This action is for expenses and $600 attorneys’ fees charged to have been expended in defending title to 240 acres of land conveyed to plaintiff by defendant. The trial court found for plaintiff $10 expenses and $200 attorneys’ fee.
Prior to the litigation herein referred to, Chariton county was the owner of large tracts of what are known as “swamp lands.” In a general way, the present controversy relates to 560 acres of these lands in two tracts, one of 240 acres and the other o‘f 320 acres. The equitable title to these lands was transferred by mesne transfers to this defendant. Defendant afterwards sold the 240 acres to plaintiff by general warranty deed. The county brought an ejectment suit against the plaintiff for 120 acres of this 240 acres, and included in the suit the 320 acre tract which defendant had not conveyed to plaintiff, but which plaintiff claimed to own. It does not appear why the county did not-include all of the 240 acres in the ejectment suit.
Shortly after this ejectment suit was instituted, plaintiff brought suit in equity against the county for decree of title to both tracts. Soon after the institution of this equity suit, defendant brought his suit in equity against the county and this plaintiff for decree of title to the 320 acre tract. The judgment in the trial court only included expenses and counsel fees in the ejectment suit. Expenses and fees for the equity suit were, not allowed and no complaint is made.
It will be observed that this plaintiff was plaintiff in one suit against the county for decree of title to both tracts, one of ■which was not conveyed or warranted to him by defendant. That he was defendant in the ejectment suit brought *105by the county for one-half the land which defendant did convey and warrant to him, and for the 320 acre tract. And that he was co-defendant with the county in the equity suit which defendant brought for decree of title to the 320 acre tract which he claimed. The record shows that defendant was not notified by plaintiff of his equity suit against the county whereby he was seeking a decree of title to both tracts. And that neither was he notified of the ejectment suit brought by the county against plaintiff for one-half the lands he had conveyed and warranted to plaintiff.
In each of these cases plaintiff employed his own attorneys consisting of three separate firms. This defendant, as soon as he learned that the title which he had conveyed to plaintiff was attacked by the county, employed Mr. Huston (who, witnesses stated, was abundantly able and competent to attend to that or any other litigated question) to defend the title. At this point in the consideration of the case it becomes somewhat complicated from the fact that plaintiff’s attorneys were employed not only to protect plaintiff in the title which defendant had conveyed to him, but also to protect him in the title to lands which defendant had not conveyed to him. And that defendant employed his attorney not only to protect plaintiff in the lands he had conveyed to him, but also to obtain decree of title to the 320 acre tract claimed by the county and this plaintiff, and with which defendant’s warranty was not concerned. The facts are that all consulted together and that all three of the cases were tried together, all the attorneys participating and rendering valuable service.
1. The authorities are in conflict on the question whether attorneys’ fees paid by a covenantee in resisting an assertion of paramount title can be recovered of the covenantor. In this state it is settled that they can be. Hazelett v. Woodruff, 150 Mo. 534.
*1062. But as a prerequisite to such liability the covenantee should notify the covenantor of the proceeding against hfm. The cases are also not in harmony on this question. But they “suggest as a rule to be deduced from them that the plaintiff’s right to recover counsel fees as a part of his costs should, in general, be limited to cases where he has properly notified the party bound by the covenant to come in and defend the title, but that the neglect or silence of the latter should inure to the benefit of the plaintiff rather than to his own.” Rawle on Covenants, sec. 200. This view was rather assumed and not decided in Hutchins v. Roundtree, 77 Mo. 500, 508, and it is supported by Chestnut v. Tyson, 105 Ala. 149; Yokum v. Thomas, 15 Iowa, 67; Crisifield v. Storr, 36 Md. 129; Mercantile Trust Co. v. South Park, 94 Ky. 271, 279; Fulweiler v. Bangher, 15 S. & R. 55; Terry v. Drabenstadt, 60 Pa. St. 400; Finton v. Egelston, 61 Hun. 246; Sammis v. Sammis, 14 R. I. 122. The case of Wheelock v. Overshiner, 110 Mo. 100, does not relate to the point here involved.
We think it is the better rule and more consistent with the covenant. Eor the covenant is not, in terms, that the covenantor will pay all expenses of defense of paramount title, but that he will himself defend against the paramount title. He should therefore be given an opportunity to defend by notice of the action. Furthermore, as is intimated in some of the foregoing authorities, it may be that the breach of covenant is of such nature that the covenantor would willingly adjust it without litigation.
3. But in this case defendant, though not notified, became aware of the action against plaintiff asserting paramount title and immediately came in and employed the counsel aforesaid to defend the action. In such circumstances, the defendant should not be held for any counsel fees *107incurred by the plaintiff. Kennison v. Taylor, 18 N. H. 220; Conrad v. Effinger, 87 Va. 59.
4. But as plaintiff went to the expense of $70 in procuring necessary documentary evidence which was used in the trial and which defendant necessarily adopted as his own, he should be held liable for that much of the judgment rendered against him.
The judgment will therefore be affirmed if plaintiff will, within fifteen days remit $200 allowed as attorneys’ fees; otherwise it will be reversed and remanded.
Smith, P. J., concurs; Gill, J., absent.