Lockwood v. Sturdevant

6 Conn. 373
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 15, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 6 Conn. 373 (Lockwood v. Sturdevant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lockwood v. Sturdevant, 6 Conn. 373 (Colo. 1827).

Opinion

Hosmer, Ch. J.

This case presents several questions, to which I shall attend, in the order in which they naturally arise.

The covenants, on which the plaintiff has founded his action, are contained in a mortgage deed, as a security of the title to the estate mortgaged. The grantors covenanted, not merely [384]*384that they were seised of the premises, but that their seisin was of an indefeasible estate in fee-simple, and that they had good right to convey this quantity of interest.

In the first place, the defendant objects, that the above covenants in a deed of mortgage, are not valid.

It is not a little extraordinary, at this late period, and in the face of the ancient and universal practice on both sides the Atlantic, to accompany deeds of mortgage with the supposed exceptionable covenants, that such an objection should be made. In the absence of established principle and judicial determination, the practice alluded to, is the strongest possible expression of opinion, that the covenants in question are legal. It is the uncontradicted voice of the civilized world, so far, at least, as the common law extends.

That such covenants are useful as a security to titles, is undeniable; and that they are legally admissible, is too clear to be questioned. As it is an universal principle relative to property, that every person may freely use, enjoy and dispose of all his acquisitions, without any controul, save only by the laws of the land; so, for the same reason, it is incontrovertibly settled, that he may bind himself, by any engagement, which the law does not prohibit. 1 Bla. Com. 136. Shep. Touch. 159. In this essentially consists civil liberty, which is the power of acting as one thinks fit, so far as this license is not restrained, by natural or civil law. From this it results, as a principle, that if the subject of a contract be not evidently useless, and be legally and morally possible, the contract is valid.

The plaintiff has an interest in the title of his grantor; and to render him secure, covenants of seisin and of right to convey are both useful and necessary. Those covenants relate directly to the title; and to guard this point, whatever the nature and extent of the estate granted may be, they are of obvious importance. As there is no law prohibiting the covenants in question, undoubtedly they are legal.

It was next insisted on, in the argument, that the covenants of the defendant have not been broken. It is an established principle, that the covenants of seisin and of good right to convey, if the grantor was not seised, and had not the right asserted, are broken instantaneously on the delivery of the deed. Mitchell v. Hazen, 4 Conn. Rep. 495. 510. Mitchell v. Warner, 5 Conn. Rep. 497.

[385]*385Admitting this, it, however, has been contended, that Incas-much as one of the grantors was in possession of the mortgage-ed premises, seised of an estate for life, the covenants have not been broken; and this position seems to derive countenance from certain determinations made in the state of Massachusetts. It has been said by Chg. DJ. Parsons, in Manton v. Hobbs, 2 Mass. Rep. 433. that to sustain a covenant of seisin, it is not necessary “to shew seisin under an indefeasible title; that a seisin in fact is sufficient; and that if, at the time the grantor executed the deed, he had the exclusive possession of the premises, claiming the same in fee-simple, by a title adverse to the owner, he was seised in fee, and had good right to convey.” To the same effect were the opinions expressed in Twambly v. Henley, 4 Mass. Rep. 441. and Prescott v. Trueman, 4 Mass. Rep. 627.

If these determinations are considered as law, they will not aid the party citing them. The seisin in fact spoken of, must be conjoined with a colourable claim to the fee-simple. But no such claim, in this case, is pretended.

Although my judgment might safely be rested on the inapplicability of the decisions cited, I am constrained to observe, that notwithstanding the veneration I entertain for the highly accomplished jurist, who expressed the above opinions, I cannot yield to them my assent. That which shows covenants of seisin and of right to convey, to be broken, is their falsity. If the covenants are true, they remain inviolate; if they are not true, they are broken. On the same principle, if they are entirely false, they are wholly violated; and if partially untrue, they are broken but in part only. All this is self-evident. Although the covenantor should have had the actual possession of the premises, and an ideal or imaginary right founded on a supposed title that was merely colourable, yet this is not a legal seisin in fee; and nothing short of this will support a covenant that the grantor is seised in fee-simple, because nothing short of this proves the covenant to have been true. This construction necessarily results from the unequivocal words of the covenantor, and the unquestionable object of the covenant. That was security to the purchaser, to the extent of the title purporting to have been conveyed. The determinations on which I am expressing an opinion, are opposed to the plain intendment of the most unambiguous expressions; to the object of the parties in making the covenants in question; and to their utility, by reducing them to little more than a nugatory agreement. A seis-[386]*386in in fact of an estate in fee-simple, if the word seisin intends any thing more than possession, is an expression without meaning, where there is no seisin in law. In the nature of things, there is but one species of seisin in fee, and that necessarily is, the possession of an estate conjoined with such a legal interest as the term fee-simple denotes. "The covenant for title," as was said by Lord Ellenborough, in Stowell v. Richards, 11 East, 633. 642. in reference to a covenant of good right to convey, "is an assurance to the purchaser, that the grantor has the very estate, in quantity and quality, which he purports to convey, viz. in this case, an indefeasible estate in fee-simple." Now, a seisin in fact, as it has been called, is not an indefeasible estate. and a seisin for life, is not an estate in fee.

The question I have been discussing, has been decided by this Court, in Mitchell v. Hazen, 4 Conn. Rep. 495.

The defendant has attempted to show a seisin in fee, under a deed executed by Lois Fenn and Joel Sanford, the administrators of Job Fenn, to Sarah Sturdevant. An objection to the competency of this deed, was made by the plaintiff, on the ground of its invalidity, by reason of its not showing a sufficient authority in the administrators to sell and convey the intestate’s estate; and for the further reason, that the deed does mot purport to be in execution of a power, but to grant the estate of the administrators only. The deed was not held to be void, but eventually was admitted, by the court, after the probate records were exhibited in evidence, showing, in the opinion of the judge, that the administrators were duly empowered to sell and convey the intestate’s estate.

It is an established principle, that the authority, by virtue of which an administrator is empowered to sell and convey estate, must appear on the deed of conveyance, and with such certainty, that the act done, shall visibly be warranted by the power conferred. Rex v. Austrey, K. B. East, term, 1817. 3 Stark. Evid. 1198.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Conn. 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockwood-v-sturdevant-conn-1827.