5 S.E.2d 889 | Ga. | 1939
1. In a suit for reformation of a deed, the grantor being the only defendant, relief will not be denied merely because of an outstanding title in a third party to an undivided interest in the property sought to be included in the description of the instrument as reformed.
2. A judgment refusing to grant a new trial on a motion complaining that the court directed the verdict in favor of the complainant in a suit to reform a deed will not be reversed on the ground that the court should have submitted to the jury the question whether the complainant used *198 reasonable diligence in pursuing his remedy, when the pleadings and the uncontradicted evidence demanded a finding that he used reasonable diligence.
1. It is insisted that the direction of the verdict was contrary to law, because the uncontradicted evidence showed that Fred L. Bender was the owner of only a half interest in the real estate which Randall Brothers Inc. sought to have included in the security deed. Whether, as insisted by counsel for plaintiff in error, Mrs. Bender is shown by this record to own an undivided half interest in the lot, or whether, as urged by counsel for defendant in error, the contention as to that is not supported by the evidence, is a question we put to one side, for the reason that Mrs. Bender is not a party to this suit, and hence she makes no such issue, and whatever is the final judgment in the instant case can not affect her interest. It matters not which of the two parties is correct as to that matter, for it can not affect the right of the defendant in error to the relief sought, if otherwise entitled thereto. Having represented to Randall Brothers Inc., as he admits he did, that he owned the entire title, he can not now impeach his own title as grantor, and can not defeat the right of the grantee by injecting into the case a claim that his mother owns a half interest. Sewell v. Norris,
2. It is insisted that the court should not have directed a verdict, because there were issues of fact which should have been submitted to the jury, to wit, whether or not Randall Brothers Inc. could have by reasonable diligence ascertained the mistake at the time the deed was executed. We recognize the principles contended for by counsel for plaintiff in error, that it is not in every case that equity will reform a contract or conveyance; that, as stated in the Code, § 37-211, "if a party, by reasonable diligence could have had knowledge of the truth, equity shall not relieve;" and that questions of negligence or of diligence are ordinarily questions for the jury. We do not think, however, that the admissions in the pleadings and the undisputed testimony call for the application of the foregoing principles. A mistake of the character here shown without dispute is relievable in equity. Code §§ 37-203, 37-205, 37-206, 37-215; Long v. Gilbert,
The clause heretofore quoted from § 37-211 was not intended to lodge any arbitrary discretion in judge or jury to deny reformation on the ground that the party seeking relief could by reasonable diligence have had knowledge of the mistake. The uncontroverted facts of this transaction show that reasonable diligence was used. The description was furnished by Bender; he personally obtained the description from the tax official at the city hall; he gave to the representative of Randall Brothers Inc. the description which he had thus obtained, not knowing that it was incorrect. He had volunteered to give a mortgage, and, when asked for the description to go into the paper, said he would go to the city hall and get it. He executed the security deed at the request of Thompson, the contractor (who had purchased the material from Randall Brothers Inc.), and agreed to put up the property as security for the bill. Bender testified: "As to whether both parties to this deed were just mistaken about the description: The City of Atlanta should have known; they wrote it out like it is. I was mistaken about it. I though I had the right description. I don't know whether I was mistaken about it or not, because I did not write out the description. It is a mistake, though, and I thought I was giving a correct description. As to whether the plaintiff in this case accepted it: They said the city hall had given the right description. They accepted the description, and thought they were accepting the correct description, and it turned out both parties were mutually mistaken about it." The verdict to the effect that a mutual mistake was made in the description, and that it be reformed and corrected as prayed for, was the only legal verdict that could have been rendered under the pleadings and the evidence. The refusal to grant a new trial must be
Affirmed. All the Justices concur. *201