Estoppel As Affecting Title To Real Property: Marquette Law Review
Estoppel As Affecting Title To Real Property: Marquette Law Review
Estoppel As Affecting Title To Real Property: Marquette Law Review
Volume 7
Article 6
Issue 2 Volume 7, Issue 2 (1923)
Repository Citation
Elmer W. Roller, Estoppel as Affecting Title to Real Property, 7 Marq. L. Rev. 81 (2009).
Available at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/mulr/vol7/iss2/6
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the agent, the deed, at least in form, not being the deed of the
principal, it was held that the principal was not estopped by the
covenant of warranty. It was further held that the agent, as
grantor in the deed, was estopped by the covenant of warraity.
North v. Henneberry, 44 Wis. 3o6.
The rules of estoppel pertaining to deeds, as such, are equally
applicable to mortgages. The mortgagor is estopped to assert
anything in derogation of the mortgage instrument. He is bound
by the covenants in the mortgage and will not be permitted to set
up, as against the mortgagee and his privies, any outstanding title
in another, nor will he be allowed to deny in himself such title as
this defeasible form of conveyance purports to pass. Caple v.
Switzer, 122 Mich. 636, 81 N. W. 560; Macloon v. Smith, 49 Wis.
200. In the latter case the court held that mortgagors who have
covenanted to defend title against adverse claims, are estopped to
allege title in a third person.
A person without title or a defective title to land, who assumes
to convey by a deed containing full covenants of warranty an
estate of particular description, and subsequently acquires an
estate or interest in the land, is estopped by the covenants of
warranty in his deed to set up, as against his grantee, such subse-
quently acquired interest or estate in the land. The grantor can-
not convey his after-acquired estate or interest to a third person,
because he has divested himself of this power by his first war-
ranty deed. The subsequently acquired interest or estate of the
grantor, therefore, immediately inures to the benefit of and be-
comes complete in, the grantee. The grantee has acquired his
title by estoppel. Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Corey, supra; Van
Rensselaer v. Kearney, ii How. (U. S.) 297; Dye v. Thompson,
126 Mich. 597, 85 N. W. 1113 ; Henrick v. Patrick, 119 U. S. 156;
Nichol v. Alexander, 28 Wis. 118; North v. Henneberry, supra;
Mclnnis v. Lyman, 62 Wis. 191, 22 N. W. 405. In the Henne-
berry case the agent, acting under a power of attorney, executed
a warranty deed which was in the form of a personal deed from
the agent, except that it described him as an attorney in fact
acting by virtue of a power of attorney from the owner and
described the premises as belonging to the owner. The court held
that the agent who executed the deed was estopped by its cove-
nants from setting up a title subsequently acquired by him from
the principal. It was contended by counsel that the agent ought not
to be estopped from setting up the title subsequently acquired by
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him from the principal, because the deed on its face showed that
the agent was not the owner of the land at the time he executed
the conveyance. But the court answered (page 319) : "It is the
co'cnant which gives force to the estoppel, and'not so much the
implied or express statement in the deed that the grantor had title
at the date of the grant. The grantor will not be permitted to
hold the estate against his solemn covenant that he will defend his
grantee and his assigns in the full and perfect enjoyment of the
same forever."
And likewise, where one, who, having no title or a defective
title to land, gives a mortgage thereon containing covenants of
general warranty, or covenants of seisin and against incum-
brances, subsequently acquires a title to such land, such after-
acquired title immediately inures, by the doctrine of estoppel, to
the benefit of the mortgagee and those in privity with him.
Caple v, Switzer, 122 Mich. 636, 8i N. W. 560; Avery v. Judd,
21 Wis. 262.
Since an estoppel by deed arises from that which has been
covenanted, agreed and declared in the deed itself, it is clear that
nothing can be estopped which is not, expressly or by implication,
definitely agreed or alleged in the deed. In order to raise an
estoppel against the grantor, therefore, it is essential that the deed
on its face, either expressly or' by implication, reading the deed
in light of its whole content, clearly and directly purports to
convey absolutely an estate of particular description. And if
the invalidity of the grantor's title appears on the face of the
deed, clearly an estoppel is impossible. Van Rensselaer v. Kear-
ney, supra, Gilmer v. Poindexter,1o How. (U. S.) 257.
A quitclaim deed, being in effect nothing more than a release
of such right, title and interest as the grantor may have at the
time of the conveyance, passing no estate of particular descrip-
tion, will not generally raise an estoppel. A conveyance of all
the right which the grantor had or might have to land, will not
create an estoppel. "This legal effect can occur only where a
party has conveyed a precise or definite legal estate or right, by
a solemn assurance, which he will not be permitted to vary or
deny." Gilmer v. Poindexter,supra. A quitclaim deed will not,
therefore, operate to estop the grantor from setting up an after-
acquired title. Jourdainv. Fox, 90 Wis. 99, 62 N. W. 936.
Where, however, in a deed quitclaim in form, reading the
instrument in light of its whole content, it is apparent that the
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exception claimed does not apply where the deed by which the
premises are conveyed contains express covenants of warranty
or quiet enjoyment. The question in such -cases, as in all other
cases arising out of the construction of deeds, is one of intention;
and where it appears to have been the object of the covenant to
assure to the grantee, or covenantee, the full and absolute enjoy-
ment of the property, without any right of the grantor to divest
or interfere with the possession at any time thereafter, there is no
reason or principle why it should not operate as an estoppel to
avoid circuity of action against a claim of the grantor to a sub-
sequently acquired estate, where a present right or interest, in
fact, passed at the time the grant was made, as well as when
nothing whatever passed."
In Myrick v. Kahle, supra, B. E. Edwards was the holder of
tax deeds and certificates to certain lots. In 1885, he and his wife
deeded their interest to the appellant, the holder of the original
title, covenanting "that neither I, the said B. E. Edwards, nor
my heirs nor any person or persons claiming by, through or under
us or them shall at any time hereafter by any way or means have,
claim or demand any right, title, interest or estate by, in or to the
aforesaid premises or appurtenances or to any part or parcel
thereof, forever." In 189i, Edwards obtained a tax deed to these
lots, on the tax certificate issued in I885, which he held when he
made the deed. It was held that such interest as Edwards may
have acquired by the tax deed of 1891, inured to the benefit of the
appellant by virtue of the covenant in the deed of 1885.
Where a deed containing general covenants of warranty, con-
veys a present interest or estate in real property, a title subse-
quently acquired by the grantor will inure to the benefit of the
grantee, whether such after-acquired title be acquired by purchase
or vest in the grantor by descent. In Weisner v. Zaun, supra,A,
tenant by courtesy and owner in fee of an undivided one-sixth
part of land, as heir-in-lawr of a deceased son, conveyed the same
to Z, the grantor of the defendant. The deed purported on its
face to convey the entire tract of land. Subsequently, A acquired
another one-sixth interest in fee, which he inherited as heir of
his son. The court held that the one-sixth interest subsequently
acquired by A by descent, by virtue of the covenant of warranty
in the deed, inured to the benefit of the defendant's grantor (A's
grantee) by way of estoppel.
As was announced in the case of North v. Henneberry, supra,
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may purchase and enforce the mortgage against the land." Meritt
v. Byers, 46 Minn. 74,48 N. W. 417; Walther v. Briggs, 69 Minn.
98, 7i N. W. 9o9.
to all the world which binds every person to examine and re-
spect the true owner's title and it therefore constitutes an
available and convenient means of acquiring knowledge of the
true state of the title. Ford v. Smith, 27 Wis. 261 Kingman v.
Graham, supra; Two Rivers Mfg. Co. v. Day, supra.
The mere fact that the owners deed is on record, however, will
not avail the true owner of the premises against a claim of title
by estoppel, where such owner, by an affirmative misrepresenta-
tion, induces the person claiming the estoppel -to believe that he
is not the true owner of the premises. It would be highly
inequitable, first to permit the true owner of realty, by some
affirmative misrepresentation, to induce an innocent party to
honestly believe and act upon the belief, that title -to the land is
in another, and then, when the true owner's title is assailed, to
permit toi point with immunity to his record of title. The record
of title may not be used as an instrument to accomplish the
perpetration of fraud, against which the whole doctrine of estoppel
is directed. In Two Rivers Mfg. Co. v. Day, supra, in which the
plaintiff corporation positively stated to the defendants that it did
not own the tract of land in question, the fact that the plaintiff
company's title was on record and open to examination by the
defendants, was no defense to the claim of estoppel because the
absolute disclaimer of the plaintiff company was such as to en-
courage and mislead the defendants into making expenditures
upon the bad or doubtful title.
And the record of title is no defense to a claim of estoppel
in pais, in a case where -the true owner of lands has actual
knowledge that another is bona fide claiming title or right thereto
in ignorance of the true owner's title. It is not permitted that
the true owner shall stand idly by and suffer an innocent party to
purchase and expend money upon the premises, or to exercise acts
of dominion and ownership over the property, under the honest
but mistaken belief that he has title thereto. The fact that the
party who is acting in good faith upon the mistaken belief that
he is the owner of the premises could have easily discovered the
true state of the title by examining the records, will not preclude
him from setting up an estoppel against the true owner who had
knowledge of the innocent mistake but who stood by in silence.
The silence of the true owner, who has knowledge of the mistake,
becomes a fraud. Under these circumstances, equity makes it
incumbent on the true owner to assert his title, notwithstanding
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