Pritchett v. Redick

86 N.W. 1091, 62 Neb. 296, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 184
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1901
DocketNo. 9,912
StatusPublished

This text of 86 N.W. 1091 (Pritchett v. Redick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pritchett v. Redick, 86 N.W. 1091, 62 Neb. 296, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 184 (Neb. 1901).

Opinion

Dtjffie, C.

December 29, 1875, Frances H. Englebert died intestate, leaving a husband and Francis Leon Englebert, a son, as her sole heirs at law. At the date of her death she was the owner in fee of lot 3, Gise’s Addition to the city of Omaha. A mortgage existed upon said lot in favor of Max Meyer & Co. and in 1881 a suit was commenced to foreclose said mortgage. A decree was entered in that case to the effect that the mortgage was a lien upon the life estate of J. Lee Englebert, the husband of Frances H. Englebert, and the life estate was ordered sold to satisfy the debt secured by the mortgage. At the mortgage sale Max Meyer and Adolph Meyer became the purchasers, and received a sheriff’s deed for the life interest for which said lot was ordered sold. The sheriff’s deed was made in 'March, 1886. August 4, 1885, Francis Leon Englebert and his father, J. Lee Englebert, conveyed an undivided half of said lot to George E. Pritchett, the plaintiff in error, and June 21, 1886, they conveyed the other undivided half of said lot to Pritchett. This gave Pritchett paper title to the whole lot, subject to the estate for the life of J. Lee Englebert held by Max Meyer and Adolph Meyer. At the date of the two deeds above mentioned, made to Pritchett, Francis Leon Englebert was a minor, and he did not attain his majority until October 11,1889. June 28,1886, Pritchett and wife conveyed the lot in question to Adolph Meyer, subject to the life estate then held by them. The consideration named in the deed was $2,000. September 26, 1886, Adolph Meyer conveyed the lot to Max Meyer & Brother, and September 27, 1886, Max Meyer & Brother conveyed the lot to John I. Redick, the defendant in error, for the consideration of $3,500. February 8, 1887, Redick conveyed the lot to Benj. F. Troxell for the consideration of $5,000. The lot comprised about one acre of ground, and after conveyance to Troxell he subdivided the same into seven lots, which is known as Troxell subdivision of lot 3, Gise’s Addition to Omaha. After subdividing lot 3, Troxell sold five [298]*298of the lots. All of the deeds above mentioned contain full covenants of warranty. December- 12, 1888, J. Lee Englebert, the father, died, and November 14,1889, within about a month after attaining his majority, Francis Leon Englebert commenced suit in the district court of Douglas county disaffirming his conveyance to Pritchett, and praying that these deeds and all subsequent deeds affecting said property might be set aside and the title quieted in him. August 1, 1891, a decree was entered in that suit as prayed in the petition, and on appeal to the supreme court the decree was affirmed, the case being reported in 40 Nebr., 195. Soon after the decree in the district court, in favor of Francis Leon Englebert, Johnson, Trennery, Ryan and Lawton, who had each purchased from Troxell one of the lots, into which the land had been subdivided, each commenced an action against Troxell on the covenants of warranty in his deed to them, and each recovered judgment against Troxell for the amount of the consideration paid, with interest and costs. Thereupon Troxell demanded from Redick satisfaction upon the covenants of warranty in the deed made by Redick to him, and Redick opened negotiations with Francis Leon Englebert and one St. John, to whom Francis Leon Englebert had conveyed an undivided half of said lot, which resulted, May 16, 1894, in the purchase by Redick of the paramount title, he paying therefor $2,500. The purchasers of lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the subdivision of lot 3 were still in possession under their deed from Troxell, and to prevent the title purchased from Francis Leon Englebert and St. John from vesting-in the purchasers of those four lots Redick, on becoming-owner of the paramount title, had it conveyed, so far as those four lots were concerned, to his son, W. A. Redick, until the grantees of those four lots should satisfy the judgment which they still held against Troxell. Thereafter, those lots were conveyed to the several grantees of Troxell, who satisfied their several judgments. Upon receipt of the deeds, lots 5, 6 and 7 were conveyed to W. H. Lawton under the following arrangement: Lawton had [299]*299purchased lot 5 from Troxell, and had recovered judgment against him for the pur chase-money and. interest, amounting to $2,008.41. He refused to release this judgment unless Troxell would procure him title to all three lots, for which he would pay an additional amount of $1,000 cash. Troxell refused to do this unless Rediclc would cancel an unpaid purchase-money note of $750, upon which there was due at that time the sum of $1,075. This arrangement was finally made. Lawton paid $1,000 in cash to Troxell, Redick surrendering up his note, and paid the remaining $1,500 for the title. The conveyances to the several grantees of Troxell by which they were invested with the paramount title were dated as follows: October 26, 1894, lot 1 was conveyed to B. F. Troxell, and this inured to the benefit of Stevens who had brought no action; May 31,1895, lot 2 was conveyed to Susan Oook, the assignee of the Johnson judgment’; June 20, 1894, lot 3 was conveyed to John H. Trennery; January 20, 1894, lot 4 was conveyed to Ada Ryan. In November, 1894, Redick brought an action of covenant against Max Meyer and Adolph Meyer, his immediate grantors. This judgment is wholly unpaid, execution having been returned nulla bona. Redick thereupon brought this suit upon the covenant in the Redick’s deed to Adolph Meyer, claiming to be the assignee thereof by virtue of the conveyances above set forth. On the trial, judgment was entered for the plaintiff for $2,081 and costs of suit, and this record is brought here upon petition in error, and we are asked to review the same.

It is first insisted by Pritchett that he never had title to the premises described in his deed to Meyers; that nothing passed by that deed, as he had no title to convey; that, therefore, the covenant of warranty on which the action is based was broken as soon as made, and did not pass from Meyer to Redick. It is the settled rule in this state that where no interest whatever passes from a grantor by a conveyance, the covenant contained in the deed can not run to a subsequent assignee. In such case the covenants are merely personal and not assignable at common law, [300]*300Scott v. Twiss, 4 Nebr., 133; Walton v. Campbell, 51 Nebr., 788. Pritchett took title to the premises by deed from a minor. This, was not a void deed, and until disaffirmed by the minor, passed to Pritchett a good contract. Had the minor taken no steps to disaffirm his deed after attaining his majority, it would have vested a complete and perfect title to the land in Pritchett and his grantors, which no one but the minor himself could question, and he is allowed only a reasonable time after attaining his majority to do so. This very question was before the court in Troxell v. Stevens, 57 Nebr., 329, and it is there said at page 336: “The covenant in Troxell’s deed was not broken Avlien made. He at that time possessed title to the lot, Avhich was perfect until Englebert disaffirmed his conveyance to Pritchett, which act of disaffirmance was subsequent to the making of the deed [by Troxel to Maulsby.” This language relates to the same deed which the plaintiff in error now insists conveyed to him no title, and gave him no interest which he could convey by his deed to Meyer. That decision is decisive of the question and it need not be further considered.

It is 'next insisted by the plaintiff in error that the Englebert deeds Avere never delivered to him, a- 1 that Avithout delivery the deeds could pass no title.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.W. 1091, 62 Neb. 296, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchett-v-redick-neb-1901.