Case Name: Sarah M. Mygatt et al., as Surviving Trustees, etc., Respondents, v. George S. Coe, Appellant
Court: New York Court of Appeals
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1891-01-22
Citations: 124 N.Y. 212
Docket Number: 
Parties: Sarah M. Mygatt et al., as Surviving Trustees, etc., Respondents, v. George S. Coe, Appellant.
Judges: 
Reporter: New York Reports
Volume: 124
Pages: 212–241

Head Matter:
Sarah M. Mygatt et al., as Surviving Trustees, etc., Respondents, v. George S. Coe, Appellant.
Covenants of seizin and of right to convey, in a deed of real estate executed by one who has no title, are broken by the delivery of the deed and become choses in action; they do not run with the land, and so, do not pass to subsequent grantees, without an assignment of the cause of action.
Covenants of warranty and of quiet enjoyment entered into jointly by the owner of the fee and a stranger to the title, who does not assume any title in himself or right to convey, do not run with the land as against the stranger, and are not available in favor of a subsequent grantee who holds no assignment of the cause of action arising from a breach of the covenants. (Bradley, Haight and Brown, JJ., dissenting.)
Defendant and his wife joined in a deed of real estate which one R. had assumed to convey to her and which -was in her possession. The deed contained a j oint covenant, on the part of defendant and his wife, that she was lawfully seized of an estate in fee, also j oint covenants of warranty and of quiet enjoyment. F., the grantee, entered into possession and thereafter executed a mortgage upon the premises. Subsequently L., wlm was in possession claiming title through various mesne conveyances under said deed, was ousted from the premises under a judgment in an action of ejectment brought by persons claiming title paramount to.that conveyed by R. to defendant's wife. Thereafter plaintiffs, who were the holders of said mortgage, foreclosed the same, sold and bid in the premises under the judgment in the foreclosure suit. Upon their application the judgment of ejectment was opened and they were allowed to come in and defend, but failed in their defense and judgment was entered against them; they never at any time had possession of the premises. In an action brought by them upon the covenants in the deed to recover the amount of the mortgage, held (Bradley, Haight and Brown, JJ., dissenting), that the covenants did not run with the land as against defendant ■who was a stranger to the title; that he was not estopped from claiming that he occupied that position; and that, therefore, the said covenants were not available against him in favor of plaintiffs, no assign ment of the cause of action arising from the breach having been made to them.
The authorities hearing upon the question as to what covenants run with land collated and discussed.
Packenham’s Case (Y. B. 42 Edw. Ill, 3), distinguished.
Dickinson v. Boome’s Admr. (8 Grat. 353,402); Lydick v. B. & O. B. B. Co. (17 W. Ya. 427), so far as they are authorities opposed to these views, disapproved.
Mygatt v. Coe (44 Hun, 31), reversed.
(Argued December 10, 1890;
decided January 22, 1891.)
Appeal from judgment of the General Term of the Supreme Court in the first judicial department, entered upon an order made March 31, 1887, which affirmed a judgment in favor of plaintiff entered upon a decision of the court on trial at Special Term.
This was an action to recover damages for an alleged breach of covenants.
On the 15th day of February, 1856, Ebenezer L. ¡Roberts acquired through Charles • Leech, a referee, an unincumbered estate, in fee simple, in the premises described in the complaint, and, to secure the payment of $5,500 of the purchase-price, executed and delivered on that day a mortgage on the premises to Leech, as referee, which was duly recorded on the next day and became the first lien. May 15,1856, Ebenezer L. ¡Roberts and his wife conveyed the premises, in fee simple, subject to said mortgage to William. Tasker, who, on the same day, executed and delivered a mortgage on said premises to secure the payment of $1,800 to Ebenezer L. ¡Roberts, which was duly recorded on the next day and became the second lien. October 1, 1856, Tasker conveyed the premises, in fee simple, to Ephraim H. Howell by a deed dated that day, which recited a consideration of $12,000, that it was subject to the first mortgage, but made no reference to the second mortgage, and contained covenants of seizin against incumbrances, of warranty and for further assurance. This deed was duly recorded December 4, 1856. September 18, 1857, Ebenezer L. ¡Roberts began an .action against William Tasker, the mortgagor, Ephraim H. Howell (then the owner of the fee) and Cecilia A. Howell, his wife, to foreclose his said mortgage. The summons was duly and personally served on William Tasker and Cecilia A. Howell, but before it was served on Ephriam H. Howell, and on the 19th of October, 185Y, he disappeared, and for some months it was believed that he had left the state. In November, 185Y, the summons was ordered served upon him by publication, and the statutory requirements were, in form, complied with. Howell had not left the state, but committed suicide (as was discovered in March, 1858) on the 19th of October, 1S5Y. He died intestate, seized in fee of said premises, and left five infant children, who were his heirs at law, and a widow. February 1Y, 1858, a judgment of foreclosure and sale was entered in this action, and March 13, 1858, the lands were sold and assumed to be conveyed under said judgment to Ebenezer L. Roberts. These proceedings were had in ignorance of the fact that Howell was dead. Roberts recorded Ms deed, took possession under it, and July 15, 1858, he paid off the first mortgage for $5,500 and assumed to convey the premises to Almira S. Coe by a deed which she duly recorded, and she immediately entered into possession of the premises thereunder, and continued therein until April 12, 186Y, when, in consideration of $18,500, she assumed to convey the premises to Nancy Fisher by a warranty deed, in which defendant George S. Coe, her husband, joined. By this deed Almira S. Coe and George S. Coe jointly covenanted : (1) That Almira S. Coe was seized of the premises. (2) That she had good right to convey them. (3) That the premises were unincumbered. (4) That the grantee should quietly enjoy the premises. (5) That they would give further assurance. (6) That they, their heirs and representatives would forever warrant and defend the grantee, her heirs and assigns, against all persons lawfully claiming or to claim the same. The grantee recorded her deed and entered into possession thereunder, and December 21,1869, assumed to mortgage the premises to the plaintiffs to secure the payment of $15,000, which mortgage was duly recorded. On the 19th of April, 18Y1, Nancy Fisher assumed to convey the premises in fee to one Henry W. Fuller, who entered into possession under his deed and remained therein until Hovember 11,1874, when he assumed to convey said premises in fee to Clara B. Leavitt, who entered into possession under her deed. In 1878 the heirs at law of Ephraim H. Howell recovered the land by an action in ejectment and ousted Clara B. Leavitt. Thereafter the plaintiffs began an action against Haney Fisher, Charles J. Fisher, her husband, Henry "W. Fuller, Clara B. Leavitt and James M. Leavitt, her husband, for the foreclosure of their said mortgage for $15,000, which resulted in a judgment of foreclosure June 5, 1879, and, pursuant to this judgment, the premises were assumed to be sold and conveyed August 14, 1879, to the plaintiffs for $2,000, that being the highest sum bidden at the sale. (85 H. Y. 30.) In Hovember, 1879, the judgment of ejectment was opened and the plaintiffs in this action were allowed to come in and defend, and on the 27th of January, 1883, a judgment was entered in the ejectment action against these plaintiffs, which was affirmed by the Court of Appeals April 29, 1884 (95 H. Y. 617), and May 10,1884, the judgment of the Court of Appeals was made the final judgment of the court of original jurisdiction. The plaintiffs never, at any time, had possession of the premises.
On January 3, 1884, Almira S. Coe died, and in Hovember of that year this action was begun to recover the amount of the mortgage given by Haney Fisher to the plaintiffs, with interest thereon from May 1, 1878, on the grounds that the covenants of seizin, for quiet enjoyment and general warranty were broken. The case was tried before the court without a jury, which ordered a judgment for the plaintiffs for the amount due on the mortgage, principal and interest.
Wm. S. Cogswell for appellant.
There was no privity of estate between appellant and Haney Fisher. He never had nor claimed any title or estate in the premises in question. Therefore his covenants that his wife was seized for quiet possession, etc., did not run with the land; they were personal covenants between appellant and Haney Fisher, and could not pass either by her mortgage or conveyance of the premises. (2 Washb. on Real Prop. 284; Cole v. Hughes, 54 N. Y. 444, 448; Snoddy v. Leavitt, 105 Ind. 357; Gibson v. Holden, 155 Ill. 199.) If it be held that appellant’s covenants ran with the land, then the respondents never acquired any right to them, either by the mortgage from Raney Fisher or by the deed from the sheriff of Kings county. (Tiedman on Real Prop. § 860; Willard on Real Estate, 414; Adams v. Conover, 87 N. Y. 422, 430; Trimm v. Marsh, 54 id. 599, 607; Odell v. Montrose, 68 id. 506; Howell v. Leavitt, 95 id. 621, 622; Dunning v. Leavitt, 85 id. 30, 36; Code Civ. Pro. § 1632; 4 Kent’s Comm. 515, 516; Rawle on Cov. 318; Washb. on Real Prop. 470; Bedloe v. Wadsworth, 21 Wend. 120; Shattuck v. Lamb, 65 N. Y. 49; Sedg. on Dam. 174; Adams v. Conover, 22 Hun, 427; 87 N. Y. 422.) If it held that the respondents were entitled to recover, the court below erred in admeasuring damages. (Tiedman on Real Prop. § 861; Peters v. McKeon, 4 Den. 546; Staats v. Ten Eyck, 3 Caines, 111; Kinney v. Watts, 14 Wend. 38; Kelly v. Dutch Church, 2 Hill, 115.)
Sidney S. Harris for respondents.
The plaintiffs as purchasers and grantees under the foreclosure sale acquired all the right, title and interest of Raney Fisher, the mortgagor, and all the rights, title and interest they had themselves as mortgagees at the date of the mortgage. (Rector, etc., v. Mack, 93 N. Y. 488; Phyfe v. Riley, 15 Wend. 255; Hubbell v. Moulson, 53 N. Y. 227; Wilson v. Wilson, 32 Barb. 343; 1 Jones on Mort. § 13; Thomas on Mort. 16; White v. Rettenweger, 30 Ia. 268-271; Andrews v. Wolcott, 16 Barb. 25; Kellogg v. Wood, 4 Paige, 578; Howell v. Dunning, 90 N. Y. 241; Vroon v. Ditmar, 4 Paige, 526; Brainard v. Cooper, 10 N. Y. 358; Packer v. R. & S. R. R. Co., 17 id. 288; 2 Jones on Mort. § 1654; White v. Evans, 47 Barb. 179.) If it had been true that the plaintiffs derived their rights upon the covenants through Mrs. Leavitt and that at that time the covenants were broken, the plaintiffs would still be entitled to maintain this action as the real parties in interest. (Andrews v. Appel, 22 Hun, 429; Roberts v. Levy, 3 Abb. [N S.] 316; Schofield v. H. Co., 32 Ia. 317; Trustees v. Lynch, 70 N. Y. 451; Ernst v. Parsons, 54 How. Pr. 163; Robert v. Levy, 3 Abb. [N. S.] 316; 4 Kent’s Comm. 472; Code Civ. Pro. § 449.) If it were necessary, it would be successfully claimed that the covenants inure to the benefit of the plaintiffs as mortgagees. (White v. Whitmey, 3 Metc. 81; Rawle on Covenants, 316, 317, §§ 216, 218; Spencer’s Case, 1 Smith’s L. C. 199; Kane v. Sanger, 14 Johns. 83.) Where the grantee has been unable to obtain the possession of premises on account of a paramount outstanding title and has in fact never been ousted from the possession, he may maintain an action for the breach of the covenant. (Shattuck v. Lamb, 65 N. Y. 499; Scriver v. Smith, 100 id. 447; Rawle on Covenants [5th ed.], § 139; Dewall v. Craig, 2 Wheat. 45; Whitmey v. Dimsmore, 6 Cush. 124.) The action is properly brought by the plaintiffs against the defendants. (Preiss v. Le Poidevin, 9 N. Y. S. R. 700; Withy v. Mumford, 5 Cow. 137; Suydam v. Jones. 10 Wend. 184; Ford v. Wadsworth, 19 id. 337; Boddee v. Wadsworth, 21 id. 120, 124; 3 Washb. on Eeai Prop. [3d ed.] 662, §§ 19, 20, 21; Andrews v. Walcott, 16 Barb. 21; Hunt v. Amidon, 4 Hill, 345; Withy v. Mumford, 5 Cow. 137; Burt v. Dewey, 40 N. Y. 286.) The defendant having joined with his wife in the deed to Fisher, which contained the usual full covenants of title, is liable on the covenants. (Whitbeck v. Cook, 15 Johns. 485; 2 N. Y. Leg. Obs. 209; 61 Ind. 367; Chitty on Plead. 48, 50; Grant v. Shurter, 1 Wend. 148; Greenwault v. Davis, 4 Hill, 693; Grant v. Townsend, 2 Den. 336.) The judge correctly held that plaintiffs were entitled to recover the amount of their mortgage with interest. (Staats v. Ten Eyck, 3 Caine, 112; Dominick v. Lockwood, 10 Wend. 142; Pitcher v. Livingston, 4 Johns. 1; Bennett v. Jenkins, 13 id. 50; Sweet v. Bradley, 24 Barb. 549; Doughty v. Duvall, 9 B. Monroe, 57; Rickert v. Snyder, 9 Wend. 420; White v. Whitney, 3 Metc. 81; Withy v. Mumford, 5 Cow. 137; Baxter v. Ryan. 13 Barb. 281; Burnt v. Dewey, 40 N. Y. 283; Cox v. Henry, 32 Penn. St. 82; 1 Sedg. on Dam. 333; Flint v. Headman, 36 Vt. 210; Harden v. Larkin, 41 Ill. 413; 2 Sutherland on Dam. 264, 280; Donohue v. Emery, 9 Metc. 68; Wilson v. Wilson, 5 Foster, 236.)

Opinion:
Follett, Ch. J.
Mrs. Fisher, had she been evicted and brought her action in the life-time of Mrs. Ooe, could have recovered her damages of this defendant, because he had covenanted directly with her, under his seal, that he would indemnify her for the damages sustained by an eviction. Though Mrs. Ooe died before this action was begun, the question of the liability of a surviving joint, contractor (Risley v. Brown, 67 N. Y. 160; Randall v. Sackett, 77 id. 480) is not raised by the record, and it was conceded on the argument in this, court that it does not appear whether the defendant received the whole or any part of the consideration of the deed. Mrs. Coe having no title when she conveyed to Mrs. Fisher, the covenants of seizin and of right to convey were broken by the delivery of her deed and became dioses in action, which were not transferred -to the subsequent grantees, or, in other words, these covenants did not run with the land. (Greenby v. Wilcocks, 2 Johns. 1; Abbott v. Allen, 14 id. 248; M'Carty v. Leggett, 3 Hill, 134; Mott v. Palmer, 1 N. Y. 564; Chapman, v. Holmes, 10 N. J. L. 20; 2 Dart's Vend. [6th ed.] 881; Rawle Cov. [5th ed.] § 69, 202.) The plaintiffs must recover, if at all, for a breach of the covenants of warranty and of quiet enjoyment.
The important question in this case is, whether covenants of warranty and of ' quiet enjoyment entered into jointly by the owner of the fee, or one assuming to be its owner, and a stranger to the title, run with the land as against the stranger, and are available in favor of a subsequent grantee who holds no assignment of the cause of action arising from the breach.
Had the plaintiffs been able to allege and prove a deed in which the defendant and his wife had assumed to grant, and had they delivered possession of the premises described and had covenanted that they were lawfully seized, had good right to convey, and that they would forever warrant and defend, the plaintiffs might, by the aid of the doctrine of estoppel, have prevented this defendant from proving, and the court from finding, that he never had any title, estate or interest in the land. But the parties agreed, and the court found that Boberts assumed to convey the premises to Almira S. Coe. The plaintiffs alleged, which the defendant did not deny, and proved that the defendant and his wife covenanted that she was lawfully seized of an absolute and indefeasible estate of inheritance, in fee simple, in the premises and had good right and lawful authority to convey them. Our attention is called to the finding that the defendant and Ms wife joined in a deed purporting to convey the land in fee simple to Haney Fisher. This finding is not inconsistent with the findings and facts admitted already referred to. It is not therein found that tins defendant assumed to convey any estate in the premises, nor is it found that he covenanted that he or they were seized and had a right to convey the premises, nor can we infer such a fact in the face of the allegation in the complaint that Mrs. Coe assumed to have the entire title to the premises, and, in legal effect, that the defendant was a stranger to it. Facts admitted by the pleadings have the same force as facts found. If the facts found and admitted are inconsistent, the appellant is entitled to rely upon those most favorable to Mm. It is unfortunate that the deed wliich fixes the rights of these parties is not contained in the case, but if a new trial is had tiffs defect will be remedied, and the exact connection of this defendant with the conveyance will be made clear.
" There are three manner of privities, viz.: (1.) Privity in case of estate only. (2.) Privity in respect to contract only.. (3.) Privity in respect to estate and contract together." (2 Sugd. Vend. *714; 4 Cruise's Dig. *376; Greenleaf's ed. 458.) The term privity in estate denotes mutual or successive relationsMp to the same rights of property. (Stacy v. Thrasher, 6 How. [N. S.] 44-59; Green. Ev. § 189, 523 ; Big. Est. [6th ed.] 347.) " There is a certain privity between the grantor- and grantee of the land. It is not the privity arising upon tenure, for there is no fiction of fealty annexed. It is, however, the same sort of privity which enables the grantee of a purchaser to maintain an action upon the covenants of title .given to his vendor; and it is moreover a privity of the same nature with that which obtains between the grantor and grantee of terms for life and for years." ( Van Rensselaer v. Hays, 19 N. Y. 68, 91.)
There was no mutual relationship between the defendant • and Haney Fisher or her grantees, nor was there any successive relationship between him and Haney Fisher or her grantees.
It is not necessary that privity of estate, within the meaning of the feudal law—mutuality—should exist between the covenantor and the covenantee or his successors in interest to carry a covenant of warranty to subsequent grantees. (Van Rensselaer v. Read, 26 N. Y. 558, 574, 575.) But unless there is either mutuality or succession of interest, this covenant will not run with the land. In this state privity of estate, within the meaning of the law of tenure, seldom arises, except between lessor and the successors of his lessee, or when the covenantor retains a reversionary interest in the land conveyed.
Under the facts found there was no privity of estate, actual or assumed, between the defendant (the covenantor) and Haney Fisher (the covenantee), only privity by contract. The defendant having no estate, title or interest in or possession of the land conveyed, there could be no privity in estate between him and Haney Fisher, and not having covenanted or represented that he had an estate, he cannot be estopped from showing that he had none. The only privity which existed between the defendant and Haney Fisher was by contract, which is insufficient to carry the benefit to subsequent owners of the property to which the covenants relate.
In Slater v. Rawson (1 Met. 450), the defendant assumed to convey one hundred and thirty acres of land by a deed containing covenants of seizin and warranty. The plaintiff succeeded to the estate of the defendant's grantee through several mesne conveyances, but was evicted from twenty-two acres under a title which was paramount to that of the defendant.. In an action to recover damages for the breach of the covenants, it was held that it appearing that the defendant had. neither title nor' possession his covenant of warranty did not. attach to the land and run with it to subsequent grantees, and that the plaintiff could not recover. Upon the retrial the jury found that the defendant was in and delivered possession of' the land when he conveyed, and it was held (6 Met. 439) that seizin was a sufficient estate to attach the covenant to the land and carry it to subsequent grantees, who could sustain an action for its breach. This rule is recognized in other cases. (Fowler v. Poling, 2 Barb. 300; 6 id. 165; Beddoe v. Wadsworth, 21 Wend. 120; Moore v. Merrill, 17 N. H. 75.)
In Nesbit v. Nesbit (1 Taylor [N. C.] 82, reconsidered and affirmed, Conf. Reports, 318), one Cranston conveyed land to Mary Montgomery, then under age, who afterwards became the wife of Arthur Newman, the consideration for the conveyance being paid by Hugh Montgomery, the father of Mary. Some years after, Hugh Montgomery, in consideration of sixty pounds, paid to him for the use of his daughter, conveyed the premises to one McConnell, covenanting for quiet enjoyment and for further assurance, to be executed by Mary when she should become of age. McConnell afterwards conveyed one-half of the land to the plaintiff, who, being evicted by Mary Newman (formerly Mary Montgomery), sued Montgomery's executors. A verdict was rendered for the plaintiff, but a motion to arrest the judgment was made, on the ground that the covenants in the deed from Hugh Montgomery to McConnell were covenants in gross, and did not run with the land to McConnell's grantee. Taylob, •!., in speaking for the court, said: " From the whole of this case it may be laid down as a rule, without any exception, that a covenant to run with the land and bind the assignee must respect the thing granted or demised, and that the act covenanted to be done or omitted must concern the lands or estate conveyed. But when it appears upon the face of the declaration that the defendant's testator, who sold this lot, neither had nor pretended to have. any title to it, that, on the contrary, Mary, his daughter, had •the complete seizin under the deed from Cranston; that the testator having conveyed no title to McConnell, the plaintiff could, consequently, derive none from him; it may be asked, what is there to create any privity between these parties? The maxim transit terra cwm onere presupposes a transfer of the land, and when that actually takes place, it forms the medium of a privity between the assignees. Unless, therefore, we make a presumption against the plain statement in the declaration, the title of this lot never ceased to be in the daughter, Mary, from the time Cranston conveyed to her. Suppose the father and mother had entered into the covenants contained in the deed, by a separate instrument, unaccompanied with any conveyance of the land, no one would pretend that an assignee should take the benefit-of such a contract. Then, can the case be materially altered by annexing these covenants to a deed of bargain and sale, which, being a conveyance under the statute of uses, transfers only what the bargainor might rightfully convey ? For the declaration shows that rightfully he could convey nothing. If one man covenants that another shall quietly enjoy or obtain a conveyance for an estate which is owned by a tliird, this binds the covenantor and his executors or administrators to the covenantee, but cannot extend- to the assignees of the latter. Uor can I conceive that the law is different where a man sells an estate and makes the same covenants, provided it appears upon the declaration that he had no right. In both cases the privity is wanting which forms the basis of reciprocal remedies to the parties."
Webb v. Russell (3 Term, 393), arose out of the following facts: William Stokes being possessed of a term having some eighty years to run, mortgaged it to Richmond Webb as security for the payment of a debt. At this time, by the law of England, the entire legal estate of the mortgaged premises vested in the mortgagee. October 26, 1180, George Russell leased the premises for eleven years, from Stokes and Webb, and agreed to pay to Stokes, the owner of the equity of redemy iion, or to Ms assigns, the annual rent of two hundred pounds -and to keep the premises in repair. In 1781, Sarah Webb, the plaintiff, acquired the estate of the mortgagor and mortgagee, and brought an action against Russell for the recovery of rent due and for damages for breaking the covenant to repair. The defendant demurred to the declaration. It was held; Lord Kenton speaking for the court: " I cannot conceive how this covenant made with Stokes can be said to run with the land; for Stokes is stated in the declaration to have no interest whatever in the the land, and yet both the implied covenant arising from the yielding and paying, and also the express covenants are entered into with Stokes. It is not sufficient that a covenant is concerning the land, but in order to make it run with the land there must be a privity of estate between the covenanting parties. But here Stokes had no interest in the land of which a court of law could take notice; though he had an equity of redemption, an interest which a court of equity would take notice of. These, therefore, were collateral covenants. And though a party may covenant with a stranger to pay a certain rent in consideration of a benefit to be derived under a third person, yet snch a covenant cannot run with the land." Subsequently Stokes sued Russell for the rent and for the breach of the covenant to repair. The facts above stated were pleaded as a defense; and thereupon the plaintiff demurred to the pleas in bar, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. Lord Kenton, again delivering the opinion of the court, held that the covenants were covenants in gross, and that the plaintiff could maintain the action. Errors were assigned and the judgment was reviewed in the Exchequer Chamber, where it was affirmed (1 Black. 563). Lord Loughborough, speaking for the court, said: " The term in this case took effect out of the estate of Webb; the covenant with Stokes could not be incident to the estate, nor run with the land; it must be a covenant in gross, and consequently not assignable."
In Keppell v. Bailey (2 M. & K. 517), many of the previous cases relating to covenants running with the land were analyzed and reviewed by Lord Chancellor Brougham, and among them Webb v. Russell, which was approved, and it was again directly held that a covenant between a covenantor and a covenantee, between whom there was no privity in estate, does not run with the land. (Pages 543, 546.)
Cole v. Hughes (54 N. Y. 444), arose out of the following facts: Yoorhies and Dean being adjoining owners, Dean erected a party-wall, one-half on the land of each, under a contract, which was recorded, by which Yoorhies covenanted that whenever he, or his heirs or assigns, used the wall, he or they would pay Dean or his assigns the value of the part so used. Yoorhies' lot passed by mesne conveyances' to the-defendant Hughes, who built on the lot and used the party-wall. Dean assigned the contract to the plaintiff, but conveyed the lot to another. In an action brought by the assignee of the contract it was held : (1.) That the covenant to Dean did not run with his land, and that the right to recover on the covenant belonged to the plaintiff, the assignee of the covenant, and not to the grantee of the lot. (2.) That Yoorhies' covenant to pay for the value of the wall did not run with Ms lot, and that there being no privity of estate between YoorMes and Dean, only a privity by contract, that the covenant did not run with Yoorhies' lot. The learned judge said in conclusion : " I am of opinion, therefore, that neither the benefits nor the burdens run with the land." The opimon does not proceed upon the theory that the nature of the covenant was such that it could not run with the land; but on the theory that there being no privity of estate between the covenantor and covenantee, only a privity by contract, that neither the benefits nor burdens of such covenants run with the land to winch they relate. Mr. Washbinn in his learned treatise upon the law of real property, says (2 Washb. R. P. *15 [5th ed.] 296): "16. It has also been- attempted to maintain the doctrine, that, although the burden of a covenant to pay rent may not be imposed upon land in favor of a stranger so as to run with it,, and bind an assignee of the land, a stranger may covenant with the land-owner in such a manner as to attach the benefit. of tlie covenant to the land, and have it run with it in favor of whoever may become the owner thereof. It is not pretended that this can be done, except where the covenant is to do some act for the benefit of the estate upon the land itself. The doctrine above stated is advocated by the editor of the American editon of Smith's Leading Cases, is favored by the English Commissioners upon Real Property, and is assumed to be the law in the cases cited below. To sustain it reference is also made to Packenharrks case, commonly known as the Prior and Gorvoent case, and to Coke's opinion.
" But it is believed that the point has never been determined in this way by a full court, though assumed by individual judges, and that, respectable as these opinions in its favor may be, the doctrine contended for is opposed to well-settled principles as well as the highest authority. With a very few exceptions, the uniform current of authorities, from the time of Webb v. Russell to the present day, requires a privity of estate to give one man a right to sue another upon a covenant where there' is no privity of contract between them; and, consequently, that where one who makes a covenant with another in respect to land, neither parts with nor receives any title or interest in the land, at the same time with and as a part of making the covenant, it is, at best, a mere personal one, which neither binds his assignee, nor enures to the benefit of- the assignee of the covenantee, so as to enable the latter to maintain an action in his own name for a breach thereof."
Kent states the rule in this language: " The distinction between the covenants that- are in gross and covenants that run with the land (and which are covenants real, annexed to or connected with the estate, are beneficial to the owner of it, and to him only) would seem to rest principally on this ground that, to make a covenant run Avith the land, there must be a sitbsisting pri/oity of estate between the covenanting parties." (4 Kent's Com. 473.)
Lord St. Leonards discusses this question at considerable length, and reaches the conclusion that the covenant of a stranger to a title does not run Avith the land. (2 Sugd. on Vend. *716, 718, 719, 721 [7tli Am. ed.] 168,170, 171, 173, pp. 25, 26, 33-35, 38 ; See Platt on Cov. 461; Cliitty on Con. [12 ed.] 51; 1 Taylor's L. & T. [8 ed.] § 261.)
In Hurd v. Curtis (19 Pick. 459), the owners of four mills, which were supplied with water by the same dam, entered into an indenture by which they covenanted for themselves, their heirs, administrators and assigns, to and with each other, their heirs, administrators and assigns, that they would use wheels of a certain construction and limited power in their respective mills. The plaintiff was a party to the indenture and owned an undivided half of one of the mills, and subsequently he acquired the other half. Later the defendants purchased of two of the covenantors their mills, and thereafter used wheels of a different construction and of greater power than those specified in the indenture. In an action brought to recover damages for this breach of the covenant, it was held that there being no privity of contract between the plaintiff and defendants that the defendants were not liable unless there was a privity of estate between them. In discussing this question it was said: "To make a defendant liable to an action of covenant there must be a privity between him and the plaintiff. (Bally v. Wells, 3 Wils. 29.) As there is no privity of contract between the plaintiff and the defendants, it follows that the defendants are not liable in this action, unless there is a privity of estate between them. Where such a privity exists between the covenantor and the covenantee, and the covenantor assigns Ms .estate, the privity thereby created between the assignee and the other contracting party renders the former liable on all such covenants as regulate the mode of occupying the estate, and the like covenants concerning the same. And so if the covenantee assigns his estate, his assignee will have th'e benefit of similar covenants. These covenants a/re atmexed to .the la/nd and run with it. Biot if there is no privity of estate between the contracting parties, the assignee will' not be bound by, nor home the benefit of any covenants between the contracting parties, although they may relate to the Icmd he takes by assignment or pinchase from one of the parties to the contract. In such a case the covenanits are personal cmd a/re collateral to the land."
Opposed to these authorities are the remarks of the learned American editor of the eighth edition of Smith's Leading Cases, page 192; Dickinson v. Hoomes' Administrator, 8 Grat. 406. Judge Habe, in his learned note to Spencer's case, in the edition of Smith's Leading Cases last referred to, said: " It appears, therefore, to he an exploded idea that privity of estate or tenure is necessary between the covenanting parties in order that covenants may run with the land."
Dickinson v. Hoomes' Administrator (8 Grat. 353), arose out of the following facts: A father devised to every one of his five children a piece of land, subject to the limitation that if any one died without issue his piece should be divided equally between the survivors or their representatives according to the principles of the law of descents. The five children survived their father, and entered on their several pieces of land. One of them, John, conveyed his land and the other four children joined in the deed, which contained a covenant of warranty. This land passed by several mesne conveyences to Dickinson, the plaintiff. Richard, one of the children and covenantors, died, in the lifetime of John, leaving several children, and afterwards John died without issue, and thereupon Richard's children evicted Dickinson, claiming, not by descent from their father, but under the devise of -their grandfather. An action was brought on the covenant of Richard against his representatives; and it was held that when Richard joined in the deed "he had, in fact, an interest in the subject; an interest which depended on the double contingency of John's dying without issue living at his death, and of Richard's surviving him." (Page 402.) In considering the question whether it is necessary that some estate should pass from a grantor to a grantee, to carry a grantor's covenant of warranty to subsequent grantees, the learned judge discussed Prior's and Spencer's cases, and held, in accordance with the rule generally adopted in this country, that it was not necessary that an estate should pass. But in discussing this question the court indulged in the following reflections, which were quite unnecessary for the determination. of the case, which had been well decided on the first ground stated: " I can see no reason why these covenants, if in their nature they are such as can run with the land, should not run with the land as well as when they are made by a stranger as when they are made by the donor; but I can see many reasons for the contrary. A person may be willing to purchase land, notwithstanding a flaw in the title, if he can fortify it by proper covenants. The owner may not be sufficiently responsible, but may be able to procure the assistance of responsible friends, or creditors, or others may have sufficient interest to join him in the covenants. But what would these covenants be worth if they could not be enforced by an assignee of the land ? A covenant of seizin, or of right to convey, would never be given in such a case, because it would be known to the parties that as soon as made, it would be ipso facto broken. A covenant of warranty, or for quiet enjoyment, would be the most appropriate covenant for such a ease; and yet, to make that covenant effectual, it would be necessary, according to the doctrine contended for, that the covenantee should always retain the property. I am, therefore, of opinion that the covenant of Richard Hoomes runs with the land, even though he should be considered as a stranger to the land." (Page 404.)
In Lydick v. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company (17 West Va. 427) the court refers to the conflicting views on the question as to whether the covenant of a stranger runs with the land, and says: " It is not necessary in this case to determine which of these views is sound. For, in the case before us, the requisite privity of estate exists according to the views of Washburn, who holds such privity to be necessary." It will be observed that in this case there had been no grant of any 'kind to the railroad, simply an oral contract for a right of way, which, had it been granted, would have left the reversion in the owner, and would have created a privity of estate according to the strict rule prevailing when land was held by feudal tenure.
The views of Judge Hake and of the court in Dickinson v. Hoomes have been the occasion of some discussion. A writer in the American Law Register ([N. S.] vol. 2, p. 201) says: " The following topic must be kept distinct from one shortly to be considered, namely, what amount of estate must pass to support the covenants when the covenantee's only title is derived from the covenantor. It is conceded that, in order for covenants in general to run with the land, there must exist a privity of estate between the parties. (3 Wilson, 29; 3 T. R. 402; 2 East, 380; 1Y Wend. 136.) But eminent legal writers have thought this not to be requisite in covenants for title; nor, indeed, in any covenants intended to benefit the estate of the covenantee. (Hare's Note to Spencer's case; Rawle on Cov. 335; 2 Lomax's Dig. 260; 3d Real Prop.; Rep. of Eng. Commissioners.) This opinion has been founded almost exclusively upon the authority of an ancient case, known as the Prior's case (Y. B. 42, Ed. Ill, 3), cited by Lord Coke. In controverting this view, Sir Edward Sugden, now Lord St. Leonards (Sugd. on Vend. & Pur. 4Y2), has subjected the Prior's case to a most searching criticism, which results in its complete overthrow as authority on this question, showing that the portions, of it particularly relied on were not judicial resolutions, but an addition by the reporter; that the case does not contain the doctrine usually extracted from it, and that it has received no confirmation, but the contrary, from subsequent adjudications.
" It may be safely laid down, that if the doctrine that the covenants for title will run with the land, even when entered into by a stranger to the land, has no better foundation than the authority of tins case, it cannot be sustained; and it would seem to be the better opinion, that in order for a covena/ntor's covenants to run with the land, he must also be a grantor of the land which they affect. No modern case decides that a stranger's covenants may run with the land; but in a dictum of Moncure, J., in the recent case of Dickinson v. Hoomes' Administrator (8 Grattan, 406), this doctrine is broadly enunciated. The dictum is based, however, on the Prior's case, and authors who have followed it. It is there said that a purchaser of land who suspects an infirmity of title, and doubts the responsibility of the vendor, may fortify the title by covenants of the grantor's friends, or other interested parties, and these covenants will run with the land to future assignees. This notion is possibly correct, and, if so, highly important, but is not, we apprehend, in accordance with the common understanding among the members of the legal profession. (7 Jarman's Bythewood, 572.) The introduction of such covenants into conveyances would be a novelty, and probably of doubtful expediency. At least it would not be prudent to rely on such covenants until further adjudications have more fully determined their value."
In the American Law Review (vol. 20, 404), Judge Hare's note is discussed, and the writer, in conclusion, says: " But the authority of Packinhcwn's case seems to be overthrown by the investigations of Sugden and Washburn, who produce unquestionable proof that the case was not decided by the court, as reported by Lord Coke, but that Lord Coke's report was the expression of a mere dictum by Finchden. . This case, then, being authority no longer, the foundation is destroyed of the proposition that even strangers, covenanting to 'annex a benefit to the land, may be held liable in the suit by the assignees of the tenant with whom the covenant was made. The doctrine, therefore, advanced by the learned annotator of Spencer's case, that even strangers may be bound by covenants benefiting the' land, is unsound."
The editor of the ninth American edition of Smith's Leading Cases (vol. 1, 211) takes 'a different view of this question from the one taken in the earlier editions. He says:
" It seems that there must be between covenantor and covenantee the relation of grantor and grantee, which is all that there is between the grantee and his assignee. It is not thought that a covenant of warranty made by a stranger to the land would run with it, and perhaps the relation necessary to exist is that which would have constituted privity of estate at common law before the statute of Quia Phnptores, although the rent or services reserved which were, perhaps, an incident of the old privity, are not now usual. On the authority of Pacleenham's case, sometimes called the Prior's case, stated in the text, the English editor lays it down broadly that the covenantor may be a stranger to the land, but that case stands by itself, and it may well be doubted if, at the present day, a covenant to warrant the title, or to keep buildings in repair (for instance), made by a stranger to the land, would be held to run. It is possible that some explanation of that case might be found in the religious nature of the service and the connection of the convent and the manor. If it should be followed to the extent suggested by the English editor, it would be a startling exception to the otherwise universal rule that there must be some land or interest in land pass in connection with the covenant."
Covenants annexed to estates in privity, or covenants running with the land, are incidents to the estate. Coke, when at the bar, successfully took the position (Noke v. Awder, Cro. Eliz. 373) that if A had no estate in land and assumed to convey it with covenants for title to B, who assumed to convey it with like covenants to C, that C being evicted by a title paramount to A's pretended title, could not recover against A on Ms covenant, because he having no estate, title or interest in the land, nothing passed to B to wMeh the covenants could attach as incidents. This doctrine led to the logical conclusion that when a grantee lost his land and needed the aid of his covenants for title, that they became worthless. Much that has been written about the liability of strangers to title being liable on their covenants of warranty has been in refutation of the doctrine of the case last cited. It is hardly necessary to say that this doctrine has long been exploded, and is but remotely, if at all, connected with the question which lies at the root of tMs case.-
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.