259 Mo. 86 | Mo. | 1914
The plaintiff acquired the title to the sixty and a half feet by devise from her late husband Louis Fischer, who died about the year 1897. He acquired the twenty-five and a half feet described in this deed from E. L. Dye in 1880, and erected a brick building on the north end of it flush with the east line, and twenty-three and one-fourth feet wide and extending south from Fourth street, on which it fronted, about seventy feet, thus leaving a strip west of the building two and one-fourth feet wide. In 1886 he acquired the thirty-five feet adjoining it on the west and extending to the west line of lots two and three. He then erected on that part of his land west of the first building an-' other building afterward called Fischer Opera House, which extended one hundred and thirteen feet south from the south line of Fourth street and occupied the entire thirty-seven and a half feet west of the first building constructed, which was commonly known as Fischer’s little store. The walls of these two buildings were independent, although in actual contact, for a distance of sixty feet south from Fourth street. Thence to the south end of the little store, the wall of the opera house building was used as a common wall.. The little store lot was vacant south of the south end of the building except that about twenty feet of the south end was occupied by a warehouse of the same' width as the store. At the time of the sale-to Hob-
Mrs. Fischer resided in Detroit, Michigan. Mr. T. A. Bruce of Salem was her agent with respect to this property. Mr. Hob'son proposed to him to buy the little store and he wrote to Mrs. Fischer for terms. She answered by letter addressed to Mrs. Bruce, contained the following upon the subject of that deal:
“Mr. Bruce asks about the price of the two stores. I have given him the prices. I will not change the the prices. The little store I will not take less than $4000 cash for, and for the big store $11,000. Would take one-half cash and balance payable $1000 yearly, secured by deed of trust, first mortgage, at six per cent. ’ ’
Mr. Bruce says he showed the letter to Mr. Hob-son, who does not deny that he read this part of it. There was a misunderstanding about its meaning; both Hobson and Mr. Bruce thinking the time provision quoted applied as well to the little store as the big one. After some further correspondence Hobson and Seay acceded to Mrs. Fischer’s terms after the receipt from her of the following letter:
“April 29th/07. 507 Field Ave.,
Detroit, Michigan.
Mr. T. A. Bruce, -Salem, Mo.
“Dear Friend: — I am in receipt of your letter 27th. Am sorry that you misunderstood my terms. I asked $4000 cash for the little store and $11,000 for the big store. The big store one-half cash and balance in $1000 payments, yearly, with mortgage at six per cent per annum, secured by deed of trust. I have a copy of what I wrote to you.
*90 “I have abstract of the property. Sorry that this turned up a misunderstanding. If you get the $4000 cash the sale is made. I do not want to bother with mortgage on the little store.”
Hobson and Seay sold and conveyed the land to the defendant Dent by the same description on October 3, 1907, for $5000, and he took possession.
During the summer of 1909, Mr. Selby, the tenant of the opera house building, ih doing some measuring to verify sidewalk bills, discovered that the description in the deed from Mrs. Fischer to Hobson and Seay covered two feet three inches of the east side of the opera house building, and went to Mr. Dent to talk with him about it. Mr. Dent immediately began to do some measuring himself,, and the warehouse building on the south end of the lot, which had, up to that time, stopped at the extension of the line between the two buildings, having become dilapidated, he fixed it up, extending it two and one-fourth feet' further west. Up to that time he says that he never knew that his land went any farther than the east wall of the opera house, but that he intended to purchase twenty-five and a half feet of the ground and thought that the little store building was that width. He said it got so dilapidated and rotten that he “took and tore it out and put it out on the line where it belonged.” The defendant Mary A. Judson claimed under mortgage from Hobson and Seay, dated May 9, 1907, to secure $2000. The judgment of the court, after reciting the facts, is as follows:
“Wherefore it is considered and adjudged by the court that in equity and good conscience that the said deeds should be reformed so as to conform to the true intention of all parties to these transactions, and that twenty-three and one-half feet of ground will cover the entire building known as the little store building, including part of the wall adjoining of the opera house building, and that said amount of ground extending*91 back from the front to the rear of said lots is all that should be described in said deed and was all that all of the grantees in all of the above recited conveyances intended to buy and all that the grantors intended to sell; and that all of said instruments are hereby reformed and corrected so as to describe the real estate conveyed thereby and in each and every one of them hereinbefore recited, as follows, to-wit:
“A part of lots two and three, in block fifteen, west side of the creek, in the city of Salem, Dent county, Missouri, as follows, to-wit: Commencing thirty-seven feet east of the northwest corner of said Tot two; running thence east twenty-three and one-half feet; thence south one hundred and sixty-five feet, to the south line of lot three; thence west twenty-three and one-half feet; thence north one hundred and sixty-five feet, to the place of beginning. ’ ’
There can be no doubt as to the intention of both parties to the sale and transfer of the land in question from Mrs. Fischer to Hobson and Seay. Whatever might have been their idea as to the proper description tó be employed to express it, there is no question as to the thing which was the subject of the transaction. They purchased the little store and the ground on which it was situated, the width of which was as perfectly marked by the width of the warehouse on Third street as by the width of the store on Fourth street. They took possession of that property, never suspecting that they'were not then in possession of everything they had purchased. A tenant was in possession of the opera house building and no complaint was made by the purchasers of this property that he was not within his right in the occupation of every square foot of that building. The unquestioned possession of the respective parties measured the claim of each, and was for that reason evidence of their intention in the transaction which was the origin of that claim.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
PER CURIAM. — The foregoing opinion of Brown, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.