The opinion of the court was delivered by
Kennedy, J.In the course of the trial in the court below, several exceptions were taken by the plaintiff in error to the opinion of the court in receiving and in rejecting evidence'. A number of points of law were also submitted to the court with a request to give a particular charge thereon to the Jury. It was alleged that *322the court below erred in their direction to the Jury on all these points as well as in their opinions excepted to, on account of either receiving or rejecting evidence, and errors have been assigned here embracing all these matters.
Many of the errors assigned, however, were abandoned on the argument, and very properly too, as I am inclined to think, that no bettei’ reason could have been given for the assignment of them, than that the points to what they related were decided, not against law, but against the party who made them.
Several of the points submitted to the Court below raise the same question; and all that is material and relevant to the merits of this cause majr be disposed of and decided by resolving the three following questions, viz:
1- Do the words', “grant, bargain, sell,” under the operation of the sixth section, of the act of the twenty-eight of May, seventeen hundred and fifteen, import a general covenant of seisin, on the part of the grantor, or only a special covenant, that he has not done or suffered any act whereby the estate granted by him may be defeated?
2. Do the words in the indenture “being part of fifty-eight acres, and one hundred perches of land, late the property of John Whitehill, of Donnegal township, aforesaid, deceased, which was decreed by an Orphans’ court of YorJs county, aforesaid, held the fifteenth day of September, eighteen hundred and twelve, unto John M. White-hill, one of the sons of the said John Whitehill, deceased, and which James Whitehill, and others the heirs of the said John Whitehill, deceased, did by their deed of release, grant and confirm unto the said John M. Whitehill, and to his heirs and assigns for ever,” import, or amount to a covenant on the part, of the grantor, the plaintiff in error, that his father was seised of an indefeasible estate in fee simple in the fifty-eight acres and one hundred perches of land at the time of his death, and that the grantor became seised of the same in fee simple by means of the father’s dying so seised, the decree of the Orphans’ court and the releases; and that he was so seised thereof at the time he conveyed by his deed of indenture to the plaintiffs below?
3. Were the plaintiffs below entitled from their shewing to recover for the alleged breach of the express covenant of general warranty contained in the indenture; orean the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court upon it be supported in respect to this covenant, and the alleged breach, if the charge of the court to jury was wrong upon either of the other questions?
*323By the sixth section of the act alluded to, upon which the first question' arises, itis enacted that “all deeds to be recorded in pursuance of that act, whereby any estate of inheritance in fee simple, shall thereafter be limited to the grantee and his heirs, the words, grant, bargain, sell, shall be adjudged an express covenant to the grantee, his heirs and assigns, viz: That the grantor was seised of an indefeasible estate in fee simple, freed from incumbrances done or suffered from the grantor, (excepting the rents and services due to the lord of fee) as also for quiet enjoyment against- the grantor,his heirs and assigns, unless limited by express words contained insuch deeds, and that the grantee, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns may in any action assign breaches as if such covenants were expressly inserted.”
It is now .more than twenty-three years since it was solemnly decided by this court in the case of Gratz v. Ewalt, 2 Binn. 25, that the words “grant, bargain, sell,” under this act amount only to a covenant that the grantor has not done any act, or created any incumbrance whereby the estate granted by him may be defeated. And it was so held again in the Lessee of Cain v. Henderson, Ib. 108; and from that time to the present, has been considered, not only as a settled construction of the act, but as a fixed rule of property in the state, which no power but that of the legislature can alter. See Dorsey v. Jackman, 1 Serg. & Rawle, 52, and Funk, v. Voneida, 11 Serg. & Rawle, 111, where it was recognized as such. Upon this construction of the words “ grant, bargain, sell” in the deed, and from the evidence given on the trial of the cause, the plaintiffs had no right to claim a recovery for a breach of any covenant growing out of them. Nor do I conceive that there was any misdirection of the court to the jury on this part of the case.
In regard to the second question, it is contended that the words-“being part of fifty-eight acres, and one hundred perches of land, late the property of John Whitehill,” &c. form no part of the description of the land intended to be conveyed, but constitute a covenant upon the part of.the vendor, that the said John Whitehill, the father, died seised of an indefeasible estate in fee in the said fifty-eight acres and one hundred perches, whereupon they descended to the plaintiff in error, the grantor in the deed, James While-hill and the other heirs at law of the said deceased; that afterwards the said fifty-eight acres and one hundred perches were decreed to the grantor by the Orphans’ court- of York county under the intestate laws of this State, and that the other, heirs of the said deceased, by deed released all their interest in the same to the grantor and his heirs. Thus making it in effect a covenant that the grantor was seised of an indefeasible estate in fqe simple;,, and such seems to-*324have been the charge of the court below-to the Jury on this part of the case. I would have been glad to have convinced myself, if I could, that the charge of the courtin this respect was right, because it appears to be in accordance with the opinion of the majority of ,this court, delivered in the same case, on a former writ of error; but after full deliberation, and a very careful examination of the matter, I feel perfectly satisfied that the charge of the court upon this question was erroneous.
It is difficult to imagine why there should have been so much circumlocution merely for a purpose that could have been expressed in one fourth the number of words, and in terms, the import and object of which could not possibly have been mistaken. Neither can it be believed, I think that any scrivener, who had been told to inserta covenant of seisin, would have thought of introducing it into the deed in the manner and form of this clause. This, however, I admit, is not of itself, an insuperable objection to its receiving such construction as that contended for by the counsel of the.defendants in error; provided it were manifest from the face of the deed, that it was so intended by the parties. This clause has been considered as being in the form of a recital in the deed; And upon the authority of some cases referred to, it has been urged that it amounts to a covenant upon the part of th.e plaintiff in error to the effect before stated.
It may be well first to know the general nature and office of recitals in deeds or instruments of writing. The author of the Touchstone under the title Execution of Deeds, page 76., says “A recital is the setting down or report of something done before.” By Lord Holt, “It may be made use of to explain a doubt of the intention and meaning of the parlies, but it hath no effect or operation3 Chan. Ca. '101. “It may be repugnant,for it is wo essential pari of the deed.” Com. Dig. Tit. Fait (E. 1.) “It does not even amount to a- direct affirmation.” Co. Lit. 352 h. “Recitals shall not make any estoppel, for they are not material; rs when A. reciting that he is seised in fee of the manor of D. granteth a rent out of it to B. this shall not estop A. to say he had nothing in the manor.” Finch’s Law, 33, who cites 33 Hen. 6, 20. b. Neither will a recital operate in a will as a devise; as where the testator in disposing of his personal estate, gave six hundred pounds to his wife to be paid to W,. W. in full payment of the lands lately purchased of him, “and is already estated in part of a jointure to' my said wife, during her natural life, that of Wiskoio, York, and Motion, the lands and tenements there amounting to the value of sixty-three pounds, in all one hundred and thirty pounds, which being also estated upon my said wife if is in full'of her jointure,” *325The testator in fact had made no such settlement on his wife; yet it was held she took nothing in the lands under the recital. Wright v. Wyvell, 2 Vent. 56. From this doctrine, and these authorities in-regard to the general nature of recitals in deeds,&c. and more especially those which dispose of the inheritance of real estate, I conclude that it is not among them that we are to look for- the covenants and agreements of the parties. And wherever a reeital has been held to amount to an agreement or covenant, in a deed disposing of real estate, it must have been exclusively on the ground of intention, for upon no other principle can it be supported. And without such intention be so clearly and plainly expressed, as that it can neither be overlooked, nor mistaken, a recital ought never-to be adjudged to amount to a covenant; otherwise recitals instead of being the non essential, immaterial and inoperative parts of deeds, as they have been pronounced by the highest authorities, will become greatly the most efficient, as well as most dangerous, by entrapping parties into covenants, which they never thought of, and to which they were never asked to yield their assent.
The first case referred to, and relied on by the counsel for the defendants in error, is Severn and Glerks, eited from Poioell on contracts, and reported in 1 Leo. 122. It was an action of debt upon an obligation conditioned for the performanceof the covenants, articles and agreements contained in a deed poll executed by the. obligor, whereby he had assigned a term of years in certain lands to the plaintiff, in which he recited “That whereas he was possess-, sed of certain lands for a certain term of years.,” in which it was resolved, that if the party had not that interest by a good- and lawful conveyance, his obligation was forfeited. It must be observed that this was not the case of the deed passing the inheritance, in real estate, but a mere term for years, partaking more of the character of goods or chattels than real estate; where the assignor-could have none of the muniments of title, nor even know the origin and chain of title which his lessor had for the land, so as to. make an exhibition of them to the party to whom he was about to ' assign, in order- that he might judge for himself, and where the assignee might therefore be supposed to have trusted to the person-, al responsibility of the assignor for the goodness of the title. It would seem perhaps unreasonable to apply the rule of caveat emptor to such cases, as is ever done in respect to purchasers of the inheritance. In the sale of chattels we kno w that the mere act of selling, implies of itself a warranty of title: but not so with respect to the sale of real estate; for there the purchaser can see the title, and determine upon the validity of it for himself; and the seller is only responsible for it, so far as he is required by the purchaser, and has. *326plainly agreed to be bound on his part. I think it also manifest from the report of this case of Severn and Clerks,that it was not upon the matter alone contained in the recital that it was so decided, but upon that in connexion with the other parts of the deed, for Clench, Justice, said that, “recital of itself was nothing, but being joined and considered with the rest of the. deed, it was material, as there.” The case of Johnson v. Proctor, Yelv. 175, has piso been relied on, as being directly in point. The ground upon which this case was decided has been misapprehended by the counsel for the defendants in error, as well as by the learned Judge who delivered the. opinion of a majority of this court in this case upon a former occasion. See 16 Serg. & Rawle 112. Indeed Lord Elden seems first to have fallen into the mistake in Browning v. Wright, 2 Bos. & Pull. 25, and to him most likely the misapprehension all round is attributable. He says speaking of it, “the recital itself amounted to a warranty.” In it A. andB. were joint tenants for years of a mill, A. assigned all his interest to C., without the assent ofB., and died. B. afterwards by indenture reciting the lease, and that it came to him by survivorship, granted the residue of the te#'m to J. S., and covenanted for quiet enjoyment of it, notwithstanding any act done by him. B. also gave the purchaser a bond conditioned to perform the covenants, grants, articles and agreements in the assignment; and the purchaser having been evicted by C., of the moiety .assigned to him by A. brought an action on the bond and obtained judgment. The decision of the court according to the report of the case, is placed most expressly and distinctly upon the force of the word “grant’’ in the deed of assignment, which by the Court was held to amount to a warranty of the title, and that the recital was merely explanatory of the subject matter of the grant, shewing the extent of it; that it was the residue of the whole term, and not an undivided moiety of it that was granted. The words of the Court are,. “Proctor expressly granted by precise words the mill and land, and therefore the condition of the bond being to perform ail grants, See. the grant being defective, at first, as to a moiety, which is the substance of the agreement of the parties, &c.”
This case and Lord Elden’s misapprehension of it, .áre noticed by Mr. Sugdon, in his treatise on the law of vendors, 574, 575, who says, “it seems material to refer the case of Johnson v. Proctor to the true ground of the decision, because if the case turned solely on the recital, it might perhaps be thought a general recital in a conveyance of the inheritance of an estate, that the vendor is s.eised in fee, which would amount to a general, warranty and, *327would not be controlled by the limited covenants for the title — a proposition which certainly cannot be supported.”
■Other cases have been cited and referred to, none of which have any other bearing upon the question under consideration, than to shew that no set form of words is nefcqssary to constitute a covenant, provided they clearly import an agreement, are reduced to writing, and under the hand and seal of the'party. That they may be contained in a recital, or in connexion with an exception, or introduced by words of condition or with proviso. Com. Dig. Tit. Covenant A. 2. But in all these cases the intention to make an' agreement must be very clearly manifested, from the language used, or from the whole face of the instrument taken together, otherwise covenants ought not, to be implied in regard to the passing of the inheritance of real estate. This brings us to the consideration of the particular words employed in the clause and recital in question. It is admitted that the words “containing ten acres neat measure,” which immediately precede the words “being part of fifty-eight acres, and one hundred perches of land, late the property of John Whitehiil, fyc.” are part merely of the description of the lane] intended to be thereby conveyed, but contended that with them the description closes. If it were to be so construed the following words would be without sense or meaning, and of course could not amount to a covenant of any kind. But if they are to be taken in connexion with the preceding words, as I think they must, in order to render them intelligible, they will then bq part of the same sentence, and a mere continuation of the'description of the land intended to be granted; that is a further explanation of it, which is one of the peculiar offices of a recital in deeds; and almost uniformly the exclusive work of the scrivener; without any regard to the covenants that have been agreed on by the parties and directed to be inserted. It may be as Mr. Justice Buller has said in Browning v. Wright, 2 Bos. & Pull. 27, “often difficult to distinguish between the words of the conveyancer and thoseof the party conveyancing,” but in the present case it appears very plain to me that the whole of the 'recital is the project and work of the person who drew the deed, and that he intended it all as mere dc-. scription of the land about to be conveyed. It is obvious in the first place, that in order to be precise and definite in the description of the ten acres, the courses and distances are set out; and in the next place to make its location generally known to and recognized by the neighbors around, the fifty-eight acres and one hundred perches, and the former holder of them are introduced. Because it was perfectly rational for the scrivener to suppose, that as the fifty-eight acres of land had been possessed, aiid held by John *328Whitehill the father for several years, as a distinct tract, separated from all the surrounding lands, every body around had got to know that he claimed it,and all no doubt considered it his property. The word “ property” upon which some stress was laid in the argument, seems from the context not to have been used in any technical sense, but merely to show that the same fifty-eight acres, which was held and claimed by John Whitehill, the father, in his life time, -was the same out of which the ten acres had been struck by courses and distances. The term property very often means the thing possessed, as well as the estate or interest which the party possessing it may have in it. And although it is sufficient where the owner in fee of land devises all his property in it to pass the fee to the devisee, yet it would not have that effect in a deed. And although it is plainly to be inferred, from the terms of this recital, that it was thought John Whitehill the father, was in his lile time the owner of the fifty-eight acres in fee, yet it would have been as plainly inferrible if instead of the term “property,” the word “farm” or “possession” had been used. Or if in place of the words “late the property of,” the words “lately owned by,” or “lately held by,” or “lately claimed by,” had been employed by the scrivener, the same inference and conclusion must have been drawn. In the course of reasoning that has been adopted to shew that the words in question amount to a covenant, the intention and understanding of the parties seem to be left out of view, and an artificial interpretation, subversive of the intention, as well as of the rule caveat emptor is substituted, in order to meet the event that is said to have occurred. Events which have happened since the making of a deed, or that may have existed before, but were unknown till afterwards, ought to have no influence in the construction of it. And perhaps it is necessary that we should ever bear this in mind, lest we should be tempted to make the deed suit the exigency of the case, instead of what was the original design and intention of the parties.
Can it be believed for a moment, that if the scrivener had been directed to have inserted a covenant of seisin in this deed, that he would have given it in the form that this is? Or if he had been asked the question after he had drawn the deed, whether or not, it contained such a covenant, would he not have promptly answered in the negative? Or if he had been directed to have drawn the deed with an express,limited, and special warranty of title, is there the slightest reason to conclude that he would not have introduced into it the very same clause as part of the description of the land intended to be conveyed? I think but oneanswer can be given to these questions. It appears from a report of this same ease in 16 Serg. & Rawle, 107, that on a former trial, the scrivener of the deed was-introduced as a witness, and proved that *329this matter of description and recital was in a measure projected by himself, and inserted in the deed; when he knew that no súch deed of release as is there mentioned existed. And he proved further that when he spoke of this thing to the parties, and told them, as the grantor said he would obtain the releases in a short time, that he would insert them in the deed, as if already obtained, and not a covenant to procure them. After it was agreed he should do so, then Christine remarked, he must have a warranty of title. This shews how the fact was, and what to my mind is perfectly clear from an inspection of the deed itself. That the parties did not mean, and could hot have understood and considered that the insertion of all this recital contained, amounted to a covenant or warranty of the title. Because it was after it was mentioned to them by the scrivener, how he-would do it, that Christine added that he must also have a warranty of the title; and accordingly an express covenant of general warranty was inserted, and it does npt appear that any other was spoken of. This express covenant of general warranty, if not sufficient in law to prevent a general covenant of seisin from being raised by implication, is at least a powerful objection against the implication of it from words of dubious import, not amounting to an express covenant, or which otherwise, upon the rule that words in a grant shall be construed most strongly against the grantor, might be sufficient to turn the scale against him. To say that such words as are contained in the recital under consideration, connected with the description of the land intended to be conveyed, shall amount to a general covenant of seisin, would in my mind go to defeat the intention and design of the parties to many deeds that have been executed containing no other express covenant than that of a special warranty; and where it was intended,that in no event should the grantor be responsible unless for claims that should come clearly within the terms of the special warranty: For in many cases of express special warranty, the subject of the grant will be found to he described in a manner, and in terms importing a general covenant of seisin, as strongly as in the present case. In the case of Windham v. Windham, Dyer, 376 b, more fully reported in Ard. 58, the deed of feofment described the messuage that was the subject of the grant by stating its locality, and then superad ded. the words “lately of Richard Cot tool,” which was untrue. It had been owned by Thomas Cotton, not Richard, yet no one appears to have ever thought it amounted to a covenant, on the part of the feoffor, that Richard Cotton had been the owner of the messuage. It was considered by all merely a part of the description; and the only question made was, whether it could be so construed as to embrace the messuage in D. of which Thomas Cotton had been the owner, and it was held that the words •“messuage with the appurtenances in D.,” were sufficient of them*330selves; and the words, “lately of Richard Cotton,” were rejected as surplusage. In conclusion on this second branch of the case,I recur to the casein theYearBook 33 Hen. 6. 20 b. cited already íxomFinch’s Nato, 3 3, where A. reciting that he was seised in fee of the manor of I). granted a rent out of it to B. This shall not éstop A. to say, that he had nothing in the manor. This I consider a much stronger case in favor of raising a covenant of seisin, because it was a recital in express and technical terms that he the grantor jw&s seised in fee, and yet it was held not even sufficient to operate as an estoppel.
I fully concur in the principle laid dowmby the late Mr. Justice Yeates in the case of Gratz Lessee v. Ewalt, 2 Bin. 102, that “in conveyances of real estate there must álways be great danger in implying any thing that is not stipulated in clear and precise terms. This is the safest way of determining the extent of a grantor’s responsibility.” I am therefore, upon the view I have taken of this question, decidedly of opinion that this clause in the deed does not amount to a covenant of seisin, that it was not so intended, and that there was error in the charge of the court below on this point to the Jury.
The third question now presents itself for consideration. In the argument of this cause, the declaration was spoken of by the counsel as containing two counts, and seems to have been treated in the District Court on the trial as if it were so. In truth it contains only one; but it is not material whether two or one, for every clause, and part of the deed, which it was supposed might possibly be construed into a covenant, either expressed or implied, that would enable the plaintifís below to get clear of the land, and to recover back the purchase money with interest, are set forth in it and breaches assigned. The Court below in their charge to the Jury on the express covenant of general warranty, and the breach thereof set forth in the declaration laid down the law correctly enough, when they said, that without an eviction of the vendees, or a surrender by them of the land to a paramount title, there could be no breach 'of this covenant. But still, inásmüch as the Court erred in their (charge to the Jury on the second question, which has been already 'considered, the verdict andjudgment of the Court below cannotstand. For 'agreeably to the charge on the second question, the Jury were clearly bound to give the verdict they did, and it became altogether Unnecessary for them to consider whether there was an eviction or not Indeed I cannot perceive from the paper book, although it professes to Set out the evidence given on the trial, that there was any atteihpt to prove an eviction, or that the plaintiffs below were at any tiine disturbed in theirpossession of the land by the Penns, their heirs, assigns, or any body else. From the evidence given by the plaintiffs below, and the time at which they have in their declaration charged the eviction, I have great doubts *331whether it be practicable for them to make out a case that would entitle them to recover for the breach of this covenant of general warranty. The eviction is stated in the declaration to have been made on the first day of November, eighteen hundred and sixteen. But they proved that on the third of April preceding all the right and interest which Andrew Gotwalt had in the ten acres of land and its appurtenances were conveyed to George Christine, who had been his co-tenant, and also the co-plaintiff in this case in the Court below, by the sheriff of York county, who had sold thé same under judicial process to Christine. Immediately after George Christine got his deed of conveyance from the Sheriff, it may be supposed, that he got sole and exclusive possession of the whole of the ten acres; and if so it is not easy to imagine how Andrew Gotwalt could have been evicted afterwards on the first of November, eighteen hundred and sixteen, jointly with George Christine. Besides, Gofioalt, on the third of April preceding, ceased to have any interest in, or right to the land, and could sustain no injury whatever by a subsequent eviction of George Christine. Gotwalt had in effect parted with all his interest in the land, and received the pqrchase money, without making himself accountable in any event, for the goodness of the title. Literally it was not a sale by himself, yet in effect, the sale by the Sheriff, was the same as if he had sold to a purchaser, who agreed to run all. risk in respect to. the title. If any eviction took place after- George Christine became the sole proprietor under Whitehill’s title of the ten acres, he alone as it appears to me can maintain an action for it upon this covenant of general w?rranty. It is a covenant which runs \vith the lan,d until broken, and Christine, in case an eviction had taken place after he had become the exclusive claimant of the land under- White-hill’s deed of conveyance, might, as a party to the deed, and the covenant contained in it, for one moiety, and as assignee in law of Gotwali’s moiety have maintained an action in his own name, and in this way, only for such breach of the covenant of general warranty.
If there were no eviction anterior to the bringing of this action, it may reasonably be conjectured from what the plaintiff in error-offered in evidence, on the trial of this cause, but was objected to by the plaintifi’s counsel there, and over-ruled by the court, that none need be apprehended in future; For from that evidence it would appear that releases in favor of George Christine, and Andrew Gotwalt were obtained from the widow of John Whitehill, the father, and from his heirs in the course of five or six months after John M. Whitehill executed his deed, and that during the pendency of this suit, in August, eighteen hundred and twenty four, a complete extinguishment of the Penn title in favour of John M. Whitehill’s vendees was procured, so that all ground of complaint *332set forth in the declaration has been, it would seem, removed, and the heirs of George Christine made perfectly secure in their title to the land.
The Judgment reversed and a venire de novo awarded.