Wynn v. Harman's devisees

5 Gratt. 157
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 5 Gratt. 157 (Wynn v. Harman's devisees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wynn v. Harman's devisees, 5 Gratt. 157 (Va. 1848).

Opinion

Daniel, J.

In the Court below, exceptions were taken by the demandant to four several opinions of the Judge, delivered upon questions arising during the progress of the trial before the jury. And the supposed errors, in these opinions, are here assigned and insisted on as causes for reversing the judgment. By the first bill of exceptions, it appears, that, on the trial of the cause, the tenants offered in evidence the patent of the Commonwealth to John Boswell, dated 3d June 1794, under which they claimed to derive title to the land in controversy. The demandant objected to its reception as evidence, and also to any evidence in support of the right of Hezekiah Harman, the ancestor and devisor of the tenants, which they could offer, on the ground that he held a deed of conveyance, with special warranty for [162]*162the land in controversy from the said Hezekiah Harman, dated 14th February 1818. This deed, which is set out in hcec verba, in the bill of exceptions, and purports to be an indenture between Harman and wife of one Part> an(* John Wynn of the other, witnessed that Harman and wife, for the consideration of one hundred and fourteen dollars and eighty-eight cents, the receipt of which is acknowledged, have sold all their claim in and to” the land in controversy, describing it as the “ Currin place, which was conveyed to Currin by Daniel Harman, sr.” The warranty is as follows: “ The said Harman and wife, for themselves and their heirs, the said right as it was invested in Daniel Harman, to the said John and his heirs, against themselves and their heirs, will warrant and defend; it is fully understood, if said title should prove insufficient in law or equity, the said Wynn and heirs is to have no recourse, he knowing the whole circumstance.” By this deed the demandant contended the tenants were estopped to shew title in themselves derived from the bargainor in that deed, by his procuring the Boswell title subsequent to the date of his deed ; but the Court overruled the objection, saying that this was not the proper time to raise the question as to the effect of that deed; but the parties having argued the question in this stage of the proceedings, the Court expressed the opinion that said deed was no estoppel to the tenants to shew better title to the land demanded, than the demandant; and permitted the tenants to introduce their testimony. The tenants then proceeded regularly to deraign their title, by exhibiting, first, the patent aforesaid to Boswell, then the will of Boswell devising the land to Thomas Johnson, the will of said Johnson devising it to Chapman Johnson and other devisees, a decree of partition between the latter, and an allotment, under it, of the land in controversy, to said Chapman, his deed conveying to Hezekiah Harman, and lastly, the will of the latter [163]*163devising to the tenants. The demandant thereupon, after first, however, introducing his written evidence, (which consisted of the patent of the Commonwealth, of date the 27th September 1796, to Daniel Harman, his deed to Hugh Currin, dated 30th June 1814, the said Currin’s deed to Hezekiah Harman, of the 21st July 1817, and the deed of the 14th February 1818, of the said Harman, conveying the land to the demandant,) moved the Court “to exclude from the consideration of the jury, all the written evidence offered and introduced by the tenants as aforesaid, upon the ground that the said deed from Hezekiah Harman to the demandant was an estoppel, and prevented him and the tenants, his devisees, from contesting the claim and title conveyed to demandant by said Hezekiah Harman as aforesaid.” The Court refused to exclude the evidence ; and the refusal to do so caused the fourth bill of exceptions. There might be some doubt whether the state of the case was such, when the first bill of exceptions was signed, as properly to present the question of the estoppel; but it is not necessary to pursue any such enquiry, as the same question does properly arise on the fourth bill of exceptions.

Does, then, the doctrine of estoppel apply to such a deed as that of the 14th February 1818? If it does, it must be because of some technical rule imparting peculiar force to the instrument of conveyance used; inasmuch as it is manifest, from the language of the deed, giving to it its ordinary signification, that it was the purpose of the grantor to convey only such claim and title to the land as he had at the date of the conveyance. I know of no rule requiring the estoppel to be extended beyond what is called for by the plain import of the terms employed by the grantor in the deed. In the absence of a general warranty, there is nothing in the nature of the instrument used, justifying the grantee in claiming under it any thing further than the specific title or claim which it purports to convey.

[164]*164It is true, as a general proposition, that no man shall be permitted to gainsay what he has solemnly averred by his deed. Every man is bound to speak and act ac- • cording to the truth and fact of the case; and the law only presumes that he has done so, but denies him the right to contradict such reasonable presumption. When, therefore, a grantor recites that he has an indefeasible title to the land conveyed, or uses terms or modes of conveyance from which such fact is fairly to be inferred, he and those claiming under him, are generally estopped to deny such fact, or to oppose the legal consequences flowing from it. If, however, by the same deed which would otherwise work the estoppel, it appears that the grantor had only a particular claim or title, the estoppel would be defeated. Wheelock v. Henshaw, 19 Pick. R. 341.

In the deed before us, there is no recital of a good' and indefeasible title; no terms used which import it; no conveyance of, nor undertaking to convey, the land. The deed merely purports to sell all the grantor’s claim to the land. The position which the tenants now occupy, contradicts no averment of that deed. They do not now deny that Hezekiah Harman, their devisor, had such claim as he undertook by his deed to sell. They do not call in question the fact that such claim passed to the demandant by said deed, to avail him to the extent of its worth. As to what is the extent of its worth, what is its legal value and weight in a comparison of titles between them and the demandant, there is nothing, in the deed, estopping them to enquire. Their pretension consists, not in the denial that Hezekiah Harman had any title at the time of his conveyance to the demandant, but in the assertion of an independent and paramount title, since acquired by the said Harman, and transmitted to them by his will.

In the warranty there is no undertaking to defend any other title or estate than that which the deed purports [165]*165to convey. It refers only to “the said right,” (meaning the claim sold,) “ as it was invested in Daniel Harman,” and not to any other right or title which might be afterwards acquired. There are no terms used in the deed implying any covenant against eviction; and to exclude all inference of an intention on the part of the bargainor to convey or warrant a perfect title, it is expressly stipulated, that “if the title should prove insufficient in law or equity, the said

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Bluebook (online)
5 Gratt. 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wynn-v-harmans-devisees-va-1848.