9 Ga. App. 578 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Lead Opinion
(After stating the foregoing facts.) The mistake in the contract was manifestly a lapsus pennae, and no reformation of the contract was necessary. In Thompson v. Hall, 67 Ga. 630, it is held: “Any mistake consisting of some unintentional act, or omission, or error, is relievable in equity, and also now at law. We scarcely regard this an open question in this court.” A suit was brought by Hall & Long on a bond which was on its face payable to Hull & Long instead of to Hall & Long, and it is said in the opinion that “the mistake in making the bond sued on payable to Hull & Long instead of to Hall & Long can not be doubted, from the whole of the surrounding circumstances,” and that “such' a mistake is relievable in equity beyond a doubt, and why not at law under our liberal statute with proper averments?” The ease seems to be much in point, and if proof of the mistake made, to wit, the writing of the obligees in the bond as Hull & Long instead of Hall & Long, was permissible in a court of law, it seems clear that it would have been entirely proper to have proved by parol evidence that the insertion of the name of Harmon C. Baker in the place where that of J. W. Gaulding should have been inserted in the contract which is the basis of the suit in this case was simply a clerical error. See, also, the case of Shaver v. McLendon, 26 Ga. 228, where a forthcoming bond was made payable to James B. Shaver instead of to William B. Shaver, and~iirwas held that William B. Shaver might sue at law and show the mistake. So in McCrary v. Caskey, 27 Ga. 54, where a promissory note dated in December was expressed to be payable on the “25th day of December next,” and parol evidence was offered to show that the 25th day of December intended was the 25th day of the same December in which the note was made, it was held that this parol evidence ought to have been received. Jackson v. Johnson, 67 Ga. 168, was a suit on an administrator’s bond which -purported to be for $150, and parol evidence was admitted to show that the bond was intended to be for $150,000; and it was held that “what was the true intention of the parties to the contract is always admissible in ease of alleged clerical mistakes,” etc.
But we think the error in this ease was so manifestly a clerical one that even parol evidence to prove that fact was not necessary. See, also, Atlanta & W. P. R. Co. v. Speer, 32 Ga. 550 (79 Am. Dec. 305). The cardinal rule of construction is to ascertain the
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The action was brought to recover damages resulting from the breach of a contract which is pleaded. In my opinion the plaintiff can not recover upon the contract in its present form, for the reason that the damages consequent upon