21 Mont. 13 | Mont. | 1898
— The Gaffney Mercantile Company brought this action to reform a certain written contract made between it and Charles Hopkins, and to enjoin him from prosecuting an action commenced by him against it upon the contract. Defendant demurred to the complaint for insufficiency. The court sustained the demurrer, and plaintiff electing to stand upon the complaint, judgment passed for the defendant, from which the plaintiff appeals. Pending the appeal, this court, as authorized by Section 23, Code of Civil Procedure, granted the injunction prayed by the plaintiff.
The single question presented is whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. It sets out that on July 19, 1897$ plaintiff and defendant entered into astipulation in writing, with respect to a certain suit entitled ‘ ‘ Chas. Hopkins v. H. Chambers and the Gaffney Mercantile Company, ’ ’ then pending and set for trial on that day, by the terms of which the case was to be continued, and a referee appointed to hear the evidence and find the amount due from Chambers to Hopkins, and that judgment for the amount so found should be entered against Chambers, “which said judgment, in consideration of this stipulation, and in consideration of the further fact that there are now and there will be
The complaint does not set up the facts necessary to entitle the plaintiff to a reformation. ‘ ‘Reformation is appropriate when an agreement has been made, or a transaction has been entered into- or determined upon, as intended by all the parties interested; but in reducing such agreement or transaction to writing, either through the mistake common to both parties, or through the mistake of the plaintiff, accompanied by the fraudulent knowledge and procurement of the defendant, the written instrument fails to express the real agreement or transaction.” (Pomeroy on Equity Jurisprudence, § 870.)
Section 3132 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which merely declares the common-law rule, is as follows: “When the terms of an agreement have been reduced to writing by the parties, it is to be considered as containing all those terms and, therefore, there can be between the parties and their representatives, or successors in interest, no evidence of the terms of the agreement other than the contents of the writing, except in the following cases : (1) Where a mistake or imperfection of the writing is put in issue by the pleadings. * * «’5
Section 4430 of the Civil Code, affirmative of an equity doctrine, reads : ‘ ‘When, through fraud or a mutual mistake of the parties, or a mistake of one party, which the other at the time knew or suspected, a written contract does not truly express the intention of the parties, it may be revised on the application of a party aggrieved, so as to express that intention, so far as it can be done, without prejudice to rights acquired by third persons, in good faith and for value. ’ ’
The mistake or imperfection must be pleaded. (§ 3132, supra, Gamble v. Knott, 40 Ga. 199; McMinn v. Patton, 92 N. Car. 371; Anderson v. Logan, 105 N. Car. 266, 11 S. E. 361.) Neither directly nor by inference does the complaint allege any mistake, mutual or unilateral, in the making of the contract, nor a mistake or inadvertence in its reduction to the
The allegation concerning the understanding between the parties, subsequent to the execution of the stipulation, as to its import, in no wise remedies the defect pointed out. It falls, moreover, within the inhibition of section 2281 of the Civil Code, providing that “a contract in writing may be altered by a contract in writing or by an executed oral agreement, but not otherwise. ’ ’
Defendant suggests that the complaint is in other particulars defective; but, since the reason we have assigned is sufficient to sustain the court below, they will not be considered. The judgment is affirmed, and the injunction issued by this court is dissolved, with costs.
Affirmed.