Schade v. Gehner

34 S.W. 576, 133 Mo. 252, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 576 (Schade v. Gehner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schade v. Gehner, 34 S.W. 576, 133 Mo. 252, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 128 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

Brace, P. J.

This is an action by the plaintiff as the widow and sole devisee and legatee of George Schade, deceased, to recover damages of the defendant, an examiner of titles to real estate in the city of St. Louis, for alleged negligence in the discharge of his duty to examine and correctly report the condition of the title to a certain lot in said city which he was employed to do by the said Schade. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the court sustained a demurrer thereto, and plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave, which the court refused to set aside, and the plaintiff appeals.

The evidence tended to prove that in the year 1881 there was pending in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis a suit wherein Hannah M. Jenkins et al. were plaintiffs and Edward G. Lilly et al. were defendants, being a proceeding for the partition of a lot in city block 253, fronting ñfty-one feet on Franklin avenue, [255]*255•which, on the tenth day of October, 1881, culminated in a decree and order of sale of said premises. The sale took place on the ninth of November, 1881, and George Sehade became the purchaser at the price of $21,600. That for many years prior thereto the said Sehade had been in possession of the premises, and had erected the buildings thereon, under a lease which had not then expired. That he was desirous of purchasing the reversionary title in fee which he understood was to be sold at this partition sale, and for this purpose engaged the assistance of the defendant Gehner. What the terms of his employment were does not appear by the evidence. It does not appear that the defendant undertook to furnish or did furnish Sehade any abstract of the title or any statement in writing of its condition. The only abstract or written certificate of title that appears in the evidence, was one prepared by Webster & Davis, made for the parties in interest, and furnished to the purchasers at the sale.

The evidence does tend to prove, however, that the defendant did undertake to assist Sehade in consummating his purchase of the property; advised him before the bidding commenced that everything was all right, and that he could go as high as $18,000 for the property if necessary — and afterward, before the purchase money was paid, and wheu Sehade was about to execute a deed of trust to raise it, and after defendant’s attention had been called to some dubiety in the Webster & Davis abstract, he again assured Sehade that everything was all right, that nothing would ever come back on him; that he had run the title back as far as O’Eallon. That afterward the defendant presented the following account for services rendered in this behalf:

[256]*256“St. Louis, Nov. 6, 1892.
“Mr. George Schade
“To August Gehner,
“Investigator of Titles, Real Estate Agent, and
Notary Public. 521 Pine Street. — Dr.
“Nov. 16. ■ To investigation of title and drawing deed of trust.. .$ 55 00
“ To cash for recording deed and deed of trust........ 5 00
“Dec. 10. To cash releasing two deeds of trust ............... 7 00
“ To com. on loan of $14,000 and drawing two deeds of trust....................................... 280 00
“ To cash for recording deed of trust.................. 175
$342 75
“Received payment. August Gehner,
“Per Gmeiner.”

This account was thereafter duly paid by the said Schade, who remained in the peaceable and undisturbed possession of the premises under his purchase until his death in February, 1885.

Afterward, on the twenty-first of November, 1885, a suit in ejectment for the recovery of the premises was instituted in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis by one Chas. E. Rodney against Morris Landau, tenant of the plaintiff, who defended the suit for her tenant, and who testifies that after it had been instituted she went to Mr. Cehner “and he said it was all right, that we did not lose the property yet, anybody can sue, but we did not lose our property yet.” Dr. Schade, a son of the plaintiff, also testified that the defendant said to him in regard to this suit: “That because suit was brought that was not said the property was lost. * * * A man could bring a suit against a courthouse, and for that reason the title was not defective. He stated he would give $500 to see us out.”

The ejectment suit thereafter duly progressed to judgment in the circuit court in favor of Mrs. Schade and her tenant, but upon appeal to this court the judgment was reversed, at the April term thereof, 1891 (Rodney v. Landau, 104 Mo. 251), this court holding [257]*257that Sehade, by his purchase at the partition sale and deed in pursuance thereof, only acquired the undivided one fourth of the premises in fee simple, the title to the other undivided three fourths being in the said Rodney, who was not a party to the partition proceeding, and ejectment followed in accordance with such judgment.

Afterward on the nineteenth day of May, 1892, Mrs. Sehade instituted this suit. The answer was a general denial, plea of the statute of limitations, and a special plea that need not be noticed.

It is manifest from the foregoing statement that there was ample evidence tending to prove that the defendant held himself out to Sehade as an investigator of titles, and that he was employed to investigate the title in question; that he reported the same to be good, and that Sehade acted upon the faith of his opinion that it was good, and that it has since turned out that the title was defective as to three fourths of the property in question. The only negligence the evidence tends to prove is that Gehner formed an incorrect opinion in holding that the whole of the fee simple title to the premises was vested in the parties to the partition suit, an error which he seems to have shared with other respectable authority.

Skill as well as care was required in the performance of his undertaking, and if he failed to exercise either, and damage resulted therefrom, he became responsible therefor. He did not, however, by such undertaking become a guarantor of the title, and could be held only for want of the exercise of a reasonable degree of skill and care; and, if it were necessary, it might become an interesting inquiry whether the mistaken judgment of the defendant as to the title in this instance was of itself sufficient evidence of, such want [258]*258of skill and care in his profession as to make him liable, — bnt for the purposes of this ease such inquiry is unnecessary, for the reason that there are other and insuperable obstacles to plaintiff’s recovery, whatever might be the result of such inquiry.

Conceding, then, the defendant’s negligence, and that a right of action accrued therefor; when and to whom did such right of action accrue? That it accrued to George Schade with whom the contract of employment was made, is matter of course. That a right of action could not accrue to anyone else who was not privy to the contract, although damage may have resulted to such other person by reason of the negligence, is the uniform doctrine of the authorities. Zweigardt v. Birdseye, 57 Mo. App. 462; Gordon v. Livingston, 12 Mo. App.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 576, 133 Mo. 252, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schade-v-gehner-mo-1896.