Woodward v. Harlin

39 S.W.2d 9, 121 Tex. 46, 1931 Tex. LEXIS 206
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1931
DocketNo. 5580.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 9 (Woodward v. Harlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodward v. Harlin, 39 S.W.2d 9, 121 Tex. 46, 1931 Tex. LEXIS 206 (Tex. 1931).

Opinions

Upon the authority of Walcott v. Kershner (Texas Com. App.),291 S.W. 195, 196, the El Paso Court of Civil Appeals sustained a recovery of $468 and interest thereon for breach of a covenant in a deed by plaintiffs in error to defendant in error that a certain tract of land was free of encumbrances, when it was at the date of the deed subject to a vendor's lien for said sum of $468. It was neither alleged nor proven that defendant in error had lost the land or had discharged any portion of the encumbrance save accrued interest amounting to $25.77. 20 S.W.2d 158.

The writ of error was granted upon the ground that the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals was in conflict with the decisions of the Supreme Court of Seibert v. Bergman, 91 Tex. 411,44 S.W. 63, and Thomas v. Ellison, 102 Tex. 354,116 S.W. 1141.

1 The decisions are in rare accord in denying the right of a covenantee to recover anything save nominal damages for breach of a covenant against an encumbrance on land where no injury has been actually sustained by the covenantee other than the continued existence of the encumbrance.

Thompson states: "While a covenant against incumbrances is broken by the existence of an incumbrance, as soon as made, it is merely a covenant to indemnify, and, until the covenantee has removed or extinguished the incumbrance, he can not recover the amount thereof." 4 Thompson on Real Property, sec. 3499, pp. 611, 612.

Devlin in stating the same rule gives a reason oft assigned for it as follows: "This covenant is considered to be one of indemnity. If the covenantee has not removed the encumbrance it may be he will never be disturbed by it. He may discharge *Page 49 the encumbrance, but if he does not do so the universal rule is that while it remains undischarged and he has suffered no actual injury, he is entitled to only nominal damage." 2 Devlin on Deeds (3d Ed.), sec. 916, p. 1718.

Rawle says the rule is "perfectly settled on both sides of the Atlantic." Rawle on Covenants of Title (5th Ed.), sec. 74, p. 89. And Washburn says that on this point there does not appear to be "substantially any difference between the several American courts." 3 Washburn on Real Property (5th Ed.), sec. 39, 41, pp. 529-531.

2 The decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas have been to the effect that our statutory covenant against encumbrances (Rev. St., 1925, art. 1297), implied from the use of the word "grant" or "convey," being the covenant relied on to sustain a recovery in this case, was a covenant looking to the future and promising compensation for damages at such time as the same might be actually sustained.

In Seibert v. Bergman, supra, in answering a certified question, the court through Justice Brown declared:

"The implied covenant against incumbrances which arose under the statute, upon the language used in the deed, was broken at the time the deed was made, in the 'sense that the promise relates to an existing condition, and is falsified then if it ever is. But, if the damage do not then result, it is misleading and mischievous to treat this mere technical breach as constituting plaintiff's cause of action.' Post v. Campau,42 Mich. 90, 3 N.W. 272. The right of action for the actual damages sustained by the appellees by breach of the covenant did not arise until the land was sold under the judgment enforcing it, although the incumbrance existed when the deed was executed."

After quoting portions of the opinion of Judge Cooley in Post v. Campau, supra, Judge Brown concludes:

"From the foregoing well-sustained propositions it follows that the statute of limitations could not begin to run in this case until the land was sold in the enforcement of the incumbrance, because, up to that time, the covenantee had lost nothing, and could have maintained no action, except for nominal damages, which would have been no recompense for the injury afterwards suffered by the eviction." 91 Tex. 413, 414, 44 S.W. 63, 64.

Thomas v. Ellison, 102 Tex. 356, 357, 116 S.W. 1141, determined that an attachment could not be sustained for breach of a covenant against encumbrances on land, where the land was subject to a deed of trust lien at the date of the covenant, *Page 50 because the covenantee had no cause of action for the amount secured by the deed of trust until he had discharged same.

The principle underlying the last-mentioned two decisions accords with that governing the operation in Texas of covenants of general warranty. Jones' Heirs v. Paul's Heirs, 59 Tex. 41; Graebner v. Limburger's Exrs. (Texas Com. App.),293 S.W. 1100, 1101.

3 We know of no reason why we should depart from a doctrine so thoroughly established in Texas and in English and American jurisprudence. Moreover, the rule is but the Supreme Court's construction of a statute. The Legislature adopted the court's construction of the statute in its repeated re-enactment without change in verbiage.

The Court of Civil Appeals was correct in the view that language was used in the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, speaking through Judge Speer, in the somewhat recent case of Walcott v. Kershner, 291 S.W. 195-197, which would warrant the covenantee recovering of the covenantor the full amount of a subsisting encumbrance on land, with nothing more than pleading and proof of the covenant against the encumbrance and of the existence of the encumbrance. For, Judge Speer said: "If there was a breach it must arise upon execution and delivery of the deed, and the damage arising from the breach is definite and fixed by the amount of the undisputed lien."

The court did not adopt the opinion of Judge Speer, but merely the judgment which the Commission recommended. Stephens County v. Mid-Kansas Oil Gas Co., 113 Tex. 167,254 S.W. 290, 29 A. L. R., 566; McKenzie v. Withers, 109 Tex. 256,206 S.W. 503. And the judgment recommended was the only correct judgment which could have been entered on the facts disclosed by the opinion. For the facts entitled Mrs. Walcott to all the relief awarded her under principles of equity too thoroughly established to be open to question in Texas.

The rule in equity, requiring the reversal of the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and the affirmance of that of the district court, in Walcott v. Kershner, is this: While at law damages are not recoverable until the covenantee sustains actual damages from breach of a covenant against encumbrances, yet in equity the covenantee who bought without knowledge of a subsisting lien can maintain an action to have the amount of such lien credited against his purchase money notes in the hands of the covenantor, who has contracted that *Page 51 the title is unencumbered. The equitable rule is grounded on the unwillingness of the courts to require the blameless covenantee to risk being required to fully perform his contract and at the same time leave him helpless to compel performance of the obligations of his covenantor should he then or thereafter be insolvent.

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 9, 121 Tex. 46, 1931 Tex. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodward-v-harlin-tex-1931.