
    Frank Roake et al., Plaintiffs, v. Hugh Sullivan et al., Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, Kings Special Term for Trials,
    November, 1910.)
    Covenants for title — Performance or breach — Measure of damages; Remedies.
    Vendor and purchaser — Adjustment of rights after conveyance or rescission of contract — Remedy on mistake as to title.
    Where one assumes to convey the whole of certain premises and executes a conveyance thereof with covenant of seizin, though one undivided twenty-eighth part of the premises is owned at the time by a third party, the measure of the damage of the covenantee is one-twenty-eighth of the consideration paid, with interest, and not what it may have cost him to acquire the outstanding interest through his purchase thereof upon a sale in partition in a suit brought by him for the purpose.
    Whether, in such a ease, where the outstanding interest could not he easily purchased and so affected the title that the purchaser could not obtain a loan, sell the property, or build upon it, he might get relief in equity in au action to compel the grantor to close out the outstanding interest upon tendering hack a deed of the property and demanding the return of the purchase money, quaere.
    
    Action foi damages arising out of a failure of title to real estate.
    James C. Danzilo, for plaintiff.
    Henry E. Nelson, for defendant Sullivan.
   Crane, J.

On .September 22, 1&98-, the defendant Hugh Sullivan conveyed the premises -described in the complaint by full covenant and warranty deed to the plaintiffs and James Charder, and the latter, on April 2, 1904, likewise by full covenant and warranty deed, conveyed Ms interest to the plaintiffs who -are now the owners and in possession of the premises.

A purchase-money mortgage was executed to Hugh Sullivan, the grantor, for part of the consideration price for Ms conveyance, which is now being foreclosed, these plaintiffs being defendants in the action and setting up, as I am informed, a breach of covenant by reason of the facts hereinafter stated.

This action has been brought by Frank Roake and Maria Roake in equity, apparently on the covenants in Hugh Sullivan’s deed, for damages arising out of a failure of title to a one-twenty-eighth interest in the property, and relief is asked that these damages may be ascertained and offset against the amount due on the mortgage which is being foreclosed.

While I doubt the propriety of bringing such an action in equity, feeling assured that breach of covenant of seizin could be properly set up as a defense in the foreclosure suit, yet by consent and request of the parties I shall pass upon the measure of damage in case there was a breach. In this way settlement between the parties may be facilitated, or a proper defense to the foreclosure case assured. Some authorities hold that breach of covenant is no defense to a suit for the purchase price, unless the purchaser has been evicted. Ryerson v. Willis, 81 N. Y. 277; McConihe v. Fales, 107 id. 404; Greene v. Tallman, 20 N. Y. 191. To the contrary Zafarino v. Baird, 80 App. Div. 144; Merritt v. Gouley, 58 Hun, 372; Walker v. Wilson, 13 Wis. 552; Brandt v. Foster, 5 Iowa, 287.

The breach of covenant of seizin occurred, if at all, by reason of the fact that, when Hugh Sullivan purchased the property on April 19, 1883, at a partition sale, a one-twenty-eighth interest had not been brought into the partition suit and was left outstanding.

To arrive at the point in this case we will assume that, when Sullivan, on September 22, 1898, gave his full covenant and warranty deed to Frank Roake and James Charder for $3,600, a one-twenty-eighth undivided interest in the property was outstanding in parties whose ancestors should have been joined in the partition suit in 1883. What is the measure of damage in an' action brought on the covenant of seizin where the title has failed to a one twenty-eighth undivided part \

The plaintiff claims that he is entitled to recover all that it cost him to get rid of this one-twenty-eighth interest, including counsel fees and expenses. .

He did not tender back the deed to the grantor and demand a return of the consideration price and interest, but he commenced a partition suit against the parties owning the one-twenty-eighth interest, and bought in at the sale, turning into the city chamberlain’s hands the value of the one-twenty-eighth interest as thus ascertained. The. expenses and costs of this partition suit- have amounted to about $1,000, which the plaintiff claims as the extent of his damage. He has adopted the wrong rule. The measure of his damage is one-twenty-eighth of the consideration price paid, with, (in this case) interest for the past six years.

Bawle on Covenants for Title (5th ed.), § 186, says: “ Whatever may be the technical or the practical rule as to the measure of damages upon a total breach of the covenant of seizin, it is well settled that upon a partial breach a purchaser may, and it seems must, recover pro lanto.' Thus where in the early case of Gray v. Briscoe, one covenanted that he was seized of Blackacre in fee simple when in fact it was copyhold land, the jury were directed to give damages according to the rate at which the county valued fee simple more than copyhold land.”

In Guthrie v. Pugslie, 12 Johns. 126, the grantors had a life estate in four-sixths of the premises and a fee in the remainder; and it was held, in an action on the covenant for seizin, that the damages should be measured by deducting the value of the life estate from four-sixths of the purchase money.

The same rule has been applied in Tanner v. Livingston, 12 Wend. 83, 96; and in the oft-cited case of Morris v. Phelps, 5 Johns. 49, 54, 55. In Lockwood v. Sturdevant, 6 Conn. 373, where an action was brought on the covenant of seizin because the grantor had .a life estate instead of a fee, the value of 'the life estate was deducted from the purchase price to ascertain the damage.

The case of Mills v. Catlin, 22 Vt. 98, applied the same rule of damage to an outstanding life estate.

Where the grantor, conveying with full covenant and warranty deed, was only seized of one-half of the property as a cotenant, there being outstanding an undivided one-half interest in a third party, the damage recoverable was one-half the consideration price, and interest. Administrators of Solomon Downer v. Smith, 38 Vt. 464. See also Dimmick v. Lockwood, 10 Wend. 142, and Reeves Real Prop., 1524, § 1144. The same rule has been applied and followed in Wager v. Schuyler, 1 Wend. 554, and Winslow v. McCall, 32 Barb. 241, 249. See this rule also given in 3 Washb. Real Prop. (6th ed.), 437.

I do not find that this rule for the measure of damage in a case like this has ever been departed from or reversed, but that it has been followed and sanctioned by the constant citation of the above authorities.

However, in Hymes v. Esty, 133 N. Y. 342, it has been called a somewhat arbitrary rule, unjust in some of its operations.

I do not think that a grantee would always be relegated to his action on the covenant for his remedy in a case like this, and that, where an outstanding interest could not be easily purchased and so affected the title that he could not obtain a loan, or sell the property, or build upon it, he might have relief in equity in an action to compel the grantor to close out the oustanding interest — in other words, perform his contract and agreement — and in that suit might tender back a deed of the property and demand a return of the purchase money. I cannot find that any such action has ever been brought, but the authorities intimate that equity might grant such relief. Bingham v. Weiderwax, 1 N. Y. 509; and the notes to Staats v. Ten Eyck, 3 Caines Rep. 111. In this last case Chancellor Kent reviews fully the reason for the rule which limits recovery to the aliquot part of the consideration price.

Ho tender back, however, of the deed to this property and demand for the return of the purchase price has been made, and it has now become impossible because of the partition action brought by the purchaser. The cases cited by the plaintiff, authorizing the recovery of costs, expenses and counsel fees, have been those wherein the plaintiff was sued by outstanding interests to recover possession; and he unsuccessfully defended the eviction. The law is that the grantee, when sued, may defend his title and possession and recover of the grantor on the covenants the costs and expenses of the defense. Olmstead v. Rawson, 188 N. Y. 517.

Ho case, however, goes so far as to hold that the grantee may himself bring action to clear up the title and recover the expenses of his grantor.

This action must he based upon the covenant of seizin, as •the covenants of warranty and quiet enjoyment are not broken until eviction; and the one-twenty-eighth interest in this case has never disturbed plaintiff’s possession, or even threatened so to do.

iiy decision, therefore, is that, if the covenant of seizin were broken by the outstanding one-twenty-eighth undivided interest, the measure of damage is one-twenty-eighth of the consideration price, with interest.

I have not passed upon the defense of adverse possession and shall leave this for further proof before me, if the parties so desire, or else leave it to he determined in the foreclosure action.

Unless these parties settle all of the litigation arising out of the transaction herein, as they intimated they would do upon my giving them the measure of damage, I shall order that the entry of judgment herein he stayed until the determination of the foreclosure action.

Ordered accordingly.  