This is a bill to obtain reformation and cancellation of a lease, from the defendant to the plaintiff, of a piece of vacant land in Cambridge for three years from September 1, 1955. Paragraphs 6 and 7 of the bill read in part as follows: “6. The plaintiff signed . . . upon the specific representation and agreement that the . . . land was to be used as a place ... to sell automobiles and that if a license to sell automobiles was not obtained then the lease was to be . . . void and all sums paid ... to the defendant under said lease would be returned .... 7. By inadvertence of the parties . . . the . . . representation and agreement were . . . not incorporated in the lease . . ..” It is alleged that the request for a license was denied.
The defendant filed a demurrer which assigned as reasons therefor, among others, (1) the pendency as shown by the bill of actions at law 1 brought by the defendant to recover rent for the months of May, June, July, and August, 1956; *450 (2) the adequacy of the remedy at law; (3) that the bill shows “that the plaintiff seeks to vary a written instrument concerning an interest in land and that the representations . . : were not in writing as required by” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 259, § 1; and (4) that the allegations of paragraph 7 state a conclusion of law and do not set forth facts to inform the defendant of the claim asserted.
The demurrer was sustained on the third and fourth grounds mentioned, and, the plaintiff having failed to take advantage of leave to amend, a final decree was entered dismissing the bill. The plaintiff appealed both from the interlocutory decree sustaining the demurrer and from the final decree.
1. Paragraph 6 of the bill alleges that the lease was signed “upon the specific representation and agreement” that if a license to sell automobiles was not obtained, the lease was to be void. The quoted words may perhaps indicate that the “representation” was oral (see
Southwick
v.
Spevak,
2. The defendant contends that the plaintiff has inadequately pleaded the facts of a mutual mistake, which would support the requested reformation of the lease. It is argued that the allegation of paragraph 7 of the bill, with respect to the omission “by inadvertence” of the alleged agreement for invalidation of the lease (if a license was not obtained), is an allegation only of a conclusion of law (compare
Cabot
v.
Assessors of Boston,
In
Tremont Trust Co.
v.
Burack,
The situation is unlike that which would be presented by an allegation that performance by the plaintiff had been obtained by “duress” (see
Fleming
v.
Dane,
Doubtless, where practicable, more detailed allegations of the manner in which the mistake occurred as, for example, by the failure of a scrivener to understand and carry out instructions, ought to be made where such specification is practicable. The allegations in the present case, however, seem sufficient to be good against demurrer and adequately to inform the defendant of the mistake which is alleged to have taken place and the basic facts with respect to it.
*453
See
Monach
v.
Koslowski,
3. Notwithstanding the statutory right under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 31, to raise equitable defences at law, the plaintiff here is not barred from appropriate equitable relief, by way of reformation, on the ground that it has an adequate remedy at law in the actions brought against it. See
Elm Farm Foods Co.
v.
Cifrino,
4. It is unnecessary at this stage of the litigation to consider whether, if at the trial it shall appear that the agreement to include the omitted provision was oral, reformation must be denied because the omitted provision may have been within the statute of frauds, 2 or whether the omitted provision is of a character, or other circumstances exist, which may make the statute of frauds inapplicable. 3
*454 5.. The interlocutory decree sustaining the demurrer and the final decree are reversed, the demurrer is to be overruled and the case is to stand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
The bill also alleges that in a prior action the defendant recovered (by default and not after hearing on the merits) rent for the months of February, March, and April, 1956, and that the plaintiff paid rent for September and October, 1955, in advance. The bill does not show whether rent for three additional months was paid before the license was denied.
See also 45 Am. Jur., Reformation of Instruments, §§ 98-100. Compare cases under the specific requirement of Rule 9 (b) of the Rules of Civil Procedure for the District Courts of the United States (
See
Glass
v.
Hulbert,
See
Stockbridge Iron Co.
v.
Hudson Iron Co.
