103 N.W. 405 | N.D. | 1905
This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment for plaintiff in an action to recover damages for the breach of a contract to convey real property. The complaint alleges, in substance, that on April 19, 1897, defendant made a written contract with the plaintiff to convey to the latter, for the sum of $1,500, payable in installments, the west 'half of lot 13, in block 17, and lots 8, 9, 10 and 11, of block 16, of the original townsite of Wahpeton, deed to be delivered on completion of the payments, but the purchaser to have possession of the premises from the date of the contract. It alleges that the purchase price had been fully paid on or about November 22, 1902, and all other terms and conditions of the contract 'Complied with by plaintiff; but that the defendant refused to convey the lots in block 16, and had no title thereto, and demands $1,200 damages. The answer admits the execution of the written contract; the pajunent of the purchase price; refusal of the defendant to convey the south three-fourths of -the lots in block 16, because it never had title to that part of said lots. It alleges that on December 24, 1902, the defendant delivered to the plaintiff a deed, and thereby conveyed to him a clear title to the west half of lot 13 in block 17, and the north one-fourth of the lots in block 16, and that the plaintiff accepted and retained the same. It further alleges that when the contract was made it was the in
The principal point relied upon for reversal is the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, and presents the same questions as were involved in the motion to direct a verdict. The facts disclosed .by the evidence are as follows: The plaintiff’s father was at one time the owner of the property described in the contract of sale. He mortgaged the lot in block 17 and the north one-fourth of the four lots' in block 16 to the defendant for a loan of $800. The mortgage was recorded and contained the usual power of sale. This mortgage was foreclosed by advertisement, and the property covered by the mortgage was sold at the foreclosure sale February 17, 1894, to the defendant, for the full amount of the debt. No redemption was made, and defendant received a sheriff’s deed of the premises September 9, 1895. The sheriff’s deed and all the papers evidencing the foreclosure were duly recorded, and the premises sold are therein described as in the mortgage, so that the record at the time of -the transaction in question showed that the defendant held title to the north one-fourth only of lots 8, 9, 10 and 11 in block 16, and the west half of lot 13 in block 17. The plaintiff’s father had a house and blacksmith shop on that part of the lots covered by defendant’s mortgage, and for some reason, not disclosed by the evidence, had been permitted to remain in possession of the property after the expiration of the time for redemption. The lots were otherwise unoccupied. In the spring of 1897 the father had apparently been in communication with the defendant’s agent at Fargo with a view to buy back the property lost by the foreclosure. He then requested his son, the plaintiff, to purchase the same from the defendant. Pursuant to this request, the plaintiff wrote to J. B. Lockhart, who was
Upon these facts, which are undisputed, we have no hesitation in holding that the plaintiff is entitled to> no relief. It is too clear for argument that the real agreement between the parties — the proposition upon which their minds met — was that the defendant intended to sell and the plaintiff to buy the property which the defendant had acquired by the foreclosure. The agreement was, in effect, that the son should be permitted to redeem the property which his father had lost by the foreclosure of defendant’s mortgage. The writing which was intended to evidence that agreement described more land than was included in the foreclosure. It is a clear case of mistake of fact as defined by the Civil Code in section 3853, Rev. Codes 1899 : “Mistake of fact is a mistake not caused by the neglect of a legal duty on the part of the person making the mistake, and consisting in: (1) An unconscious ignorance or forgetfulness of a fact, past or present, material to the contract; or (3) belief in the present existence of a thing material to the contract which does not exist, or in the past existence of such a thing which has
It is urged that the mistake in the description was due to defendant’s own negligence, in that its agent failed to examine the foreclosure papers and get the correct description. The same criticism could be made with equal propriety of plaintiff’s conduct. Mere failure to avail one’s self of the “means of knowledge” does not bar relief from mistake, provided there is no “neglect of a legal duty.” See note to section 762, Field’s Civil Code of New York, and cases cited; also Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, vol. 2, section 856, and cases cited.
It is unnecessary to determine in this case whether rescission or reformation would have been the appropriate relief to which defendant would have been entitled upon discovery of the mistake, because the evidence 'conclusively shows that the parties agreed in effect, upon a reformation of the contract. By the letter of May 14, 1902, the plaintiff was informed of the mistake, and that defendant would not execute the contract and deliver the deed except in accordance with what it asserted was the real intention of the parties. It was a proposition which, under the circumstances, it was the duty of plaintiff to either accept or reject. His reply to that letter and his subsequent conduct cannot be interpreted, consistently with honest dealing, to be anything but an assent to the defendant’s proposal to treat the contract as if it were revised to accord with the real intention of the parties. His letters and •course of conduct were calculated, and there is strong reason to think were expressly designed, to induce the defendant to believe that its proposal was accepted, and consequently to forbear resort
A written contract may be altered by an executed parol agreement. Rev. Codes 1899, section 3936. For the reasons stated, we hold that the evidence conclusively establishes a proposal by defendant to alter the terms of the written contract, and an acceptance of that proposal by the plaintiff. The final payments, delivery and acceptance of the deed were a complete execution of that modification of the written contract. The executed parol agreement was, in effect, a reformation of the written contract by the act of the parties so as to make it conform to their real intentions.
For the foregoing reasons it was error to deny defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, and there must be a new trial.
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered.