Whitaker v. Title Insurance & Tr. Co.

199 P. 528, 186 Cal. 432, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 463
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1921
DocketL. A. No. 5797.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 199 P. 528 (Whitaker v. Title Insurance & Tr. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitaker v. Title Insurance & Tr. Co., 199 P. 528, 186 Cal. 432, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 463 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

*433 SLOANE, J.

The defendant, Title Insurance & Trust Company, is appealing from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and respondent, as damages for the failure of title to certain real property, claimed to have been covered and guaranteed by a certificate of title issued by thé defendant company to plaintiff’s assignor, one C. B. Williams.

The exact form of the transaction between plaintiff and his assignor was the assignment of a promissory note by the latter to the former for seven thousand dollars, secured by a mortgage upon the real property in question. The note and mortgage were executed to Williams by a corporation, the Caruthers Building Company, and was assigned to plaintiff by, Williams without recourse. The corporation was insolvent. Its title to the mortgaged property failed, and the plaintiff here lost his investment in the note and mortgage amounting to $6,391, besides some further sum in attempting to realize on the security, by reason, as he claims, of relying upon the certificate of title issued by defendant company.

The question before us is the liability of the Title Insurance & Trust Company to the plaintiff upon the certificate of title.

There are many intricate questions raised on this appeal and elaborately briefed and argued, as to the nature and extent of the liability of title insurance and abstract companies in certifying, guaranteeing or insuring titles to real estate, and as to the rights of third parties relying upon such certificates as successors in interest to the persons to whom such certificates are directly issued.

Under our interpretation of the terms of this contract, however, it will be unnecessary to discuss most of the points presented.

[1] Conceding, without deciding, that the plaintiff is entitled to the full benefit of the certificate issued to his assignor, his rights in the premises are limited to the express terms of the document. Instead of guaranteeing or insuring against the adverse claims to this real property which eventually defeated plaintiff’s security, the certificate of the Title Company is expressly made subject thereto.

The certificate on its face purports to have been issued to Caruthers Building Company, a corporation, and C. B. Williams. After reciting the examination of the various *434 official records pertaining to this title, the document provides that “The Title Insurance & Trust Company hereby guarantees that said title as appears from said records is vested in Caruthers Building Company, a corporation, subject to matters set forth in note following description.” The note referred to is as follows:

“Note.

“On November 16th, 1906, suit was begun in the Superior Court in and for said county, Case No. 54219, by William Reid, plaintiff, vs. C. B. Williams et al., defendants, wherein it was sought to obtain judgment declaring a certain deed theretofore executed by plaintiff to be a mortgage and to quiet title to lands above described in plaintiff. Notice of the pendency of said action was recorded in the recorder’s office of said county on November 16th, 1906. Judgment for plaintiff was filed March 17th, 1909. Motion for new trial was made and a new trial granted February 21st, 1911. Judgment was rendered May 18th, 1911, by stipulation of the parties whereby it was adjudged that defendant C. B. Williams was the owner of said lands at the date of the beginning of said action, and at all times during the pendency of said action and at the date of said judgment and that plaintiff take nothing by said action. Said Williams being the immediate grantor of the vestee herein. On August 22d, 1909, William Reid executed a deed of said lands to William A. Hunter. On August 24th, 1909, William A. Hunter and wife executed a trust deed of said lands to Union Trust & Realty Company, to secure a note for thirty-two hundred dollars ($3200.00), in favor of German American Savings Bank. On October 24th, 1910, the Union Trust and Realty Company executed a deed to Parley M. Johnson, which deed contains recital as to default payment of indebtedness secured by said trust deed and sale thereunder. In the opinion of the attorneys for said company, said Parley M. Johnson obtained no title to said lands by reason of sale and deed to him.”

Granting plaintiff the fullest recourse against defendant company, the foregoing is all he has to rely upon.

The effect of this reference to the litigation of an adverse claim to real property was to inform the beneficiaries of the certificate that their title otherwise guaranteed was subject to the validity of the judgment in their favor in *435 said action which the Title Company was unwilling to insure, but which it states, in the opinion of its attorneys, was good.

To put the matter more simply, the Title Company, in effect says: “We guarantee that your title to this property is good, subject to the validity of certain legal proceedings determined in your favor and which in the opinion of our attorneys confirm your title, but the conelusiveness of which we do not vouch for.”

Is it not plain that the only representation as to the effect of this litigation the defendant could be held for would be the truthfulness of the statement that such was the opinion of their attorneys? There could have been no purpose in qualifying this general guaranty of title by making it subject to the proceeding set out in the note other than as a reservation to the guaranty of any failure of title that might arise under this litigation. At best, all the plaintiff has to rely upon here is the opinion of the abstract company or its attorneys, and there is no showing that such opinion was not held and given in good faith.

There are allegations in the complaint that the recitals regarding the adverse claims on this property failed to set forth certain details of the litigation which, if stated, would have informed persons relying upon the certificate that the judgment in favor of plaintiff’s assignor had not become - final; and it is averred that the certificate “was so framed for the express purpose of aiding said Caruthers Building Co. and said C. B. Williams in selling and disposing of said lands and said note and mortgage, and with the intention of inducing third parties to purchase the same.” But the certificate does not purport to give the full record or legal effect of the court proceedings or to be even an abstract of the record; and we find no evidence in the case to justify a finding of conspiracy or fraud.

[2] Testimony of C. B. Williams was admitted in behalf of plaintiff and over the objection of defendant as to certain oral statements made by the head of the legal department of the defendant company regarding the contents of the certificate and its legal effect.

These conversations were inadmissible, being an attempt to vary the terms of a written instrument, and because no showing was made of authority on the part of the head of *436 the legal department to interpret the contract of the corporation. [3]

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Related

Colonial Savings & L. Assn. v. Redwood Empire Title Co.
236 Cal. App. 2d 186 (California Court of Appeal, 1965)
Cohen v. Citizens National Trust & Savings Bank
300 P.2d 14 (California Court of Appeal, 1956)
Huffman v. Lindquist
234 P.2d 34 (California Supreme Court, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 P. 528, 186 Cal. 432, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitaker-v-title-insurance-tr-co-cal-1921.