After a diligent consideration of the defence set up in this case, I am not able to perceive any sufficient ground for denying to the plaintiffs the ordinary remedy upon their mortgage.
The bond and mortgage charged in the bill, and admitted in the answer, were executed on the 1st of October, 1802. They were given to the plaintiffs, as executors of Nicholas Gouvernevr, deceased, to secure part of the consideration upon the sale of Cl several land office treasury warrants of Virginia, and of the estate and interest of N. G , and of the executors, to all the lands which had, or might be located and obtained by virtue of those warrants.” The answer states, that the proposal to purchase these warrants carne from the testator, in May, 1802, and shortly before his death, and they were estimated to cover upwards of 19,000 acres of land in the state of Kentucky. The testator died before the contract could be consummated, and the negotiation was renewed with his executors, Upon the application of the defendant, and it terminated in the execution of a deed by them, and in receiving 3,000 dollars in cash, and the bond and mortgage mentioned in the bill.
There is no colour for a charge of misrepresentation or fraud, on the part of the grantors. I do not understand that any such charge exists in the answer, or was intended by it, as a substantial ground of defence, though such a charge is now put forward by the defendant’s counsel, as one of their points. But it is requisite that the charge of fraud should *83he to&de a distinct ground of allegation by the party in pleading, otherwise, it is not to be deemed in issue, and cannot affect the contract ill question. This was the clear and decided doctrine of the Court of Errors, in James v. M'Kernon, (6 Johns. Rep. 543.) and that case may be considered as perfectly in point, as to this part of the defence. If this were not so, yet there is nothing in the proofs to support an allegation of fraud in the testator, when he made the proposal to sell, or in the executors when they executed the deed.
The testator dealt in good faith. The interest in the land warrants and in the locations under them, came to him from Robertas S. Brands, who was naturalized in Maryland, as early as 1784; and in 1799, an act of the legislature of lien* tuclcy was passed, to legalize the transmission of the title of Brands to J. and N. Gouverneur. And when the testator wrote to H. Marshall, his agent, on the 10th of January, 1796, that he was satisfied that Brands had a clear title, there can be no doubt that it was a declaration made in perfect sincerity. Mr. Marshall says, he had once offered the testator 4,000 dollars for his claims, and to run all risk as to title; but that he afterwards declined it, on the ground of the alienage of Brands, which objection, as it has since appeared, was without foundation. The testator, no doubt, knew that there were embarrassments as to some of the locations, and difficulties and obscurity as to parts of the lands claimed; and he had employed Mr. Marshall to investigate the titles. We may be satisfied, that if the titles to the whole 19,000 acres, had been ascertained and clearly established, those lands never would have been offered for sale to the defendants for 8,000 dollars. They were worth, at least, from 3 to 4 dollars an acre, in their natural state. . It was, therefore, a purchase by the defendant upon speculation, and he took upon himselfj at his own peril, the chance of great gain, and the hazard of some loss.
*84Nor is there any colour for the imputation of fraud to the executors. They knew no more of the subject, or of the-goodness of the titles than the defendant, and the answer admits, that the sale was reluctantly made by them* at his solicitation. The vendor selling in good faith, is not responsible for the goodness of his title, beyond the extent of his covenants. The case of Bree v. Holbeck, (Doug. 654.) is a strong and pointed case of this kind, and quite applicable to the attempt in this case, to get rid of the payment of the consideration. The administrator, with the will annexed, in that case, found a mortgage deed among the papers of the testator, and assigned it, and it turned out to be a forgery. It was held by the K. B., that the purchaser of the mortgage could not recover back the consideration he had paid, for there was no other covenant than that the testator or the administrator had not incumbered the estate, and it was incumbent on the purchaser to have looked to the title. This decision was, afterwards, sanctioned by Lord Kenyon, in Cripps v Reade, (6 Term, 606.) and the doctrine contained in it, by the Court of C. B. in Johnson v. Johnson. (3 B. Pull. 162.) by the Supreme Court of this State in Frost v. Raymond, (2 Caines, 188.) and by the Courts of Equity, in the cases referred to in Abbott v. Allen, (2 Johns. Ch. Rep. 523.) There can be no doubt that the executors dealt with perfect candour, and made all the disclosures within their knowledge; and it was pertinently asked by one of the counsel for the plaintiffs, how came the defendant in possession of the correspondence between Marshall and the testator, and the original letters from the former to the latter, if they were not delivered over to him by the 'executors?
But the subsequent acts and confirmations of the defendant do, of themselves, put an end to all objections on the ground of fraud, or misrepresentation, or a want of consideration and value, imputed by him to the purchase. Let us attend, for one moment, to a connected history of those SlOtS»
*85The negotiation for the purchase was entered into between the defendant and the testator, in May, 1802 ; and we are bound to presume, that all due inquiries were made, and all due disclosures exhibited. The death of the testator put an end to the negotiation. It was renewed with his representatives, who were under ignorance equal to that of the defendant, as to the title and value of the subject; and in October, 1812, the deeds were exchanged. Here the defendant had an interval of four or five months to reflect and examine, and to make inquiries, and to investigate the state and condition of the title, and the possession, condition, and value of the lands. After receiving a deed, he went to Kentucky, in the spring of 1803, and had conversations with Mr. Marshall, the former agent of the testator, and satisfactorily discovered the state and situation and amount of the locations under the warrants, and the incumbrances upon those locations by the claims of John May and Humphrey Marshall, and the fact of interfering claims and locations, and of adverse possessions. All this appears from the answer; and Mr. Marshall says, that the defendant, upon that visit, entered into “ a more particular agreement” with him to carry on the investigation in respect to the titles; and, by that agreement, the defendant was to do what was necessary to establish his own title to the land, and the witness was to prosecute and defend all suits, as to adverse claimants, at his own expense, and to pay the taxes. All this was part of the new agreement between the defendant and his agent. On the defendant’s return to this State, laden with all this knowledge, he takes a new deed from the plaintiffs, and cancels the former one. The new deed is of the date of the 14th of May, 1804; and he, at the same time, executes to the plaintiffs a bond of indemnity of the same date against the claims of John May and Humphrey Marshall, in regard to their agency in the premises. This was one of the most solemn recognitions that could have been made of the original contract, with full knowledge, derived from the most *86authentic sources, of all the circumstances belonging to the case. It would seem to be impossible, after this, for the defendant to allege, with any plausibility, fraud, or misrepresentation on the part of the plaintiffs. He ratified the bargain, after due notice and inquiry; and afterwards, in the spring of 1805, he paid 300 dollars towards interest. And nearly three years after the ratification, he writes a letter to one of the plaintiffs, on the 3d January, 1807; and though, in that letter, he says he was “ as uncertain in regard to the Kentucky property as at first,” and that his agent had done nothing “ to progress the claims which he had been so unfortunate as to take from off his shoulders” (meaning the executor); yet, that he “ meant to have paid before this, and had done his utmost, but had not been able to raise the money; that he expected reimbursements that winter, out of which he should pay him (the executor) as much as possible. He hopes he (the executor) will be content with receiving interest, till he can effect a sale of some property; and thinks it will not be much of a favour for the executors to wait for the principal, till he was able to dispose of property to discharge it.”
Nor is there any breach of the covenants contained in the deed to the defendant. There were no covenants, except against R. S. Brands and his representatives, and the representatives ofS. Beall and of Isaac and Nicholas Gouveineur, and the persons claiming under them ; and there is no proof of eviction or disturbance under any claim derived from either of those sources. Even, if the mere failure of title was made out, it would not alter the case, or help the defendant, for he took the risk of the goodness of title upon himself. He knew with whom he dealt, and the nature of the hazardous, but flattering, speculation in which he engaged. He has no remedy, but under the express covenants in his deed; and these covenants have not been broken. If it was in the power of the defendant, yet it would seem to be very unreasonable and inequitable for him, at this late day, and after a *87lapse of 18 years, to rescind the contract, and cast back upon the plaintiffs the burthen of rescuing a title now impaired and oppressed by the great lapse of time, and the want of due diligence or skill on the part of the defendant. There is no good reason to suppose, but that vigilant and well directed efforts in the prosecution of the title of the testator, under R. S. Brands, if they had been commenced in 1802, and steadily and unremittingly pursued, would have saved the defendant from loss, if they did not yield him a considerable gain. The adverse possessions should not have been suffered to spread and take root, and ripen into right; and if the defendant had not voluntarily “ taken the burden from off the shoulders of the plaintiffs,” how can we now safely say, that they might not have realized a more valuable consideration ? There is no case in which a party, with knowledge of all the circumstances, has been permitted to hold to a bargain for years, and then, at last, to throw it up as unprofitable.
There has been no decision to this day, in the Kentucky Courts, upon the merits of the Brands title; and Mr. Marshall says, he does not know that any of the suits brought by him, on behalf of the defendant, are affected by any of the statutes of limitation. The decision of the Court of Appeals in Kentucky, of the 10th April, 1817, turned upon a matter of evidence as to the requisite proof of the will of the testator. This was an objection rather of form than of substance, and was capable of being cured; and the defect of proof in that case was imputable to the want of due diligence and inquiry in the defendant. And how the Court of Appeals in K. could say, that the deed from the plaintiffs was not executed by a majority of the executors of N. Gouverneur, when the deed was executed by three out of five of the executors named in the will, I am at a loss to understand There must have been some mistake, either in the documents before them, or in the documents before me, as to that matter of fact.
*88The defendant has no right to charge the plaintiffs with, the loss, if any, resulting from the sales made by the Marshal of the district of Kentucky, for U. Stales taxes. The lands were sold in 1805, and the deeds executed to the purchaser (who bought in large tracts, for a nominal consideration) in 1807. By the new agreement made between the defendant and H. Marshall, in 1803, when the defendant appeared and assumed the control of the lands, and of the interest therein, as owner, Marshall was to pay all taxes. It was incumbent, then, upon the defendant, or his agent, to discharge those U. S. taxes, or to redeem the lands. The plaintiffs were not chargeable with any duty, or with any negligence, upon that point. That task was assumed by the defendant, and conferred upon his agent; and the petty incumbrance of U. S. taxes was not within any of the covenants in the deed to the defendant.
Upon the whole, whatever sympathy may be felt towards the defendant, for his losing bargain, there is no principle in law or equity to be deduced from the case, that will justify this Court in rescinding the contract of purchase, or in denying to the -plaintiffs their ordinary remedy upon their mortgage.
I shall, accordingly, direct, that the usual decree for a foreclosure and sale be entered.
Decree accordingly.