Patton v. McFarlane

3 Pen. & W. 419
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 15, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Pen. & W. 419 (Patton v. McFarlane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patton v. McFarlane, 3 Pen. & W. 419 (Pa. 1832).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kennedy J.

Samuel Patton, the plaintiff in error, by his deed bearing date the 24th of July, 1821, conveyed in fee simple to James M’ Farlane, the defendantin error, 200 acres and eighty five perches of land, with a covenant of general warranty. Patton held the land under a location and survey in the name of William Cochrane, but had never paid to the Commonwealth the purchase money due to her, which was a charge upon the land, and obtained á patent for it.

Upon the 10th of September, 1821, M’Farlane paid to the Commonwealth two hundred and twenty-eight dollars in full of the purchase money, as also the further sum of fourteen dollars and fifty-cents for the patenting fees; and a patent was thereupon granted to him for the land.

This suit is an action of covenant, and was brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error, to recover the money which he had paid in prder to have his title to the land perfected, and to obtain a patent for it from the Commonwealth.

The decláration, after reciting the deed of conveyance from Patton to M’Farlane, and the covenant of warranty, set forth the facts [422]*422ofthelegal title to-theland being in the Commonwealth at the time of making the conveyance, and her claim to the money which waspaid by M’Furlane, without which, a legal and good title could not have been obtained, and then assigned the neglect and refusal of Patton to pay this money to the commonwealth, and to procure a patent for the land, as a breach of his covenant of warranty.

Several errors have been assigned in this case, but the only question to be solved is this: Is it necessary in order to maintain an action of covenant for a breach of warranty of title, to allege an eviction, in the declaration, and to prove it, or what may be considered equivalent to it, on the trial of the cause?

In ancient times, it was usual to annex a warranty to the conveyance of lands, by which the grantor for himself and his heirs undertook to warrant and defend the same to the grantee. By the feudal constitution, if the vassal’s title to enjoy the feud was disputed, he might vouch or call the lord or donor to warrant and insure his gift; which if he failed to do, and the vassal was evicted» the’lord was bound to give him a feud of equal value in recorm pence, 2 Black. Com. 300; since that, however, a different mode of obtaining this object has been resorted to and adopted, by inserting in deeds of conveyance and of grant, what are usually called covenants for title. This invention has been ascribed to Sir Orlando Bridgeman, 3 Pow. Conv. 205 Platt on Cov. 304. This last author says “the simple means they presented of carrying into effect the various intentions of parties, and the facility with which they were accommodated to the circumstances connected with titles, soon occasioned their general use in practice.” ,

Of these covenants tor title, there are five in number: 1. That the vendor is seized in fee. 2. That he has a good right to convey. 3. That the purchaser and his assigns shall quietly enjoy. 4. For indemnity against incumbrances; and 5th, for further assurance.

If a recovery in this case, upon the covenant of general warranty, can be supported without either allegation or proof of an eviction, it would, in effect, be deciding, that the covenant of general warranty, contains within it, each of these five covenants, which would be a novel idea to conveyancers and professional men. Because I cannot conceive of any defect or objection that can be discovered which may affect either the possession, or the sufficiency of the title, to invest the vendee completely with the estate professed to be conveyed, that may not, with as much propriety as the present case, be embraced in, and considered as provided against by the covenant of general warranty, and an action supported for a breach of it, without either averring or proving an eviction. It comes to this, that the covenant of general warranty may either be considered as a covenant of seizin, of good right to convey, of [423]*423quiet enjoyment, of indemnity against incumbrance, or further assurance, as may best suit the wishes of the vendee. But it has been decided by the Supreme Courtof the state of New York, when composed- of judges alike distinguished for their talents and legal intelligence, that a general warranty contained no covenant of seizin either express or implied. Vanderkarr v. Vanderkarr, 11 John. Rep. 122. It was the inaptitude of the covenant of general warranty to accommodate itself to the various intentions of the parties, as well as the circumstances connected with the titles to the land, that first gave rise to these special covenants, and recommended them to general use; whifeh repudiates the idea of their being contained within it. And Judge Blackstone, in speaking of them, seems to consider them preferable to a warranty, because they are susceptible pf such modification, as to make them either a better or a less security tp the grantee, as may best comport with the intention of the parties, 2. Bl. Com. 304.

The propi’iety of introducing a general warranty, or one or more of these special covenants, and which of them, must always depend upon the agreement of the parties, and the particular circumstances under which the conveyances are to be made. The man "who eoxisiders himself the absolute owner of the estate in fee simple which he is about to sell and convey, and considers himself also as receiving a price for it, that will indemnify him for doing so, may annex all those five covenants to his deed of conveyance. All, however, cannot be necessary in any case. If the covenant of seizin be inserted, it implies a power and good right to convey, and therefore this last need not be annexed. But a man may have a power and authox’ity to sell and convey an estate in fee, without being seized himself, and in such case, it would be proper enough for him in his deed of conveyance, to covenant for his having full power and good light to convey'; although it would be inappi-opriate as well as indiscreet in him to covenant, likewise, that he was seized: because, if he did, it would be a covenant broken as soon as made, upon which he might be sued, although the vendee was -invested by the deed of conveyance which was made to him, with a perfectly good title in fee simple.

That an eviction must not only be alleged, but proved, in order to maintain an action upon a covenant of warranty, I have ever considered a proposition well settled in law. The books of precedents or of pleading furnish no form for a dcelai'ation in such an action, without averring an eviction under an elder and -a better title. Adjudged cases on this subject, as well as the forms of the declaration in them, all tend to prove, that such an allegation must be set forth in the declaration, and full proof made of its truth on the trial. Watton v. Hele. 2 Sound. 177, decided in the [424]*424time of 22 Car. 2, which is considered a leading ¿ase on this subject; and subsequent cases noted by Serjeant Williams in his note to it, evidence this pretty fully. . ...

The principle, I believe, has been recognised or established by the highest tribunal of almost every state in the union. The only exceptions that I have met with, are two cases decided in South Carolina and reported in 2 Nott & M’C.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Pen. & W. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-mcfarlane-pa-1832.