134 Mo. 484 | Mo. | 1896
This is a suit in equity to reform two deeds, one dated October 16, 1889, and executed by E. N. Peyton and wife to John L. Harrison and John Hamilton; the other dated November 27, 1889, executed by said Harrison and Hamilton and their wives to plaintiff, both deeds conveying lot 3 and the west half of lot 2 in block 29, in Freeman, Cass county, Missouri.-
The petition in effect avers that sixteen and one half feet off the east side of lot 4 (which lies imme
The defendants with the exception of the grantors in the deed to plaintiff and John R. Dolan are the heirs of said E. N. Peyton now' deceased. Dolan was made a party defendant after the suit was commenced; exactly how, or for what purpose, is not disclosed by the record, other than there seemed to be an impression that he owns that part of lot 4 in question.
The answer is a general denial.
From a judgment and decree correcting the deeds as prayed for, defendants appealed.
At the time of the sale of the property and the execution of the deed therefor by Peyton to Harrison and Hamilton he was the owner of lots 2, 3, and 4, in the north half of block 29.
The following plat will show the location of the lots, as well also as the location and boundary of that portion in controversy.
North Half of Block 29..
When Harrison and Hamilton bought from Pey-ton, all of that part of lot 4 east of the dotted line, and lot 3, and the west half of lot 2, were inclosed by a fence, and so remained until after plaintiff’s purchase from them.
There was also on the property described in the ■deed to them a three room frame dwelling house. At the same time there were on the land in dispute a small stable and cistern which were used in connection with the house, and the fence, which then stood on the dotted line in lot 4, was pointed out to them by Pey-ton as being the western boundary line of the land.
Hamilton testified that during his negotiations for the property, he and Peyton were on the west fence, and he said to Peyton, “Ed, I want to know how much land there is here, how much is it;” and Peyton said “there is a lot and a half of a lot;” and Peyton further said, “it is all inside of this fence, inclosed in this fence; what you see in here embraces that;” and, Hamilton testified, “I took it for granted that that-fence was around a lot and a half of gi'ound.”
Hamilton also.testified as follows:
“Q. Did he tell you what, lot and a half it was?' A. Yes, sir; just what was described in the deed; then I looked at the deed and found it corresponded with what he told me about it.
UQ. What did he tell you? A. He told me all of lot 3 and half of lot 2, in block 29; that is the way*489 I understood it; I did not know anything about the lines, how they run, and I did not take any time to investigate it; and I took it for granted that the fence was on the line; that west fence was on the line; and I thought all.of the fences were as near on the line as we get them in Freeman, and so we got the deed, and after that—
“ Q. Tell the court whether or not there was anything said about selling you any more land than lot 3 and the west half of lot 21 A. No, sir; not at that time.”
He further testified that when he and Harrison purchased the property they were put in possession by Peyton of all that was inclosed by the fence and that they placed plaintiff in possession of the same property when they sold to him.
It does not appear that Peyton knew where the lines between the lots were, but that he sold to Hamilton and Harrison all the land inclosed by the fence, and that they so bought not only seems clear from the evidence of Hamilton, but is shown by all the evidence in the case. And it makes no difference so far as their rights, and plaintiff who claims under them, are concerned, that the deeds do not embrace the land actually sold.
Hamilton and Harrison did not buy the land as described in the deed to them, but bought the land that was inclosed by the fence which they and Peyton understood to be correctly described by the deed from himself and wife to them, when it was not. It was a mutual mistake between the parties to the deed from Peyton to Harrison and Hamilton in that the land in question is not a part of lot 3 and the west half of lot 2, and the same mistake entered into the sale of the lot by Harrrison and Hamilton to plaintiff. The grantees in both deeds had the right to rely upon the statements
In Butler v. Barnes, 60 Conn. 170, it was held that a mutual mistake of grantor and grantee in supposing land staked and pointed out to the grantee by the grantor belonged to the latter, while in fact it included a strip belonging to an adjoining owner, whose land was made a boundary by a description of the premises in the deed, entitled the grantee to have the deed reformed.
In the case in hand the land was inclosed by a fence and presents a much stronger case for equitable relief than that case did.
It is immaterial whether the error in the description of the land actually pointed out and sold was the result of intentional or unintentional mistatement on the part of Peyton as equity will afford relief as well in the one case as in the other. Smith v. Jordan, 13 Minn. 270; Botsford v. McLean, 45 Barb. 478; Bush v. Hicks, 60 N. Y. 298; De Peyster v. Hasbrouck, 11 N. Y. 582.
Our conclusion is that the evidence clearly shows that there was a mutual mistake between Peyton and Harrison and Hamilton in that the description of the land as contained in the deed by him to them, does not embrace all the land pointed out, and represented by him as being inclosed by the fence, and part of lot 3 and the west half of lot 2, and that the same mutual mistake existed in the sale and deed from Harrison and