Court Opinion

ID: 6514861
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:25:41.752577+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:59.408444
License: Public Domain

THORINGTON, J.
The statute of 1803 provided that the words “grant, bargain, sell,” when used in deeds whereby any estate of inheritance, in fee simple, is limited to the grantee or his heirs, should be adjudged an express covenant to the grantee, his heirs and assigns, that the grantor was seized of an indefeasible estate in fee simple, free from in-cumbrances, done or suffered from the grantor, as, also, for *562quiet enjoyment against the grantor, bis beirs and assigns, unless limited in express words contained in sucb deeds.
In construing tbis statute tbis court declared tbat the words “grant, bargain, sell” do not import an absolute or general covenant of seizin against incumbrances and for quiet enjoyment, but tbat tbey amount to a covenant only against acts done or suffered by tlie grantor and bis beirs. The language employed by the court on tbis question is as follows: “We think tlie most natural interpretation, and tlie only one tbat consists with tlie established rules of construction, requires tbat the grantor should be held to covenant, tbat the estate undertaken to be conveyed was indefeasible as to any act of himself. The opposite conclusion can only be attained upon the hypothesis tbat the second clause of the section provides for two distinct covenants, viz: 1. Tbat the grantor stipulates with the grantee, as against all the world, tbat be is seized of an indefeasible estate in fee simple; 2. Tbat be is seized of sucb an estate freed from incumbrances done or suffered by himself. If tbis were well founded, the second covenant would be wholly inoperative, as it would be embraced by the first, which is much more extensive. But this clause must be regarded as a unit, the latter words limiting and controlling those which precede them. . . . ■ . . . Again, the third clause serves further to show tbat the second must be restricted in the manner we have stated. It is limited in its objects in covenanting ‘for quiet enjoyment against the grantor, bis beirs and assigns.’ Why thus restrict the covenant for quiet enjoyment, if it was intended by the first part of tlie second clause to make the words ‘grant, bargain, sell’ import a general warranty ? It would destroy the harmony of the section; but all its parts operate together upon the construction we have given it.” — Roebuck v. Dupuy, 2 Ala. 535. Tbis interpretation of the statute was re-affirmed by repeated decisions of tbis court, and, among others, by Griffin v. Reynolds, 11 Ala. 198, in which Chief Justice Dabgaw, speaking for the court, says: “The act of 1803, respecting conveyances, creates a covenant by the use of the words grant, bargain and sell, but tbis covenant extends to acts done by the grantor or bis beirs only. Tbey do not import a covenant of seizin nor a general covenant against incumbrances, nor for quiet enjoyment.” There have been substantial reenactments of this statute after it bad received sucb known, fixed, judicial construction, thereby giving to sucb construction the sanction and authority of legislative adoption. Code, 1886, § 1839; 3 Brick. Big. p. 749, § 16.
*563Tlie only question reserved in tbis case arises from the action of the trial court in sustaining a demurrer to the two special pleas filed by the appellant. Tlie suit is brought to recover a balance due on the purchase-money for land. The pleas set out in different forms the warranty in the deed implied from the use therein of the words “grant, bargain and sell,” and aver a breach of such warranty, in that the grantor, at the time of the sale, had neither title to nor possession of part of the land tlie deed purports to convey; and the pleas seek to set-off the damages accruing from such breach against plaintiff’s demand. There is no averment of misrepresentation or fraud on the part of the vendor, or that the party in whom tlie outstanding title resides acquired it from tlie plaintiff, or that the title has failed or is defective in any wise by the act of the grantor. The pleas, therefore, fail to show a breach of tlie statutory warranty contained in the deed, as that warranty has been fixed by both judicial and legislative construction. — Parker v. Parker, 93 Ala. 80, and authorities there cited. And this construction has so long remained an established rule of property, we would have no disposition to disturb it even if we approved the reasons urged by counsel against its correctness. The demurrer reached the defect in the pleas, above pointed out, and was properly sustained.
It may subserve a useful purpose for us to remark, here, that neither tlie act of 1803, nor any re-enactment thereof, has ever given to the word “convey” the effect of a warranty, audits use in some one or more of the decisions of this court as one of the words designated in the statute as importing a warranty is mere inadvertence., and is not to be regarded as an authoritative declaration on that subject. Indeed, if the question were raised, this court would doubtless feel bound to hold that the word “convey,” when used in a deed, does not have the effect under the statute of creating a warranty. — Parker v. Parker, supra.
Nothing in what we have said is opposed to the general doctrine laid down in the text books that an unqualified covenant of seizin is broken as soon as made if the coven-antor had no title to the estate granted, and that an unqualified covenant against incumbrances is broken by the existence, at the time of its execution, of an outstanding in-cumbrance. — 2 Devlin on Deeds, § 889'; Moore v. Johnson, 87 Ala. 220; Anderson v. Knox, 24 Ala. — . The difference is between a covenant against incumbrances and defects of title generally and covenants against defects or incumbrances created or suffered by the grantor or Ms heirs.
*564We will say ftirtber in regard to the pleas that neither of them shows that the defendant has been evicted, or that he has yielded up the possession to a paramount title. ■ The demurrer does not raise this question, but we notice it in order to avoid being understood as regarding the pleas good in all respects except as to the specific defect above declared. It is well settled by the decisions of this court that when a purchaser has gone into possession under a deed with covenants of warranty, and remains in possession, he can not defend against an action for the purchase-money either at lav or in equity on account of a defect in the title, unless there was fraud in the sale, or the vendor is insolvent and unable to respond in damages. — Franke & Muth v. Riggs, 93 Ala. 252; Strong & Wife v. Waddell, 56 Ala. 471; Magee v. McMillan, 30 Ala. 420.
There was no error in the rulings of the Circuit Court on the demurrers to the pleas, and its judgment is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.