273 Mass. 9 | Mass. | 1930
This is a suit for reformation of a deed. In 1915 Grace E. Nichols owned a tract of land in New Salem known as the “Abbott Place” and contracted to sell it to Clarence Joslyn. The consideration for the conveyance was Joslyn’s agreement to furnish her with board for four months and at the end of that time to execute to her a mortgage for $600, and he agreed not to have the deed recorded until this had been done. On August 11, 1915, she executed and delivered to him a deed which both parties understood to be a conveyance of the “Abbott Place,” but the deed contained a description not of the tract intended to be conveyed but of other land. It recited as part of the consideration a mortgage to be given by the grantee to the grantor. The deed was caused to be recorded by the grantee but the mortgage was not given.
Thereafter conveyances with the same erroneous description were made by parties believing they held the legal title, the last in the series being to the plaintiff in 1922.
Shortly after the conveyance to Joslyn his grantor married Napoleon E. Porter. In 1920 she learned for the first time of the error in the description and also learned that Joslyn had parted with his title. In 1922 she conveyed to the defendant Jennie A. Chandler by a correct description the property in question. Chandler was a bona fide purchaser for value. In 1923 she learned of the plaintiff’s claim to the property and in 1927 conveyed it by the same correct description to Napoleon E. Porter in consideration of his paying some of her bills. At the time of this purchase both parties to the conveyance and Mrs. Porter had knowledge of the facts, and the Porters then, and at all times after discovering the mistake in the description, intended to repudiate and ignore any claim to the property of the successors in title to Joslyn. After the conveyance to Napoleon E. Porter, he notified the plaintiff, of his claim of ownership to the property and thereafter this bill was brought.
The case was referred to a master whose report was confirmed and a final decree entered dismissing the bill with costs, the plaintiff having first expressed her unwillingness to take the premises subject to a mortgage for $600 and interest from December 11, 1915, or to pay the same as a condition of relief.
It is assumed for the purposes of this decision that Napoleon E. Porter has no greater rights than his wife, who was the original grantor, would have had if no conveyance had been made by her. Had Joslyn, the original grantee, sought to have the deed reformed, he would have been required as a condition of that relief to give the mortgage which he was under obligation to execute as a part of the consideration for the conveyance to him.
The, reference to the mortgage in the deed to Joslyn
Decree affirmed with costs.