Grant v. Grant

Appleton, C. J.

— This is an action of covenant broken. It appeared in evidence that the defendant had loaned one Berry the sum of two hundred dollars, and had taken from *574him a warranty deed of the farm on which he lived, as security for the money loaned. He afterwards applied to Berry for re-payment, who negotiated a loan of the plaintiff and agreed that the premises conveyed by him to the defendant should be deeded to the plaintiff as security for its re-payment.

It is manifest, from the testimony of both parties, that they supposed that Berry’s title to the land he had conveyed was good, and that they both acted upon that supposition.

As the title to the land was in the defendant, the question arose whether he should convey the same to Berry, to be by him transferred to the plaintiff, or should deed directly to the plaintiff. The defendant testifies that, when the writings were "fixed up, T. B. Grant called me into the counting-room, and says to me, in room of using two deeds I have only written one. * * It will save the expense of doing the writings, and I wrote one right from you to me. Says I, is that the correct way, uncle Tom, to do business. Says he, that is correct. Here is a writing that runs between Joel E. Berry and me, that will clear you. * * My uncle told me I was clear from anything.”

It was claimed that the signature of the defendant to the deed was fraudulently obtained from him by reason of the above remarks. The defendant would not originally have loaned the money unless he had regarded the security upon which it was made, as good. Nothing indicates that either party was aware of any defect in Berry’s title, but the reverse. The suggestion that the defendant should deed directly to the plaintiff was a natural one. Indeed, it was what any one would have done under the circumstances, and it is not a fraudulent misrepresentation, which should avoid the deed. It was merely the defendant’s opinion as to the best way of closing the transaction.

. It is in proof that the plaintiff, at the time he received his deed of the defendant, gave Berry a bond to convey the premises deeded him upon re-payment of the amount loaned, which Berry accepted. The defendant ceased there*575by to be under any obligation to Berry. The statement, therefore, was entirely correct.

This is the case as shown by the defendant, and it is entirely devoid of fraud on the part of the plaintiff.

If the plaintiff’s testimony is true, the deed was 'read to the defendant and compared by him with his deed from Berry. He signed it, in that case, with a full knowledge of its terms and he cannot avoid it because ho did not know the difference between a deed of warrantry and of quitclaim.

A title by deed would be of little value if it could be avoided by evidence such as was offered in the case at bar.

Motion sustained. Verdict set aside.

New trial granted.

Cutting, Kent, Walton and Daneorth, JJ., concurred.