118 Mo. App. 417 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
Plaintiff bought defendant’s farm in Boone county by written contract of sale, which provided for the execution of a general warranty deed. He alleges that the purchase price was $40 per acre. He received his deed and went into possession and so remained for nearly two years, when he discovered that the premises did not contain the number of acres which he supposed he had purchased, the shortage being twenty-three and twenty one-hundredths acres. He thereupon brought this action against defendant for $928. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence offered by him and judgment was entered for defendant.
The deed as executed to the plaintiff contained the following description, to-wit: “That the said party of the first part, for and in consideration of twenty-two thousand three hundred and thirty dollars to them paid by the said party of the second part, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, do, by these presents, grant, bargain and sell, convey and confirm unto the said party of the second part the following described tract or parcel of land, situated in the county of Boone, in the State of Missouri, to-wit: seventy-seven (77) acres, more or less, the west part of the southeast quarter, west of Cedar creek; one hundred and sixty (160) acres the southwest quarter, both in section twenty-one (21) ; one hundred and forty (140) acres, more or less, the west part of the northeast quarter west of Cedar creek; one hundred and sixty (160) acres the northwest quarter, and twenty (20) acres, more or less, the northwest, part of the northwest quarter of the southeast
The number of acres mentioned in the description in the contract of sale and in the deed aggregate 557 acres, and the question is, was there a sale of that number of acres at a given price per acre, or was it a sale of a tract of land as described for a stated price, in solida? The rule seems well settled by the decisions of the Supreme Court, that where the description is by metes and bounds, or (as here) by divisions and subdivisions, into sections, half sections, quarter sections, etc., according to government survey, the description controls and the number of acres stated must give way. [Campbell v. Johnson, 44 Mo. 248; Ware v. Johnson, 66 Mo. 662; Orrick v. Bower, 29 Mo. 210, 214; Baker v. Clay, 101 Mo. 553.] The same thing has been several times decided in this court on the authority of those cases. [Wood v. Murphy, 47 Mo. App. 539; Mires v. Summerville, 85 Mo. App. 183.] The St. Louis Court of Appeals has also recognized the same rule. [Hobein v. Frick, 69 Mo. App. 263.] So, therefore, we have no difficulty in concluding that there was not only no sale of 557 acres, as a definite quantity of land, but also, that the deed made no warranty of any certain quantity.
Plaintiff offered and the court excluded evidence tending to show that he had had the land surveyed by the county surveyor and that it showed only 534 acres and a fraction. Also that at the time of the execution of the contract of sale and of the deed defendant stated to plaintiff that there were 557 acres and that he sold the farm by the acre at forty dollars per acre. These offers were properly refused. The deed is the final contract of the parties and must be taken to measure the liability of the party executing it. [Davidson v. Manson, 146 Mo. 619, 620.] The deed, being the final consummation of the contract, cannot be varied or altered by prior or contemporaneous understandings unless there be
If plaintiff desired that the deed show a sale by the acre, or that the tract was warranted to contain a certain number of acres, he should have had such provisions inserted. If a person of ordinary intelligence, in full possession of his faculties, knowingly enters into a contract, he will be bound by its terms; and even if he does not read it, it will yet measure his rights and liabilities. [Railroad v. Cleary, 77 Mo. 634; O’Bryan v. Kinney, 74 Mo. 125; Mateer v. Railroad, 105 Mo. 350; Och v. Railroad, 130 Mo. 44; Kellerman v. Railroad, 136 Mo. 188, 189.]
In Greenfield’s Estate, 14 Pa. St. 496, Chief Justice Gibson stated that, “If a party who can read will not read a deed put before him for execution, he is gmilty of supine negligence, which, I take it, is not the subject of protecton, either in law or equity.” In speaking of the same queston, the Supreme Court of this State said that, “To permit a party when sued on a written contract to admit that he signed it but to deny that it expresses the agreement he made, or to allow him to admit that he signed it but did not read it or know its stipulations, would absolutely destroy the value of all contracts.” [Crim v. Crim, 162 Mo. 554. See also, Johnston v. Ins. Co., 93 Mo. App. 588.]
In Davidson v. Manson, 146 Mo. 619, already referred to, the court, through Judge Williams, said, “The deed of conveyance in this case must be taken as conclusive evidence of the terms of the sale. There is no allegation of fraud or that any language not truly expressive of the contract had been inserted in the deed, or that any mistake whatever had been made in writing the same.” It is thus made apparent that since there is no pretense of fraud in putting upon plaintiff a deed, the contents and import of which he did not know, and since he accepted it without artifice, deception or imposition being
The cases of Davidson v. Manson, supra, and Mires v. Summerville, 85 Mo. App. 183, decided by this court, really dispose of the question before us. While fraud in the representation of the quantity of the land was charged in the Mires case (and is not here), yet we held that since the purchaser had lived all his life near by the land, had been over it time and again, and was thoroughly acquainted with it, with no confusing irregularities in boundaries, with no hindrance to his view or judgment, he should not be allowed to say that he thought and relied upon a tract of seventeen acres being a tract of thirty-two acres. We considered the matter as too patent to the observation of anyone, not laboring under some disability, to be made the subject of a dispute after it had been closed by a deed, in the execution of which there was no pretense of deception or artifice.
Those cases involved the complaint of persons sui juris, and whose ability to care for themselves was not questioned as was also the case with the plaintiff in Mires v. Summerville. But when the complaint comes from the weak, the helpless, the unfortunate and ignorant, as appears in McGhee v. Bell, supra, the entire aspect is changed and the law affords them protection, for the very reason that they are not able to protect themselves and cannot be considered at fault in becoming the victim of the wrongdoer.
Of course, fraud may also be committed on the diligent or even the most careful of business men, and be the subject of ready redress by the courts. But it will be in instances where it was reasonable and prudent to trust to the opposite party; or, where from the situation, nothing else could be done with regard to reasonable convenience or opportunity. It will not be in those cases where the complainant was himself thoroughly acquainted with the subject-matter, saw and examined for himself and where the falsehood in the representation was patent to the eye and understanding as in Mires v. Summerville. And why our brethren at St Louis should have conceived the notion that that case was opposed to McGhee v. Bell, or to the case they were then deciding (Judd v. Walker, 114 Mo. App. 128), we are not able to understand. We can readily see where (conceding a measurement or survey need not have been made) one, though standing upon the land, may believe representations that a small tract contained something more than in fact it did contain, but when he states that he had always known a tract,
Tiie judgment of the trial court should not be disturbed and it is accordingly affirmed.