Court Opinion

ID: 6604614
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:11:01.928518+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:07.567531
License: Public Domain

LyoN, J.
In Nichol v. Alexander, 28 Wis. 118, it was held that if a grantor, by full covenant deed of warranty, assumes to convey unoccupied lands to which he has no title, there is at once a constructive eviction of the grantee which entitles him to the same remedies that he would be entitled to had he been turned out of the actual possession of the land by legal process. It was also there held that if, in such a .case, the grantor subsequently obtains a good title to the land, .while he would be estopped to deny the title of his grantee, yet he cannot compel the latter, after his eviction by title paramount, to accept such after-acquired title in satisfaction of .the covenants in his deed or in mitigation of damages for a breach thereof. As to constructive eviction, see Rawle on Covenants (2d ed.), 268, and cases cited in note.
The foregoing propositions must be regarded as the settled law of this state. They are rules of property, and the maxim stare decisis is peculiarly applicable to them. It may be said, however, that they are supported by every weighty authority elsewhere, and we believe they are sound in principle.
On the trial of this cause the circuit judge held that, under the deed of 1880, from the railroad company and Thompson and Smith to the defendant, the title to the lot thereby conveyed vested in the plaintiff, and that from the time of the execution of such deed his title to the lot was perfect, except as to the land reserved for the railroad. Indeed, this view was concurred in by both parties, and the case was tried upon this theory, and upon the further theory that the land was valueless after the timber had been removed therefrom.
The rule of damages laid down by the court is to the effect *195that if, after the tax deed was recorded in 1816, and before the title so inured to the plaintiff in 1880, the lot “ was rendered valueless without fault of the plaintiff, in such case the plaintiff is entitled to recover such proportion of the whole purchase money paid for the whole land purchased as the value of the land the title or value of which has failed, bore to the value of the whole land bought, with interest on the sum so found from the time of the failure of such title or value to the time of the trial of.this cause, not exceeding-six years in all.”
On the theory upon which the case was tried, this is not the correct rule of damages. If the title was perfected in the plaintiff when the action was brought, he was entitled to a fair indemnity for all damages he had sustained by reason of any acts done upon the premises under the tax deed. Noonan v. Ilsley, 21 Wis. 138; Smith v. Hughes, 50 Wis. 620. It is manifest that a fair indemnity in this case would be the value of the timber taken from the land under the adverse title, and the proportionate value of the reserved strip, but in no case could such damages exceed the consideration paid for the land and interest thereon. The evidence in this case, taken most liberally for the plaintiff, is that the value of all of the timber taken from the land after the-execution of the tax deed did not exceed $300; yet the verdict is for $500 and interest.
But there is another and more serious objection to the rule of damages laid down by the court. The plaintiff was allowed to recover damages for all the injury to the lot, no matter by whom committed, if without his fault. There is considerable evidence in the record tending to show that the timber was taken from the premises, not by virtue of the adverse title outstanding in the railroad company and Thompson and Smith, but by mere trespassers upon the land. The defendant did not covenant against the wrongful acts of strangers; and hence, if the title to the lot is in the plaintiff, he cannot recover in this action for the value *196of timber -wrongfully taken from the lot by trespassers. The liability of the defendant is limited to injuries done by the owners of the adverse title, or under their authority. Rawle on Covenants, 77. For the errors above suggested, the judgment must necessarily be reversed.
A few observations will be made concerning the other aspect of the case. The complaint is framed upon the theory that the plaintiff’s title has wholly and permanently failed. The tax deed is fair upon its face, and apparently conveyed the absolute title to the lot to the grantee therein named, which became indefeasible on the recording of the deed in Lincoln county, in March, 1876. So, upon the face of the record it appears that when the defendant executed the deed of the lot to the plaintiff, at a later date, the defendant had no title whatever thereto. The covenant of seizin, contained in his deed to the plaintiff, was therefore broken as soon as such deed was executed. The land being unoccupied at that time, this, as we have already seen, was in law an eviction of the plaintiff, and gave him an apparent right of action to recover the consideration paid for the lot, and interest thereon, in an action for a breach of the covenant of seizin. One sum being named as the consideration for the three lots, the circuit judge gave the correct rule for ascertaining the consideration paid for the lot to which the defendant’s title had thus failed.
It is competent, however, for the defendant to contest the validity of the tax deed. If, from any cause, the same should be held invalid, of course its existence would be no breach of the covenants in the deed to plaintiff. So far as the covenant of seizin is concerned, it is immaterial that the statute of limitations afterwards ran in favor of the deed. In this action the rights of the parties are fixed by the conditions existing when the deed to the plaintiff was executed; that being the time when the breach complained of occurred and when the right of action therefor accrued..
As already stated, it was assumed on the trial, by court *197and counsel, that the title to the lot in question vested in the plaintiff under the deed to the defendant of 1S80. We have already seen that this is not necessarily so. The question as to what acts on the part of the plaintiff would amount to an acceptance of the title under that deed has not been argued, and will not now be determined. Whether he has accepted that title may, we think, properly be litigated in this action. If he has not, the fact that timber was cut upon the land after -1876, and before 1880, is of no importance. The damages in that event will necessarily be assessed upon an entirely different and independent basis; that is, upon the basis of the consideration paid, and interest thereon. There should be deducted from this amount, however, the value of any timber taken from the lot by the' plaintiff after the contract of purchase in 1873 and before the recording of the tax deed in Lincoln county in 1876. As to the strip reserved for the railroad track, the damages must necessarily be assessed on the basis of the consideration paid therefor, because, in any view of the case, the plaintiff has obtained no title thereto.
The trial in the circuit court failed to determine whether the plaintiff now has the title to the land described in the tax deed, or whether he remains disseized thereof. The question is material, because the rule of damages depends upon its solution. The case was tried upon the theory that the plaintiff now has the title to the land; while the rule ■upon which the damages were assessed, is not the true rule in such a case, but is rather the rule applicable to a case of eviction and entire failure of title.
Eor the reasons herein suggested, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause will be remanded for a new trial.
By the Gourt.— Ordered accordingly.