This is a suit to reform and enforce, after reformation, a contract whereby plaintiff agreed to sell and defendant to purchase property in the city of Pleasant Hill. The contract description is of a tract twenty-four rods wide, from east to west, and thirty rods long, from north to south, “containing 3 acres, more or less” and “being known as the Dr. James Dunn, Jr., place.” The petition alleges, in effect, that the dimension from north to south should have been given as twenty instead of thirty rods. The question argued in this court is as to the sufficiency of the evidence to establish mutual mistake. It will be observed that the description by metes and bounds in the contract includes four and one-half acres and that which the petition alleges to be correct includes, exactly three acres.
In 1866 Dr.- James Dunn, Jr., acquired title to the south two acres of the tract and in 1867 erected a residence thereon and otherwise improved it and occupied it thenceforward. In 1881 one Phelps owned one acre 'adjoining Dunn’s property on the north, twenty-four by six and two-thirds rods, and this he Sold to Dunn, describing it as “containing one acre” but gave its metes and bounds as twenty-four by sixteen and two-thirds rods. Phelps had no title to the north ten rods of the parcel included in the meets and bounds then given though he did own the south one acre.
Dunn, until his death in 1884, occupied the three acres to which he had title, and his enclosure, so far-
In 1901 defendant moved to a large farm adjoining Pleasant Hill and in 1907 seems to have moved into that city. He knew “the Dunn place” and in 1907 talked with plaintiff about renting it but these negotiations bore no fruit. In the spring of 1908 defendant arranged to purchase the premises from plaintiff and took possession some time in April and began repairing and papering the house, expending prob
After the execution of the contract sought to be reformed plaintiff forwarded an abstract as agreed and defendant submitted it to an attorney who returned it with several requirements. In one of these he pointed out that Phelps, in his deed to Dunn, described two and one-half acres “when he owned only one acre” and that “at this point James Dunn, Jr., owned a three-acre tract, although he had deeds calling for four and one-half acres.” In another requirement, referring to a subsequent deed executed in 1885 by one of James Dunn’s heirs, the examiner in construing that part of the description relating and referring to “the land conveyed by Phelps to Dunn”
J. V. Hon owned, and for at least fifteen years had occupied, the ten rod strip which defendant claims was properly included in the contract. Defendant knew of Hon’s occupancy before he*executed the contract.
Defendant admits he was present when the directions were given as to drafting the contract in suit but says that plaintiff merely told the scrivener to copy the description from the Arnold deed. Defendant also testified plaintiff told him he owned part of the ground in Hon’s inclosure. Plaintiff denies having made this statement.
The court gave judgment reforming and enforcing the reformed contract as prayed and defendant appealed.
The power of a court of equity to reform a written contract which by reason of a mutual mistake of fact fails, in a material particular, to express correctly an actual previous oral agreement of the parties is not questioned. Neither is it contended this is not a proper case for the exertion of that power if the facts are as alleged in the petition. It is not suggested that equities of third persons have intervened or that plaintiff has been guilty of any, culpable negligence in the premises. •
The sole error assigned, the sole insistence of defendant’s counsel, is that the evidence adduced lacks the clearness, cogency-and certainty requisite to warrant the exercise of the power to reform a contract on the ground of mutual mistake. The question presented is, therefore, purely one of fact.
In this ease the evidence is overcast with no suspicion arising from long delay in instituting suit nor is this court under the necessity of speculating as to what explanations of statements and conduct the hand of death has stricken from the record. The suit was begun promptly upon the heels of the first claim made by defendant under the error in description now sought to be reformed and both parties to the contract in
It is true that defendant denies this, but, besides the testimony of the two witnesses mentioned, he is confronted by the fact this description was put into the contract by the scrivener though not included in the Arnold deed (which defendant says was all that was given the scrivener from which to secure the description) and confronted also by his own conduct which is wholly inconsistent with his present claim. Under the contract as reformed defendant will get all he thought he was buying in the first place. There is nothing in the record to show lack of title in plaintiff to that part of the three acre parcel lying outside the Dunn inclosure. As stated above no dedication of streets was attempted to be proved nor was any user shown. Had defendant desired to base an agreement upon the existence of streets upon a part of the ground plaintiff contracted to convey it was incumbent upon him to adduce some legal evidence of their existence. This court would not be justified in disturbing the judgment on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence. The judgment is affirmed.
PER CURIAM. — The foregoing opinion of Blair, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
