131 Ga. 694 | Ga. | 1908
(After stating the facts.)
The court-did not dismiss the petition because no cause of action was set forth, but because the plaintiff did not restore or offer to restore the $100. The defendant demurred to the plaintiff’s prayer for reformation, on the ground that the allegations made did not warrant the prayer, and that the prayer was virtually asking that the release pleaded by the defendant be rescinded; and contends that the court did right in requiring the restoration of the $100 by the plaintiff. The plaintiff filed other special demurrers to the allegations on
The plaintiff in his petition as amended prayed for a reformation of the writing purporting to be an accord and satisfaction, alleging that such writing did not contain the true agreement between the parties, but that the true agreement was that the $100 was paid by the defendant and received by the plaintiff as part settlement of his claim for damages, and that the balance of the settlement was to be made as hereinbefore set forth. Under the plaintiff’s allegations, he was laboring under a mistake as to what
The contract between parties is what they agree upon, and the writing is merely the evidence of such contract. It should be borne in mind that this is not an attempt to rescind or set aside a contract, but to reform a writing so as to make it speak the real agreement entered into. Where a party seeks to rescind or set aside a contract, he will not be permitted to repudiate it and at the same time retain the benefits received thereunder, but must put the other party in statu quo before he can maintain any action in which it would be involved. Asking the reformation of an instrument is in no sense the repudiation of a contract; but is, on the contrary, an effort to affirm the real contract which the writing, when reformed, will evidence, and the party seeking such reformation would be entitled to retain any amount which he had rightfully received thereunder, both parties still resting under any unfilled obligations which the contract may impose. Plaintiff does not seek to have the court either to rescind or ignore the writing, but to reform it, and in its reformed and proper condition to preserve, recognize, and enforce it. He asks that when the writing is put by the court in the condition of telling the truth about-the agreement, it be given effect by crediting the $100 on the plaintiffs claim for damages. If this writing was as plaintiff seeks to have it declared in his petition to reform it, it would show on its face that the $100 was simply to be credited on his claim for damages, and would not stand in the way of his action for any balance that might be due him on that account. The court committed error in dismissing the petition because the plaintiff did not refund to the defendant the $100 received. ’
Judgment reversed.