“When a purchaser accepts a subject from the seller tantum et tale as it stands in the person of the latter, he accepts it with all its advantages and all its faults; he comes precisely into the right and place of the seller: if the subject or the right sold turns out to be more valuable than was thought, the purchaser has the advantage; if otherwise, he bears the loss.” John Trayner, Trayner’s Latin Maxims 595 (4th ed. 1894).
tantum et tale
tantum et tale (tan-t[schwa]m et tay-lee). [Latin] Hist. So much and of such a kind.