55 A.2d 617 | Vt. | 1947
On February 26, 1938, the parties to this action entered into a written contract whereby the defendants agreed to sell and convey to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff agreed to purchase, certain real estate, "described approximately as follows: Two hundred and seventy-five (275) acres located in the town of Westminister, Vermont, known as the farm of Ernest E. Bemis and more fully described in the deed of said premises recorded in Westminister Town Clerk's office, Book 30, page 20," together with certain described personal property. The contract price was $4200. of which $420. was paid by the plaintiff to the defendants at the time of signing the contract, as that instrument provided that it should be, and the balance was due at the time set therein for the delivery of the deed, and the possession of the premises, April 30, 1938, at 11 A. M. The contract further provided as follows: "It is understood and agreed that the property herein described has been inspected by the Buyer or the Buyer's duly authorized agent; that the same is and has been purchased by the said Buyer solely as a result of said inspection."
The transaction was not consummated and the plaintiff has brought this action to recover the sum of $420. which has not been repaid to her by the defendants, together with interest thereon. The original writ was dated August 17, 1938, with a declaration in the common counts. On December 14, 1945, the plaintiff filed what she calls her specification, but what is in reality an additional count to the declaration, which contains allegations that the contract for sale was entered into between the parties; that before April 30, *211 1938, it became apparent that the defendants were unable to convey 275 acres of land; that she rescinded the contract and demanded the return of the $420. down payment, which was refused. That thereafter the defendants conveyed the property to third persons, thus making it impossible for them to carry out the contract.
The cause was tried by jury and resulted in a directed verdict for the defendants. The exceptions of the plaintiff challenge this ruling, and also the admission of certain evidence.
The only witness who testified at the trial was the defendant Ernest E. Bemis, who was called by the plaintiff. It appears that the plaintiff and her husband gave their depositions in New York City, but these depositions were not put in evidence. Bemis testified that he said to the real estate agent with whom he listed the farm for sale that the acreage was 275 acres more or less, as near as he could tell. He had never had the property surveyed. He testified that he and his wife, the other defendant, attended at the time and place appointed in the contract for the purpose of closing the sale, along with their attorney, for the purpose of giving the deed but that the plaintiff "called the deal off." No reason for her doing so was given. Subsequently, on May 19, 1941, the defendants conveyed the farm to Edward J. McDougal, Jr. and Katherine E. McDougal, describing it as containing 200 acres more or less.
We first consider the exception to the granting of the motion for a directed verdict. The plaintiff here and below has taken the position that the parties labored under a mutual mistake in estimating the acreage of the farm, and that therefore there was no meeting of their minds upon the subject matter, and no contract existed, which gave the plaintiff the right to the return of the money that she had paid. In her brief the issue is thus stated: "The question is whether a prima facie cause of action for the return of the down payment of $420. has been established based on the variation of the quantity of land contained in the land contract and the admission of the defendants on the quantity of their land in their deed to the McDougals."
The defendants maintain that the contract was for the sale of the specified tract of land, that is, for a sale in gross and not by the acre; that the statement of the approximate acreage was mere matter of description; that the plaintiff, or her authorized agent, had inspected the property before the execution of the contract; and that she contracted in reliance upon the information thus obtained regarding its contents. *212
Where a contract has been entered into under a mutual mistake of the parties regarding a material fact affecting the subject matter thereof, it may be avoided in a court of law at the instance of the injured party, and an action lies to recover money paid under it. Bedell v. Wilder,
It is clear that this contract was for a sale in gross. The phrases "described approximately as", in the agreement, and "more or less" in the deed from the defendants to the McDougals, referring to the acreage in each instance, are the same in meaning. They are words of safety and precaution, intended to cover some slight and unimportant inaccuracy and, where the property is described by metes and bounds, and the identity of the tract is in issue, are regarded as a mere matter of description, since the boundaries control the quantity actually conveyed. Parrow v. Proulx,
In Darling v. Osborn,
McDonough v. Hanger,
If it is shown that the hazard of gain or loss, whatever it may be, was accepted by the parties and entered into the contract, relief will be refused. O'Connell v. Duke,
The equitable principle of the decisions above mentioned applies in the present case. The plaintiff agreed to purchase a designated parcel of land, containing, with allowance for slight and unimportant inaccuracies, 275 acres. By their deed to the McDougals, the defendants conveyed all and the same land as containing 200 acres, with the same allowance. The latter description was an admission by them that the farm consisted of only about that quantity, Trustees Caledonia Co. Grammar School
v. Howard,
The doctrine of our cases is that there must be a reliance upon the mistake regarding the subject matter of the contract, in order to gain relief. Flint v. Davis,
The fact that the plaintiff or her agent inspected the farm before the execution of the contract does not necessarily show the absence of a mistake as to its quantity. Bigham v.Madison,
We are of opinion, therefore, that the issues of mutual mistake and reliance thereon should have been submitted to the jury, and that there was error in the direction of the verdict.
Since the question has not been raised either here or below, we do not consider whether the conduct of the defendants in failing to take steps to enforce the contract and in conveying the property to third parties was such as to permit the jury to find an implied assent on their part to a recission of the agreement. Brown v. Aitken,
An exception was taken to the exclusion of the agreement for listing the property for sale between the defendants and the real estate broker. It is claimed to be admissible because it contained a statement that the farm contained about 275 acres. If there was error in the ruling, it was harmless, because Ernest Bemis admitted that he had so stated when he listed the property for sale. Ainsworth v. Hutchinson,
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
The so-called "specification" is inartificially drawn, but is sufficient to raise the issue of recission. As we have seen, it is *216
alleged therein that before the day set for the completion of the sale (April 30, 1938) it became apparent that the defendants were unable to convey 275 acres of land, and that the plaintiff rescinded the contract. The action was not brought to recover damages suffered by a breach of the contract but to recover the part of the purchase price that had been paid. The evidence, introduced for the purpose of showing that the acreage of the farm was much less than what was agreed to be sold, and that the plaintiff refused to accept the deed, is not inconsistent with the claim of a rescission of the contract. Added to this is the plaintiff's contention that there had been a mutual mistake, made in the trial court. It does not appear that there has been a change of theory in the conduct of the plaintiff's case.Brown v. Aitken,
The second ground of the motion is that the evidence was such that the jury could not find that the actual size of the farm was only about 200 acres, without indulging in conjecture. This argument was fully presented by the defendants' brief on the original hearing. We held, however, that there was a question for the jury. In the contract the land was represented to consist of 275 acres, and it is not claimed that this representation was made in bad faith or otherwise than as the result of a mistake. As is said in the defendants' brief on this motion, Ernest Bemis did not know what the acreage was. More than three years later the defendants, in their deed to the McDougals, admitted that the same farm contained only about 200 acres. In determining the relative credibility of these two statements the jury would have been justified in considering whether, in view of the latter, the defendants had not in the interim during which they remained in possession and control of the property acquired a more accurate knowledge of its extent than they had when they executed the contract for sale.
Lastly, it is insisted that the clause in the contract to the effect that in entering into it the plaintiff relied solely upon an examination of the premises by herself or by her agent, necessarily implies that there could have been no reliance upon anything else, hence no reliance upon the defendants' representation as to the quantity of land embraced in the farm. If this were an action based upon a fraudulent representation there would be force to this argument. But, as we have pointed out, in cases where a mistake is alleged as *217 a ground for the rescission of a contract the requisite reliance must be upon the erroneous belief which constitutes the mistake, in the same way that reliance upon a false representation must be shown where fraud is in issue. It may well be that an inspection of a parcel of land will result in a mistake as to its extent. For this reason the provision in the contract is not, as a matter of law, conclusive upon the question presented here.
We see no reason for revising our decision that the cause should have been submitted to the jury.
Motion for reargument denied. Let full entry go down.