Hovey v. Smith

22 Mich. 170, 2 Mich. N.P. 39, 1871 Mich. LEXIS 2
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 Mich. 170 (Hovey v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hovey v. Smith, 22 Mich. 170, 2 Mich. N.P. 39, 1871 Mich. LEXIS 2 (Mich. 1871).

Opinion

Christiancy, J.

This was an action of covenant, brought upon the covenant of seizin and good title, contained in a deed of conveyance of land, and comes before us upon a case made. The facts are neither agreed upon by the parties nor found by the court. There was no special finding of facts or law, and no request for any. But certain exceptions were taken upon the admission of evidence, and the questions arising upon these are all the questions we can consider in the case.

There was no error in admitting the deed claimed to contain the. covenant declared upon. The objection was that it was inadmissible under the declaration; and this objection is sought to be sustained on two grounds: 1st, that the deed appears to have been executed by different parties, or by another party, besides the one described in the declaration; and 2d, that the description of the land which the deed purports to convey is different from that described in the declaration, as conveyed by it.

The deed offered was executed by the defendant and his wife to the plaintiffs. But it sufficiently appears from the evidence and circumstances of the case, that the land was not, nor any part of it, the individual property of the wife, and there is no claim or pretense that it was. The only reason for the wife joining in the deed was to release her contingent right of dower. Any covenant on her part would be simply void, and any in which she might join [173]*173with her husband, would be void as to her, leaving it the sole covenant of the husband.

The declaration describes the deed as executed by the “ defendant, party of the first part.” But it does not assume to set out the deed in Imc verba nor to describe it by its tenor, but only according to its legal effect; and in legal effect it was a conveyance by the husband, and the covenant of seizin and good title upon which the action was brought was his sole covenant. We think, therefore, there was no material variance as to parties.

As to the description of the land, this declaration only purports to describe a part of the land described in the deed; and the covenant was alleged to be broken only as to part of the land. It alleges the conveyance to have been of “certain pieces or parcels of land situate in the township of China, St. Clair county, Michigan, among which was the following piece of land,” and then follows the description of eighteen acres by metes and bounds, a description, however, which does not, at least in words, compare with any particular piece of land as described in the deed; and this is the variance in the description to which objection is made.

Whether, in fact, the lands thus described in the declaration were included among the lands described in, and purporting to be conveyed by the deed, could only be ascertained from evidence outside of the deed. The declaration avers the affirmative, and we see no reason to doubt that it was a proper subject of proof. It was never necessary, either in ejectment, trespass or covenant, to describe the lands in the words used in the title deeds or any of them, unless the plaintiffs have undertaken to set out this part of the deed in Imc verba, or by its tenor. It was always matter of evidence outside of the deed to bring the land [174]*174described in the declaration within the description contained in the deed.

These are the only grounds urged upon the argument against the admission of the deed. Another ground, however, might have been urged with more plausibility, and as the objection at the trial was broad enough to cover it, it is proper that we should notice it here.

The covenant, as already noticed, was in form plural, applying to the wife as well as the husband, and yet it was in law the covenant of the husband alone. But this covenant also was in form, “that they were well seized of the premises above described as of a good, absolute and indefeasible estate of inheritance in the law, in fee simple.” And, though the declaration properly sets this out as the covenant of the defendant alone, yet it states the seizin covenanted for, as in the deed, “that they were well seized,” etc. The declaration does not mention the wife at. all or any other person as executing this deed with the defendant; and, upon the face of the declaration alone, it might be impossible to know the meaning of the covenant as to who were seized; and it might well be doubted, therefore, whether it states any cause of action without some averment of what party or parties were by the covenant represented to be seized. The declaration would have been clearly bad upon demurrer, and perhaps a judgment by default might have been reversed on error. But not having been demurred to, and the. case having been tried upon the facts, the point is now to be considered as it would be after verdict. And there being no verbal variance in this respect between the covenant set out in the declaration and that contained in the deed, the declaration must be hold sufficient, if this uncertainty can fairly be considered as removed, and the declaration made certain by the evidence, at least if the [175]*175evidence contained in the record fairly shows that the averment that the covenant was that “they were seized,” etc., was intended as an averment of a covenant for defendants’ seizin, and that such also was the meaning and legal effect of the covenant found in the deed; or, in other words, that “they,” in the covenant declared upon and in the declaration stating that covenant, was a mere clerical error for “he,” (the defendant), and that the covenant was in legal effect intended to be a covenant that defendant alone was seized; and such, we think, does sufficiently appear -from -the evidence and the circumstances already referred to, to have been the intention. And, in view of such facts and circumstances, we think it sufficiently obvious, that the error of form in covenanting that “they were,” instead of “he was” seized, etc., arose from using the form of the printed blanks for deeds which, from the great number of such deeds brought to our notice, I think we are bound to take judicial notice, has been for a long time generally in use in this state; which would seem to have been originally got up by some person having very little legal knowledge, and which, instead of leaving a blank for the insertion of the name of the husband at the beginning of the covenant (where the deed is to be executed by husband and wife), introduces the covenant in this form: “And the said part of the first part, for themselves, etc., do covenant,” etc., leaving the blank to be filled by adding “y” where but one party executes, and by “ies,” when to be executed by more than one, whether husband and wife or otherwise. And, of course, the pronouns and verbs subsequently occurring throughout the covenant will be in the plural whenever the word, “parties,” has thus been used at the beginning.

Such being the usual form of the printed blanks, any person not a lawyer would naturally use them without [176]*176alteration, and would be likely to follow it even in a manuscript deed. And even lawyers, who recognize the error, too generally prefer filling the blanks as they find them, rather thau to take the trouble of striking out any part of the blank and inserting the name of the husband. This is erroneous, no doubt; but it is safe to say that a very large proportion, — and I think the majority of the deeds of conveyance executed by husband and wife in this state — are drawn in this way.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Mich. 170, 2 Mich. N.P. 39, 1871 Mich. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hovey-v-smith-mich-1871.