On the fifth day of May, 1875, the defendant conveyed the forty acres of land in question to Patterson, by a deed containing the statutory words “grant, bargain, and sell,” and also a covenant of general warranty. On the twelfth of September, 1878, Patterson, by a like deed, conveyed the same land to plaintiff. Plaintiff brings this suit for damages on the covenants in the deed to Patterson.
1. There is a question made as to whether the petition declares on the covenants of seisin only, or on that and the covenant of warranty. The petition' is very carelessly prepared, but we think it shows a purpose to declare on both. As the cause will be remanded, the plaintiff can amend so as to bring both covenants fully *328on the record proper, and we shall' treat the case as if such an amendment were made.
2. The plaintiff put in evidence the two deeds' before mentioned, and showed that the land was a part of the swamp lands of Chariton county, and that Riddle • was the owner, by deeds, from and through the county. He testifies that, after he bought the land he found defendant had no title, and, on further inquiry, found that Riddle had taken possession long before plaintiff had purchased the same. The plaintiff concedes that the full measure of his damages is the amount he paid, with interest. For proof of damages he relies alone on the' recital of three hundred and fifty dollars consideration paid by him in his deed from Patterson ; and the question is whether this made out a prima facie case. As to the parties to a deed, the consideration clause is ;prima facie evidence, but it has the force and effect only óf a receipt, and is open to explanation and contradiction, not for the purpose of defeating the deed as a conveyance, but for the purpose of showing the true consideration. 57 Mo. 552; 76 Mo. 33. Generally, however, the recital in the consideration clause is not evidence of the amount paid, or the value of the premises as to third persons. Rose v. Taunton, 119 Mass. 100. We have held that the recital of the place of residence' of the grantee in a deed is not evidence of the fact in his own favor. 30 Mo. 166. The question arose in a foreclosure suit in a case decided by the supreme court of Ohio, and reported in 1 West Rep. p. 53. There H. sold the property and by his contract agreed to make a deed upon payment of the purchase money. He then made the mortgage on the same premises. Thereafter the purchaser assigned his contract and the successive assignees made divers payments. H. then made a deed to the last assignee, reciting payment in full, and it was held' this recital was not evidence of payment in full as against the mortgage. A substantial issue in this case *329was, liow much did Allen pay, and tlie burden of proof was upon the plaintiff. The statement of the amount paid in the deed is no more than the declaration of Pah terson. Kennedy is no party to that deed, claims nothing'under it, and we must hold there was a failure of proof. Where the contest is between a prior unrecorded deed, and a subsequent recorded deed, the question is, whether the holder, under the recorded deed, purchased in good faith for value and without notice. The deed there may well be regarded as giving the grantee a prima facie standing in court, but we express no opinion here in that class of cases ; the issue there is unlike the present one.
3. As to the covenant of seisin of an indefeasible estate in fee-simple, the claim is, that this covenant, if broken at all, is always .broken when made, and does not run with the land. Whatever may be the rule elsewhere, with us, it is more than a covenant in the present tense. It is rather a covenant of indemnity, and it has often been held that it runs with the land to the extent that if the covenantee takes any estate, however defeasible, or if possession accompanies the deed, though no title pass, yet, in either event, this covenant runs with the land and inures to the subsequent grantee, upon whom the loss falls. Dixon v. Desire, 23 Mo. 151; Chambers v. Smith, 23 Mo. 174; Maguire v. Riggin, 44 Mo. 512; Jones v. Whitsett, 79 Mo. 188.
4. Both covenants in the Kennedy deed were broken before the plaintiff purchased ; for Riddle, the owner of the title, had taken possession under it, and Patterson was without title or possession. On this state of the case the contention of the defendant is, that covenants only run with the land until breach ; that they then become dioses in action, which cannot be assigned. Many authorities do hold that choses in action cannot be assigned so as to enable the assignee to sue in his own name at law, but that is not the law of this state. Dam*330ages arising from, the breach of the covenants in a deed may be assigned, and when assigned, the assignee, and he alone, can sue. Van Doren v. Relfe, 20 Mo. 456. The only remaining question is, whether the deed to plaintiff will operate as an assignment of the prior covenants so as to protect the assignee as to the damages lie has sustained. As having some bearing upon this question, it may be stated that, by our statute, any person claiming title to real estate, may, though there be an adverse possession, convey his interest as if he were in the actual possession. R. S., 1879, sec. 673. Kimball v. Bryant, 25 Minn. 496, was an action on the covenant of seisin in a deed from defendant to Hardy, who conveyed with full covenants to the plaintiff. The grantor in the first deed had no title, and it did not appear that he was ever in possession. The court said : “The covenant is taken for the protection and assurance of the title which the grantor assumes to pass' by his deed to the covenantee ; and where the covenantee assumes to pass that title to another, it is fair to suppose that he intends to pass with it, for the protection of his grantee, every assurance of it that he has, whether resting in right of action or in unbroken covenant; so that if, before enforcing his remedy for breach of the covenant, the covenantee execute a conveyance of the land, unless there be something to show a contrary intention, it may be presumed that he intended to confer on his grantee the benefit of the covenant so far as necessary for his protection — that is, that he intends to pass all his right to sue for the breach, so far as the grantee sustains injury by reason of it.” See, also, Scofield v. The Iowa Homestead Co., 32 Iowa, 318.
In Wead v. Larkin, 54 Ill. 498, the court, after reaching the conclusion that, where the covenantee takes possession and conveys, the covenant of warranty in the deed to him will pass to his grantee, although the cov-enantor may not have been in possession at the time of *331his conveyance, proceeds to say: “It is not, however, to be supposed, because we do not lay down a broader rule than is required by the case before us, that we hold, by implication, the covenants would not pass if the immediate covenantee should convey before taking possession. * * * We should be inclined, rather, to-say, that, although the covenant of warranty is attached to the land, and for that reason is said, in the books, to' pass to the assignee, yet this certainly does not mean that it is attached to the paramount title, nor does it mean thatit is attached to an imperfect title, or to possession, and only passes with that, but it means, simply, that it passes by virtue of the privity of estate, created by the successive deeds, each'grantor being estopped, by his-own deed, from denying that he has conveyed an estate-to which the covenant would attach.”
As our covenant of seisin runs with the land, what is there said as to the covenant of warranty is equally applicable to it. The Patterson deed contains full covenants, and it was certainly the purpose to transfer to-plaintiff whatever covenants and assurances the grantor held, whether broken or unbroken, and no good reason is perceived why the intention of the parties should not be made effectual, instead of being frustrated and wholly defeated. Had Patterson brought the suit on the covenants, we are of opinion that the deed to plaintiff would have been a complete defence. The plaintiff, on making-proof of damages, will be entitled to recover. That many authorities would lead to a, different result, is conceded, but the reason of many of them is overthrown, when it is shown that choses in action are assignable, that the covenant of seisin runs with the land, as an indemnity to the party who, in fact, suffers the loss, and that real property may be conveyed, though in the adverse possession of another.
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded.
All concur.