computed only from the date of the writ.

It is the opinion of the court, however, that the ruling was in substance correct. It authorized the jury to add interest from the time the estate was sold and conveyed to the plaintiff. At that time there existed an outstanding right to flow a portion of these premises, — a perpetual easement which was incapable of being removed at the option of the covenantee. At that time the value of the estate was diminished by the existence of this paramount right of flowage, and the amount of such decrease in the value was the damage to which the plaintiff would have been entitled, at that time, in an action for a breach of the covenant of warranty. The commencement of this action was evidently delayed in the erroneous belief that his claim for damages could be offset against the mortgage debt. (Bean v. Harrington, 88 Maine, 460.) During all these years he has been deprived of the beneficial enjoyment of a part of the estate conveyed to him, while the covenantor, the defendant’s intestate, was receiving the income accruing from the proceeds of the sale of this outstanding right of flowage.

[474]*474The rules which have been established to determine the measure of damages in this class of cases, as in all others, are designed to give the aggrieved party a fair indemnity for the damages .sustained. He is entitled to an exact equivalent for the loss or injury; he is to be made whole so far as money is a.measure of just compensation. This is the guiding principle to be kept in view in the application of all. rules of damages. .

So in air action for breach of covenant the defendant must make good his warranty; he must pay a sum of money which will put the plaintiff in as good condition as if the defendant had kept his covenant.

In this case the exercise by a stranger of his paramount right of flowage, was an interruption of the plaintiff’s full enjoyment of the premises. It was a permanent subtraction from the substance of the estate. On the day of the conveyance to him, the plaintiff, in contemplation of law, suffered all the damage resulting from the encumbrance created by his covenantor’s former grant. The covenant was broken as soon as made. A rule of damages which would relieve the defendant from paying and prevent the plaintiff from receiving interest from that time on the amount then paid by the plaintiff, for which he -received no equivalent and the income of which the defendant’s intestate has continually enjoyed, would be clearly inadequate and unjust; while the rule actually given is not only reasonable and manifestly equitable, but when the facts to which it was applied are critically analyzed, it will be found in no degree in conflict with the rule established by the great weight of authority.

For a breach of the covenant of seizin resulting from a total or partial failure of title, the authorities are all agreed that the purchaser is entitled to recover the consideration paid, which was the-agreed ’value of the estate of which he has been deprived, with interest from the time of payment. Montgomery v. Reed, 69 Maine, 515; Wheeler v. Hatch, 12 Maine, 389; Stubbs v. Page, 2 Maine, 378; Sedgwick on Damages, 195; 2 Sutherland on Dam. 257. So, for breach of the covenant to warrant and defend, the plaintiff is entitled to recover the value of the land which he lost [475]*475by the injurious act of the defendant, with interest from the time of the eviction. Williamson v.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A. 986, 89 Me. 470, 1897 Me. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrington-v-bean-me-1897.