268 Ill. 164 | Ill. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court:
This appeal is from a decree of the circuit court of Shelby county granting partition of certain real estate and other relief.
Warren S. Bivins and his two sisters are the grandchildren of Charles C. Scovil, from whom, through their mother, they inherited a tract of about fifty-five acres of land off the west side of the northwest quarter of a certain section 7, in Shelby county. The east line of the premises was irregular, and F. P.. Bivins bought eleven acres lying immediately east of the fifty-five acres, the east line of such eleven-acre tract being parallel with the east line of the quarter section and 1216 feet west of it. This tract was conveyed to the three children of F. P. Bivins. Warren S. Bivins was a young man twenty-four years old, who lived with his fathér and one sister and had been engaged with his father in farming and stock raising. F. R. Dove lived next door, only a few feet away. Charles King, twenty-nine years old, was a laborer, working for Bivins on his farm. Warren Bivins told King he wanted-to sell his land, and King went to F. R. Dove and B. W. Kerr about it. They agreed to pay King $100 if the trade were made. Warren Bivins did not talk with either Dove or Kerr while negotiations were in progress but all communications were made through King. The result was that Kerr and Dove agreed to buy the land, and Bivins went to Kerr’s office and executed a deed to Kerr and T. C. Dove, a brother of F. R. Dove, for his undivided interest in all of the northwest quarter of the section, except a strip 1216 feet wide off the east side. He received a check for $2500 and King another for $100. The controversy in the case is as to what Warren actually sold,—whether his interest in the land he inherited, only, or his interest in all the land in the quarter section, including the eleven acres bought by his father. The deed actually included the eleven acres. The father claims to have bought and paid for this tract with his own means "and to have had the title conveyed to his three children with the understanding that it should be conveyed to him if he should request it, his object being to have the title apparently in his children as "a protection against malpractice suits which might be brought against him as a physician. The deed was made Saturday afternoon, January 24, 1914. F. R. Dove, who was an attorney-at-law, immediately prepared a bill for partition for Kerr and his brother, and with Kerr met Dr. Bivins on the street, told him that they had bought Warren’s interest in the land, and asked him what he wanted done,—whether he wanted it partitioned or left as it was. Bivins said to wait a while and they would see what to do, and that he supposed Warren had sold his ten acres. Dove said he did not think Warren had sold any land of his father’s but only his own. On the next Monday morning the original bill herein was filed by Dr. Bivins and his two daughters against Warren, Kerr and the Doves, the object being to set aside the deed from Warren to Kerr and T. C. Dove and to have partition of the fifty-five acres. F. R. Dove filed a disclaimer, and later an amended bill was filed, in which Warren Bivins was joined as a complainant against Kerr and T. C. Dove, the prayer of which was that the defendants be required to re-convey to Warren upon payment of $2600, with interest and costs, or that partition be made of the fifty-five acres and F. P..Bivins be declared the owner of the eleven acres. The defendants filed a cross-bill, and on a hearing a decree was rendered setting aside the deed of Warren Bivins to Kerr and T. C. Dove on the ground of mutual mistake, directing partition of the fifty-five acres and dismissing the cross-bill.
The decree cannot be sustained on the ground that there was a mutual mistake in the description of the premises in the deed. The testimony of Warren Bivins and of King is, that what Warren intended to sell, and what he offered to sell, was his interest in the land he had inherited, and that he stated this to the appellants when he went to Kerr’s office and executed the deed. He had no conversation before with either of the appellants on that subject. All his communications had been through King, and though he saw and read the deed he, might well fail to know what land it described. The description was all the quarter section except 1216 feet off the east side. He was a young man not shown to have been familiar with the description of property in conveyances and «would probably rely upon the knowledge of appellants. That he was mistaken as to the land conveyed the evidence sufficiently shows. There was, however, no mistake on the part of the appellants. They were men of experience in real estate transactions and were acquainted with real estate titles and descriptions. Kerr was a real estate dealer. They had had the records examined and knew what appeared in them. They knew that fifty-five acres had been inherited from the grandfather and eleven acres acquired later by purchase, and they necessarily knew that Warren was conveying more land than he had inherited, though he and King both testify that he stated at the time that he was conveying one-third of the fifty-five acres. The land was worth $200 an acre. The purchase price of $2500 was that fixed by the seller, but it was low for his interest in the fifty-five acres and was still more inadequate for the sixty-six acres. The situation was one where the vendor had offered to sell one thing and the vendee believed that he was buying another. In such case the contract cannot be reformed. The mistake is not in the expression of the agreement of the parties, for the parties’ minds have not met,—there has been no agreement. Warren Bivins mistakenly conveyed property which he did not intend to convey. Thé appellants received the conveyance with full understanding. There was therefore no mutual mistake. A mistake on one side may be ground for rescinding but not for reforming a contract. A court of equity may rescind a contract at the request of one party who has entered into it, without negligence, through a material mistake of fact, when it can do so without injustice to the other party. Morgan v. Owens, 228 Ill. 598.
The appellees have assigned cross-errors on the record for the failure of the court to decree a rescission of the conveyance, and this assignment will be sustained.
The decree is reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court, with directions to enter a decree setting aside the deed from Warren Bivins to B. W. Kerr and T. C. Dove upon the payment of $2600, with five per cent interest from January 24, 1914, the costs to be paid by the complainants. The appellees will recover their costs in this court.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.