Lunt Land Corp. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Co.

342 S.W.2d 376, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 1673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1961
Docket16189
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 342 S.W.2d 376 (Lunt Land Corp. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lunt Land Corp. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Co., 342 S.W.2d 376, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 1673 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

In the case on appeal it appears that the-landowner, presumably in good faith and without knowledge that a third person held record title to a pipeline easement across, the land, purchased a policy of title insurance covering the same. In consideration of the premium paid, the insurance company issued Texas’ standard form of Title Guaranty Policy, guaranteeing that the landowner had “good and indefeasible title” to the subject property, describing the same. Coverage of the policy was made subject to restrictive covenants; discrepancies, conflicts, or shortages in area or boundary lines or encroachments which a correct survey would show; taxes for the current and subsequent years; rights of parties in possession; parts of the land in any road or roadway on or across the same; etc. Coverage was not made subject to easement or encumbrance of any kind.

The policy of insurance further provided that the insurer should “not be liable in a greater amount than actual monetary loss of (the) assured”, and that “Upon payment of any loss * * * the Company shall be entitled to be subrogated to all-rights of assured against all other parties.” It was further provided that “Upon the-sale of the property covered hereby, this-policy automatically thereupon shall become- *377 a warrantor’s policy * * * for a period of twenty-five years” from the date the policy was issued and made effective, and as such would fully protect the party insured and his heirs, executors and administrators “by reason of the payment of any loss he or they may sustain on account of any warranty contained in the deed executed by assured conveying said property.” The following language was also contained in the policy, “* * * The Company to be liable under said warranty only by reason of defects, liens or encumbrances existing prior to or at the date hereof (and not excepted above) such liability not to exceed the amount above written.”

First Basic Question: What right, if any, did the landowner have to recover under the policy because of the diminishment in value of the land, if any, by reason of the existence of the pipeline easement across the land?

Answer: As applied to said dimin-ishment in value, the policy is to be considered as one of insurance rather than as an indemnity policy. In the event the landowner was ignorant of the existence of the easement at time he received the policy, and was not chargeable with a "breach of good faith, etc., he is entitled to recover under the policy.

In view of the foregoing answer, arrived at in answer to the first basic question, the second such question is reached.

Second Basic Question: What was the ■effect, if any, upon the right of such landowner to collect under the policy, if notice ■of the loss and claim under the policy, by reason of said diminishment in value, be made upon the insurer after the owner had contracted to sell the land, and which contract to sell was consummated by sale and transfer of title?

Answer: The liability of the insurer to the owner to whom it issued the policy was not affected by the transaction between the landowner and the grantee in the execution and delivery of the deed to the property.

It is true that the policy in question was in one respect a contract of indemnity rather than of insurance, but in so far as the policy guaranteed the landowner that he had “good and indefeasible title” to the property it was a contract of insurance. The parties to the instant contract must be held to have agreed that the insured under the policy would be made whole, in what both parties “supposed he had” by way of title to real property, in the event it should later be discovered that he held a lesser estate. 60 A.L.R.2d 972, et seq., Annotation, “Measure, extent, or amount of recovery on policy of title insurance.” This means that if after the policy is issued it develops that the property is burdened with an encumbrance, within the contemplation of such title insurance policy, to the diminishment of the value of the property insured, loss to the extent of said diminishment in value should fall upon the insurance company rather than upon the insured person to whom it issued its policy. 29A Am. Jur., p. 488, “Insurance”, sec. 1372, “Title Insurance”; 66 Yale Law Journal (1957) 492, article by Professor Quintín Johnstone, “Title Insurance”; Appleman’s Insurance Law and Practice, vol. 9, p. 15, “Title Insurance”, sec. 5210, “(Risks and Causes of Loss)—Liens and Incumbrances”; Foehrenbach v. German-American Title & Trust Co., 1907, 217 Pa. 331, 66 A. 561, 12 L.R.A., N.S., 465, 118 Am.St.Rep. 916.

A pipeline easement, especially one which consists of a high pressure gas line as was found in the instant case, is such an encumbrance, i. e., a right to or interest in the land which may subsist in third persons, which, though consistent with the passing of the fee by deed of conveyance, ordinarily results in a diminution of the value of the land. See Overholtzer v. Northern Counties Title Ins. Co., 1953, 116 Cal.App. 2d 113, 253 P.2d 116.

The easement instrument, under authority of which the pipeline was placed across *378 the property, contained a provision which reads: “It is agreed and understood that in the event the pipe line constructed under this Easement interferes with the location of a present or future permanent structure or structures on the above described property, Grantee shall, within sixty days after receipt of written notice by registered mail from Grantor to Grantee at Dallas, Texas, relocate said pipe line to another location on said property so as to eliminate said interference at grantee’s expense, but without additional cost of grantee for right of way.”

It was pursuant to activity on the part of the insured landowner to contract to sell, and to sell, the property that the existence of the easement was discovered. In view thereof, coupled with persuasive argument premised upon the language of the instrument of easement (quoted in the foregoing paragraph), the insurer contends that it should not be held liable even though it be properly deemed liable to some extent were the title still in the insured. The insurer’s theory, upon which it advances the contention, is that it was prejudiced because it was precluded from taking steps to eliminate the presence of the pipeline across the property or to negotiate for its elimination, or, in any event, was precluded from taking steps to have the pipeline easement relocated so as not to interfere “with the location of a present or future permanent structure or structures on the * * * property.” But for the sale of the property, says the insurer, it would have been able to eliminate or mitigate the insured’s loss by reason of any diminution in value of the property because of the existence of the easement.

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Related

Rosenfield v. POLLOCK REALTY COMPANY
416 S.W.2d 833 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1967)
Stewart Title Guaranty Co. v. Lunt Land Corp.
347 S.W.2d 584 (Texas Supreme Court, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
342 S.W.2d 376, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 1673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lunt-land-corp-v-stewart-title-guaranty-co-texapp-1961.