67 Miss. 502 | Miss. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mrs. Sinnott exhibited the bill in this cause against Atkinson to cancel a deed she had made to him, as obtained by fraud, or, if upon hearing, this relief should be denied, she prayed specific performance of its terms against him. The instrument giving rise to the controversy is here set out, and is followed by the only paper signed by Atkinson. The deed is as follows :—
“ N. Sinnott and wife, deed to Wm. Atldnson.
“ State op Louisiana,
“ Parish op Orleans.
“For and in consideration of the sum of one thousand dollars, to be paid to us within -ten days from the date hereof as per agreement entered into with William Atkinson, of Magnolia, Miss., we
N. Sinnott. .
Arabella D. Sinnott.”
This instrument was properly acknowledged as a deed by the grantors before a notary public in the city of New Orleans on the day of its date. On the same day Atkinson, by his agent, delivered to Mrs. Sinnott a written promise to pay money, in the following-form, as claimed by Mrs. Sinnot, but Atkinson asserts that the words “ to be,” which are italicized, were inserted ¿herein by complainant after its delivery by him:—
“New Orleans, August 19th, 1887.
I hereby agree to pay to Nicholas Sinnott and A. D. Sinnott the sum of one thousand dollars ($1000) within ten days from date, or upon approval by my attorney of a certain deed to be made to me by said parties to a certain tract of land in Pike county, Mississippi, known as the Sinnott Place.
Wm. Atkinson,
Attest J. H. Levy. Per R. M. McDonald.”
Complainant seeks to avoid the conveyance made by herself and husband on the ground that it was obtained by fraud. But the only fraud averred, or sought to be proved, is that while she and
The alternative prayer for relief was that the court should direct and compel the defendant tp pay to complainant the sum of $1500, and that the whole land composing the Sinnott place, including both that part sold to Atkinson at $1000 and the homestead reservation, valued at $500, should be decreed subject to sale for the
The question is whether there was a sale of the whole premises at the sum of $1500, as the chancellor has found, or a sale only of the land, exclusive of the residence lot, at the sum of $1000, with the privilege or option secured to Atkinson to become the owner of the residence lot upon payment of the further sum of $500.
This question is determinable from the contract of the parties as found in the writings signed by them. While the conveyance uses words in reference to the residence lot of well settled technical significance, and which imply a present grant, the context shows that a different construction should be put upon them to meet the meaning in which they were employed. In the prior portion of the conveyance the residence lot was expressly reserved, while a fixed price, to be paid at a fixed time, and evidenced by a written obligation of the grantee, was stipulated to be paid for the other land. The concluding clause of the deed, while using words of present conveyance of the home lot, indicates that the conveyance thereof was to be effectual only “ upon” the payment of the price named, $500; and neither by the deed nor by any writing signed by Atkinson, is there imposed on him the correlative obligation of paying the price or accepting the deed as conveying this land. In fact, he did not enter upon the possession of this part of the property, nor is it claimed, either in the pleading or evidence, that he agreed to be the purchaser thereof. It is a well settled rule of construction that where the whole of a written instrument shows that the parties thereto employed technical language in a sense different from its ordinary meaning, the primary meaning of the words is what the parties meant, and not what the technical words usually import. Elphistone on Interpretation of Deeds, rule 16, page 76. “It is a rule of construction that the sense and meaning of the parties in any particular part of an instrument may be collected ex antecedentibus et consequentibus; every part of it may be brought into action in order to collect from the whole one uniform and consistent sense, if that may be done.” Lord Ellenborough, in Barton v. Fitzgerald, 15 East, 540.
Looking only at the clause having reference to the residence part of the lot, we find the present effect of the granting words limited and restrained by the words which succeed it, by which it appears that the conveyance was to be operative as to this lot only upon the payment of the purchase price. The taking effect of the grant evidently depended on something to be thereafter done, and which must be done as a condition precedent to the operation of the grant. But there is nothing in the deed or in the conduct of the parties from which arises an obligation on the part of Atkinson to perform the condition. If he 'had been admitted to the possession of the property, and had accepted the possession, claiming under the deed, a different question might be presented. It may be that even then he would have been compelled either to pay the money or surrender the possession. But, confessedly, there has been neither a recognition of his right to possession by complainant, nor a claim by him of such right. It was never the intention of the grantors to make an immediate sale of the residence lot, nor of Atkinson to make an immediate purchase.
Looking to the deed alone, we find nothing which binds him to buy. If we look to the circumstances of the parties to discover therefrom what meaning they intended to convey by the use of the words, “ upon the payment of the sum of five hundred dollars,” it is clear beyond all doubt that no present sale was intended. The complainant testified that she was unwilling to make a present sale of the residence, which she desired to retain as a place of recreation for an invalid husband during his life, and that the pur
We find nothing'in the deed from which a present conveyance of the residence lot, or an obligation on the part of Atkinson to buy it, can be inferred; and, since he tendered with his answer the money due for the land he did buy, the money should have, been directed to be paid to complainant, and she should have been denied interest on said sum and costs of court.
The decree is reversed on the appeal of the defendant, Atkinson, and cause remanded.