Court Opinion

ID: 6581340
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:38:32.205617+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:17.718869
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Royce, J.
It is conceded that the plaintiffs are entitled to nominal damages ; and the only question made is, whether upon the facts found by the referee they are limited to the recovery of such damages, or are entitled to recover the amount paid to redeem the premises from the Hyde decree. This suit was brought and prosecuted by Lucia M. Fish, for her benefit, with the privity and consent of her husband, Leonard Fish, who acted for her in paying the money to redeem the premises from the Hyde decree. Florette D. Cole held the title to the premises conveyed to her by the defendant as the trustee of Leonard and Lucia M. Fish, and the covenants contained in the deed from the defendant to Florette D. are in equity to be treated as covenants for the benefit of the eestuis que trust. All the interest that Florette D. had in said covenants passed to Lucia M. Fish by the deed from the plaintiffs to her. The defendant is liable on the covenants in his deed to protect the title against the incumbrances that were upon the premises described in the deed at the time of its execution. The covenant against incumbrances runs with the land, and can be enforced for the benefit of the party holding the legal title. The payment of the amount due on the Hyde decree was not a voluntary payment, but a compulsory one. Fish was obliged to make it to save his title to the premises. The claim to indemnity on account of the breach of the covenants of title and against in*644cumbrances was a chose in action, and was transferred to Lucia M. Fish by the deed from the plaintiffs to her ; and the assignee of a chose in action has the right (subject to the right of the assignor to require indemnity against costs) to sue in the name of the assignor. It is a matter of indifference to the defendant to whom he pays, if he is fully protected against any further liability. It is not claimed that there is any other party but Leonard Fish and wife that could make any claim against the defendant on account of his covenants ; and the discharge filed in the case is a full protection against any claim that they might otherwise make. The rule of law that limits the recovery in actions of covenant against incumbrances to the amount paid to remove the incumbrance was adopted for the protection of the covenantor, for until full payment the liability of the covenantor would continue. The cases relied upon by the defendant differ from this in the important fact that in none of those cases did it appear that the suit was being prosecuted for the benefit of an assignee who had been compelled to make payment to save his estate, and full indemnity had been tendered to the covenantor. The attempted defense is purely technical; and it does not appear that any defense which the defendant might have made if the suit had been in the name of Leonard Fish and wife was not equally available to him in the present suit. In Smith v. Perry, Admr. 26 Vt. 279, the plaintiff had not paid the judgment recovered by his grantee on account of the breach of his covenant of title, but the court allowed a full recovery to be had, protecting the defendant’s estate against further liability by the form of the judgment rendered. Here, as we have seen, the defendant is protected by the discharge filed.
Judgment reversed, and judgment for the largest sum.