Randolph v. Meek
Randolph v. Meek
Opinion of the Court
The facts of this case are set out in the opinion of the court, as delivered by
This was an action of covenant, brought by the de
The Meeks in the court below, declared upon the clause of warranty, and assigned as a breach, that Randolph, on the 4th of July, 1818, had made a deed in fee simple to Parrish and Pinson, deacons of a Baptist church, for a part of said land; by virtue of which deed, Parrish and Pinson had taken possession and expelled the said A. and K. Meek from the occupation and seizen of said 230 acres of land.
Randolph pleaded covenants performed, and non infregit conventióncm. On the first plea issue was taken; the second plea was demurred to by the plaihtiifs, which demurrer, on argument before the circuit court, was sustained, and it is thought very correctly.
Upon the trial of the issue, the facts appeared to be, as proved by the witnesses, that the deed from Randolph to Parrish and Pinson, the deacons of the. church, was for one and a third of an acre, including a meeting-house, which was in the keeping of the deacons, and used by the church, who worshipped there regularly monthly, and sometimes more frequently; that the meeting-house was thus occupied nt the time the conveyance from Randolph to the Meeks was made, and continued to be so used up to the time of the trial. Upon the trial of the cause in the Lincoln circuit court, the jury were charged by the circuit judge, “that no eviction, by suit at law, was necessary to authorize the plaintiff to sustain the action; that the occupancy of the church, holdenby virtue of the older deed.to the deacons, was a sufficient eviction to authorize- the plaintiffs to recover, and that this eviction might be proved by parol.” There was a verdict for the plaintiffs below, and judgment thereon, from which the defendant below (Randolph) prosecuted a writ of error. The material error assigned is to the above charge of the circuit judge. It is contended that the jury should have been instructed to disregard any proof
There being an express warranty in the deed, of course •all implied warranty is done away. (Noke vs. James, Cro. E. 574; 2 Caine’s Rep. 192.) Nor is it believed, that if there had been no express warranty, the defendant (Randolph) would have been bound for the title or possession by implication.
This cause shows no merits on the part of the defendants in error, and is probably captious; yet it presents the simple principle, whether an ouster of possession can be proved by parol, in an action of covenant, upon a clause of gene
It is contended that an eviction by due course of law, and that eviction by a paramount title, must be alleged and proved, before a recovery can be had; and that the only competent proof of the eviction, is the verdict of a jury, and judgment of a court. This is. not believed to be the law. The old doctrine of warranties, laid down in 1 Inst. ch. 13, 7; Ba. Ab. title “warranty;” and Bedford vs. Talbot's heirs, in Cooke's Rep., treats the warranty as a real covenant running with the land; and it is by the decision in Cooke’s Rep. placed upon a ground equally high with the covenant of seizen, the best covenant in the law. But that case was partly overruled by the case of Crutcher vs. Stump, 5 Hay. 100; where a warranty is treated as a personal covenant, and put upon a footing with the covenant of quiet enjoyment, which alone refers to the possession, and is perhaps the least effectual, known to the conveyancer, recognising the principles laid down in 4 Term Rep. 617; 1 Mass. 467; 3 John. 464. In the case of Crutcher vs. Stump, an eviction, it is said, is necessary; that point did not,however, come before the court, and the question there, was, whether an averment that the plaintiff’s testator had no title to the land sold, was assigning a sufficient breach. All the authorities concur that you must aver and prove the better title, and an ouster, by virtue thereof, from the warranted premises, by him who is vested with the paramount title. (Wotton vs. Hele, 2 Saund. 175, 181, and note 10; 4 Term. Rep. 617.)
The only question in this cause is, whether the possession of the deacons of the church, by virtue of a deed from Randolph, at the time he sold to the defendants in error, is a sufficient ouster? And here we must be partly governed by analogy, and the reason of the thing, having no authority to guide us by any adjudication in this state; and it not being probable that any would be found in England, or any other country, for the reason that our act of 1805, ch. 12, permitted lands to be sold by any one who chose to set up claim to them while they were adversely possessed, which
Few subjects are as badly understood by courts and lawyers, as the action of covenant upon clauses of warranty. It is not even settled, what effect a record of éviction will have, when produced against the covenantor. This will be seen by the causes of Nokes vs. James, Cro. E. 675; Wot
I think the circuit court charged the jury correctly, in substance, and that the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Hugh Randolph v. Alexander and Keys Meek
- Status
- Published