To defeat this action to recover the amount of three promissory notes, the defendants pleaded false and fraudulent representations on the part of plaintiff, and a failure,of consideration resulting from a breach of all the covenants contained in a warranty deed from him to them for *27wliicb the notes were given. Judgment was entered upon a directed verdict for the full amount of plaintiff’s claim, and the defendants appeal. The recitals of the deed amount to the usual covenants of seisin, against incumbrances, and for quiet enjoyment. The undisputed evidence shows that at the time the deed was executed respondent surrendered the actual possession of the premises to appellants, which, so far as disclosed by the record, they still maintain and enjoy without the slightest interruption.
At the time the sale was made, the lien of a tax certificate was upon the premises, and, at the apparent suggestion of appellants, the note first due was placed in escrow, under an agreement by which respondent was obligated to remove such incumbrance before the maturity of the note. For the avowed purpose of perfecting the title, and removing any cloud upon the premises that might be in existence, respondent gave his note to the holder of the certificate for the amount necessary to redeem, but allowed the sale to ripen into a tax deed, and afterwards took to himself a conveyance from the grantee named therein, which according to the old maxim and the statute as well, passed ipso facto to appellants all the title thus acquired. “Where a person purports by proper instrument to grant real property in fee simple, and subsequently acquires any title or claim of title thereto, the same passes by operation of law to the grantee or his successors.” Comp. Laws, § 3254, Subdiv. 4. Viewed in the light most favorable to appellants, there is nothing tending to support the imputation of fraud, or justify any inference that they were ever evicted or in the slightest degree disturbed in possession or quiet enjoyment. Were we to assume that a defect in the title exists, this action to recover the *28purchase price could not be defeated while the presumption that respondent is able to respond in damages remains unchallenged. Price v. Hubbard, 8 S. D. 92, 65 N. W. 436; Bowne v. Wolcott, 1 N D. 415, 48 N. W. 336; Sanborn v. Knight (Wis.) 75 N. W. 1009.
Nor can the old rule of the common law, by which the burden was on the grantor to show affirmatively that there had been no breach of covenant, be invoked to defeat a recovery of purchase money, and relieve these grantees from offering testimony in support of their allegations of fraud and failure to convey title as warranted. Ingalls v. Eaton, 25 Mich. 32; Landt v. Major, 2 Colo App. 551, 31 Pac. 524; Hamilton v. Shoaff, 99 Ind. 63; Woolley v. Newcombe, 87 N. Y. 605; Hartshorn v. Cleveland, 52 N. J. Law, 473, 19 Atl. 974; Lathrop v. Grosvenor, 10 Gray, 52; Jerald v. Elly, 51 Iowa, 321, 1 N. W. 639. In Ingalls v. Eaton, supra, Judge Cooley says: “The burden of showing want of title is on the defendant. * * * It would be a curious anomaly in the law if the vendor, with the deed alone in evidence; could recover the purchase price, and then that the vendee, on precisely the same evidence and no other, could immediately turn about and collect it back again, on an assumption that the deed had conveyed no title.” For the reasons above given the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.