238 P. 591 | Mont. | 1925
The plaintiff in his pleadings urges that the defendant at the time of making the contract had knowledge of this defect. This the defendant denies; but in any event knowledge of a defect of title at the time of entering into a contract for the purchase and sale of real estate is immaterial. (Newmyer v. Roush,
It appears that the main point in the plaintiff's contention was that defendant having entered into an option contract and having made a layman's perusal of an abstract, and thereupon the defendant having "closed the deal," he thereby bound himself to accept whatever title the plaintiff had. The case most closely "on all-fours" with that contention and showing the same to be erroneous is Craig v. White,
Mistake: In the case of Comerford v. United States F. G.Co.,
In 1908 R.B. Ayers made entry upon public lands of the United States including the south half of the southeast quarter of section 22, township 9 north, range 55 east, in Custer county, and in 1910 received a patent therefor, which patent contained the following reservations: "Reserving also to the United States all coal in the lands so granted and to it or persons authorized by it, the right to prospect for, mine and remove coal from the same upon compliance with the conditions of and subject to the limitations of the Act of March 3, 1909, 35 Stat. 844 [U.S. Comp. Stats., sec. 4665]." For convenience this eighty-acre tract will be referred to hereafter as the "government land." Ayers also acquired title to all of section 23 in the same township and *521 range, consolidated the two parcels into one ranch, and improved and cultivated the same until late in 1909, when he returned to make his home at Sparta, Wisconsin, from which place he had come to Montana.
During the summer of 1916 Lewis Buswell came from his home at Kendall, Wisconsin, to this state, and while here had his attention directed to the Ayers ranch. On his return home, Buswell opened negotiations for the purchase of the ranch, with the result that he and Ayers entered into a memorandum in writing on October 7, 1916. Buswell then returned to Montana and made an examination of the ranch, and Ayers had an abstract of the title prepared which he delivered to Buswell on October 30 or 31. On November 13 Buswell went to Sparta for the purpose of completing the negotiations, and after some conversation he and Ayers repaired to the office of R.B. Graves, an attorney, where a formal contract for the purchase and sale of the Ayers ranch was prepared and signed by Ayers and his wife and by Buswell. The contract, as prepared and signed, contained the provision that Ayers and wife would "make, execute and deliver to said second party [Buswell], his heirs or assigns, upon demand therefor, a good and sufficient warranty deed in fee simple of the premises above described, free and clear of all liens and encumbrances, except taxes and unpaid purchase price hereunder."
Early in 1917 Buswell took possession of the ranch and continued in possession, cultivating and improving the same until August or September, 1922. He also made the payments on the purchase price from time to time up to and including January, 1921. On November 12, 1921, Buswell wrote to Ayers as follows: "My attorney advises me after looking over the abstract and my contract, that you are unable to give me a warranty deed in fee simple as it provides in my contract, for there are reservations in your title as shown by the abstract." Negotiations followed which failed *522 of their purpose, and on July 14, 1922, this action was commenced.
As ground for reforming the written contract of November 13, 1916, it is alleged that the agreement actually made by Ayers and Buswell was that Ayers and wife should convey the property to Buswell by warranty deed, free from and clear of all encumbrances, except taxes and the unpaid part of the purchase price and the coal and mining rights in the government land reserved in the United States by its patent; that is to say, that Buswell was to receive the same title to the government land that Ayers had received by the patent, but by the mutual mistake of the parties in having the terms of their agreement reduced to writing, the exception of coal and mining rights was omitted. Issues were joined and the cause brought to trial. The court called a jury, to which special interrogatories were submitted. The first and second of these only are material here and, with the answer to each, are as follows:
"(1) Was it the purpose and intention of plaintiff and defendant that plaintiff would convey to defendant the title to the premises referred to in this case as government lands subject to the government reservation of coal and coal mining rights as shown by the abstract delivered to defendant? Answer: Yes.
"(2) Did the written contract executed by the parties in this action upon November 13, 1916, contain all of the terms of the agreement between them? Answer: No."
The court adopted these findings and, in addition thereto, made somewhat elaborate findings of its own, all in favor of the plaintiff, and rendered and had entered a judgment reforming the contract and decreeing specific performance thereof as reformed. From that judgment defendant appealed.
As reformed by the court, the contract requires Ayers and wife "to make, execute and deliver to said second party [Buswell], *523 his heirs or assigns, upon demand therefor, a good and sufficent warranty deed in fee simple, of the premises above described and free and clear of all legal liens and encumbrances except taxes and unpaid purchase price hereunder, and except and subject tothe coal and coal mining rights in and to the south half of thesoutheast quarter of section 22 in township nine north of rangefifty-five east, Montana Meridian, reserved to the United Statesgovernment by its patent dated December 15, 1910, and recorded onthe 17th day of April, 1911, at five p.m. in Book X of Deeds atpage 395 of the records of Custer county, Montana, under the Actof Congress of March 3, 1909." The change made consists of the addition of the italicized words, and the only question raised by this appeal is: Does the evidence justify the change?
The abstract furnished by Ayers disclosed the coal and mining reservations as they appear in the patent, and it is not disputed that Buswell had the abstract in his possession continuously from October 30 or 31, 1916, until February or March, 1922, and that he had examined it before November, 13, 1916.
We agree with counsel for defendant that the mere fact that[1] defendant may have had actual as well as constructive notice of the existence of the coal and mining reservations in the government land does not affect the contract or warrant reformation (Key v. Vidovich,
For centuries courts of equity have exercised the right to[2] reform contracts on the ground of mistake and to make them represent truly the intentions of the parties. (2 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, 4th ed., sec. 838 et seq.) In this state the subject is governed by statute. Section 8726 provides: "When, through fraud or a mutual mistake of the parties, or a mistake of one party, which the other at the time knew or suspected, a written contract does not truly express the intention of the parties, it may be revised on the application of a party aggrieved, so as to express that intention, so far as it can be done without prejudice to rights acquired by third persons, in good faith and for value."
In Parchen v. Chessman,
The testimony given upon the trial of this case covers nearly 300 pages of the record, and only the briefest reference will be made to the salient features of plaintiff's story. That story, as told by the plaintiff on the witness-stand, when reduced to its simplest terms, is to this effect: At the very inception of the negotiations Ayers informed Buswell of the coal reservations in the government land, and it was then agreed that Buswell would go to Montana and examine the ranch, and in the meantime Ayers would have an abstract *525 of the title prepared. Ayers said to Buswell: "If the abstract shows a title good enough so you think it is all right, you can have the property; otherwise you need not take it," and Buswell replied that he would examine the land and then the abstract and "decide whether it is satisfactory." After Buswell returned from examining the land, and on October 30 or 31, 1916, Ayers delivered the abstract, and Buswell said, "I want time to look it over and I want to submit it to my attorney." About November 4, Ayers received a letter in which Buswell wrote that he had examined the abstract, "but there is some parts which I want to talk to you about. You may have the rest of the papers made out so we can complete the deal." In response to this letter Ayers went to Kendall but was unable to see Buswell, who was absent. On November 13 Buswell went to Sparta, sought out Ayers, and after some conversation the two started for the office of Mr. Graves to have the contract prepared. On their way to the office, Ayers asked Buswell whether he had had his attorney examine the abstract, to which Buswell replied, "No, I have not; but it looks good enough for me anyway." It was understood throughout the negotiations that if the deal was completed, Ayers would convey, and Buswell would accept, such title to the government land as Ayers had received from the United States, — in other words, such title as was disclosed by the abstract. At the attorney's office Mr. Graves was asked to prepare the contract, and Ayers and Buswell gave him the description of the lands, stated the amount of the purchase price, the terms of the agreement, etc., but neither mentioned the reservations in the government land. Ayers simply forgot to mention the matter and Buswell did not mention it. Mr. Graves testified that he assumed — not from anything said by either Ayers or Buswell, but rather from their silence — that they wanted the contract to provide for a warranty deed conveying perfect title, and he had his stenographer copy a printed form *526 of contract in general use in Wisconsin, which contained the provisions which appear in this writing. Ayers did not remember whether he read the contract before he signed it, or at all, until he received Buswell's letter of November 12, 1921. There are numerous facts and circumstances which tend to corroborate Ayers' testimony, and some which have the contrary effect; but after all is said that can be said, the plaintiff's case rests primarily upon the plaintiffs own testimony.
The function of the jury was to enlighten the chancellor, and[3] in the performance of that duty, to pass upon the credibility of the witnesses in the first instance. The court was not bound by the jury's findings, but was free to disregard them for any reason or without reason; but the fact that the court did adopt the jury's findings and made other findings of its own in harmony with them is ample evidence that the court as well as the jury accepted the plaintiff's testimony as true, despite the contradictory testimony of the defendant and his witnesses. The plaintiff, having pleaded the mistake, had to sustain the burden of proof, but the issue raised by the pleadings was to be determined by the preponderance of the evidence.
Upon the second appeal in the Parchen-Chessman Case,
It is true, as stated by defendant's counsel, that the only direct evidence that a mistake was made, and that it was mutual, is to be found in the testimony of the plaintiff, but, as said in the case last cited: "Neither can it be questioned that the preponderance of the evidence may be established by the testimony of a single witness as against a greater number of witnesses who testify to the contrary; for section 7861, Revised Codes [10505, Rev. Codes 1921], declares that: `The direct evidence of one witness who is entitled to full credit is sufficient proof of any fact, except perjury and treason.'"
According to plaintiff's theory, the mistake consisted in the unconscious forgetfulness of a material fact, viz.: that the contract should contain a provision excluding the coal and mining rights in the government land.
It is suggested that plaintiff failed to make out a case even[4] upon the most favorable view of his own testimony, andComerford v. United States F. G. Co.,
If the testimony of the plaintiff is to be believed, the intention of the parties was clear, and that intention is made known in terms sufficiently explicit that no one can be in doubt. It will not do to say that plaintiff's forgetfulness was the result of his own negligence and therefore he should be denied relief. At the time the contract was drafted, plaintiff was sixty-six years old and apparently had not been accustomed to transacting business of this character to any considerable extent, and he was dealing with a man twenty *528 years younger who for twenty-four years theretofore had been engaged in the real estate business. These were matters properly to be considered by the trial court in determining whether the plaintiff had presented a case which ought to appeal to the conscience of a chancellor. Furthermore, section 8726, Revised Codes, authorizes a court of equity to grant relief for mutual mistake, and every mistake involves the idea of negligence to a greater or less degree.
In Brundy v. Canby,
It is the rule in this jurisdiction that in an equity case[5] this court will not interfere unless it appears that the evidence in its entirety preponderates decidedly against the trial court's findings. (Allen v. Petrick,
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICES GALEN, STARK and MATTHEWS concur.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY, being absent on account of illness, did not hear the argument and takes no part in the foregoing decision.
Rehearing denied July 6, 1925.