104 P. 525 | Mont. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in this action seeks the reformation of two deeds, also an accounting for rents, and to have its title to the real estate in controversy quieted. The complaint alleges that on September 25, 1897, the plaintiff and the defendant Basin and Bay State Mining Company each owned an. undivided half interest in certain real estate in the town of Basin, in Jefferson county; that at the time the Basin and Bay State Mining Company acquired its interest the land was unimproved, and thereafter, but prior to September 25, 1897, plaintiff at its own expense erected valuable improvements thereon, of which it was the sole owner; that the title of the Basin and Bay State Mining Company stood in the name of Alexander J. and James Glass on the records of Jefferson county; that on September 25, 1897, it was agreed between the parties that the Basin and Bay State Mining Company should become the owner of one-half the improvements, and that transfer thereof should be made by the plaintiff to Alexander J. and James Glass, representing and acting for the company, to the end that the parties should be tenants in common of the land, together with the improvements thereon; that “it was intended by the parties interested that the deeds should convey a half interest undivided in the improvements, and it was not intended that any interest in the real estate should be conveyed, and also that it was not intended that any mineral reservation should be included in the deeds; that by the mutual mistake of all the parties the deeds were so written as to convey a half interest in the real estate as well as in the improvements, and also to make a mineral reservation. ” It is further alleged that the Basin and Bay State Mining Company collected and accounted for the rents until August, 1899, since which date it has refused to account therefor; also, that plaintiff did
The defendants denied all of the plaintiff’s allegations with regard to mistakes in the deeds, and denied the allegation of that paragraph of the complaint which set forth that plaintiff did not discover the mistakes until October 19, 1905. Defendants also alleged affirmatively that plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by the provisions of section 512 of the Code of Civil Procedure of 1895. Defendants’ so-called fourth defense reads as follows: “Allege that, as to the property mentioned in said complaint, the plaintiff herein gave a good and sufficient deed thereto unto Alexander J. Glass and James Glass, which by mesne conveyances has passed to the Basin and Bay State Mining Company; that said deeds were recorded in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Jefferson county, Montana, on the twenty-fourth day of March, 1900, in book 25 of Deeds, at page 72, and book 29 of Deeds, at page 84. Defendants allege that plaintiff is barred from maintaining this action for that the record of said county clerk and recorder are notice to the plaintiff herein, and plaintiff has delayed its application for reformation of said deeds for over five years after such notice thereof.”
At the trial James Glass testified in categorical substantiation of the allegations of the complaint, relating to the intention of the parties at the time the transfers were made, and that mistakes were made in the deeds. He was corroborated by R. H. Kleinschmidt, an officer of the plaintiff company, and it was stipulated that if Alexander J. Glass were present as a witness, he would testify to the same effect as had James Glass. Kleinschmidt also testified that the American Mining Company first became aware of the mistakes in the deeds at the time of a certain trial in court on October 19, 1905, and that he personally became aware of the error at the same time. No other officer of the plaintiff testified. At the close of plaintiff’s case, the defendants moved for a nonsuit, upon nineteen grounds, the principal of which are substantially: (1) That no equity is stated in the complaint or disclosed by
We think the district court erred in granting the motion for a nonsuit. It is not seriously contended that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The testimony of James Glass is ample to prove that mistakes were made in the deeds, and that they do not express the agreements between the parties. This being so, the plaintiff is entitled to the relief sought, unless its cause of action is barred by the statute, or it has too long delayed seeking the aid of a court of equity. This action was begun on December 11,-1905. The section of the statute relied upon in this court is referred to by the respondents in their brief as paragraph 4 of section 513, Code of Civil Procedure, 1895, which provides that the periods prescribed for the commencement of actions, other than for the recovery of real property, are (among others) “within five years: (4) An action for relief on the ground of fraud or mistake. The cause of action in such case not to be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud or mistake.” It is immaterial whether the period of limitation to be applied is two years or five years, for the reason that more than five years had elapsed from the time the transfers were made until the commencement of the action, and section 513, Code of Civil Procedure, 1895, is not specially pleaded; the defendants relying upon the facts set forth in their fourth defense. The objection that the action was not commenced within the time limited can be taken only by answer. (Revised Codes 1907, sec. 6475; Grogan v. Valley Trading Co., 30 Mont. 229, 76 Pac. 211.) It is conceded that the section specially pleaded—i. e., section 512, Code of Civil Procedure (Revised Codes 1907, sec. 6445)—has no application. But it is contended that the defendants in their fourth defense have pleaded the “facts showing'the defense,” and have theretofore brought them
We think the better rule to be established in this state is that the recording of the instrument is to be considered with other facts and circumstances in determining whether the plaintiff is. to be charged with notice, either actual or constructive, but that the fact of recording alone will not so charge him. In this connection it may be noted that the record of an instrument is not. required in order to charge the parties thereto with notice of its contents, but for an entirely different purpose. Having executed
Again, it is seriously contended by the defendants that the plaintiff has been guilty of such laches as will induce a court of equity to refuse it relief, even though its cause of action be not barred by the statute. We have no doubt of the correctness of the rule to the effect that the defendant in an equity case may avail himself of the laches of the complainant notwithstanding the time fixed by the statute has not expired (see Patterson v. Hewitt, 195 U. S. 309, 25 Sup. Ct. 35, 49 L. Ed. 214), and in cases where he has neglected to plead the statute or elected not to do so. (See Badger v. Badger, 2 Wall. 87, 17 L. Ed. 836.) It is undoubtedly true, as was said by the supreme court of Virginia in Persinger v. Chapman, 93 Va. 349, 25 S. E. 5: “Equity will not extend its aid to one who has been guilty of culpable negligence. It requires that the party who asks relief on the ground of mutual mistake shall have exercised at least the degree of diligence which may be fairly expected from a reasonable per
iWe find in the answer an allegation “that on the fourth day of January, 1906, in an action then pending in the district court of Jefferson, county, wherein plaintiff herein, American Mining Company, Limited, was plaintiff and defendants herein, Basin Reduction Company and W. A. Kidney, were defendants, being the same persons and corporations as are parties hereto, and for the same cause of action as that set forth in the complaint herein, judgment was duly given and made upon the merits of said cause, a copy of which judgment is hereto attached, marked ‘Exhibit A,’ and made a part hereof.” The
It was at the trial of the action referred to in the answer, as we read the record, that R. H. Kleinschmidt first learned that mistakes had been made in the deeds', and, as the plaintiff here was the plaintiff in that ease also, it is not a violent presumption that it then learned of the mistakes for the first time as testified to by Mr. Kleinschmidt, and the record seems to so indicate. According to the pleadings and testimony in the case we are considering, it was after the first case had been tried, and before the court had rendered judgment, that this action was commenced. In addition to the foregoing, Mr. Kleinschmidt testified to an intimate knowledge of the affairs of the American Mining Company, Limited. He said that he was its secretary and treasurer, and one of its trustees, at the time of the trial, and had held such official positions since its incorporation in 1890. It appears from the deeds of which reformation is sought that Mr. Hillebrecht was secretary in 1897. ' So Mr. Kleinschmidt probably meant to testify simply that he had been a trustee since 1890. He appears, therefore, to have been in a position to know whether the plaintiff discovered the mistake in the deed prior to October 19, 1905. We do not know from the record how long after 1897 Mr. Albert Kleinschmidt and Mr. Hillebrecht continued to be officers of the company, or where they were at the time of the trial. In view of the foregoing, however, and the fact that the defendants elected to offer no testimony at the trial, and the further consideration that it is so palpable from the testimony that the mistakes relied upon by the plaintiff were actually made, we feel that the relief prayed) for should be granted. This is a case which should be finally determined by this court. (Stevens v. Trafton, 36
The judgment and order of the district court for Jefferson county are reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court, with directions to ascertain the amount due the plaintiff on account of rents, and, if necessary, to take further testimony on that question alone. After such amount is ascertained, the court is directed to enter a judgment therefor in favor of plaintiff, and also reforming the deeds and quieting its title to the land in controversy, as prayed for.
Reversed and remanded.