129 Minn. 217 | Minn. | 1915
This is an action brought by the plaintiffs against the defendants for the reformation of a certain contract for the sale of land and of two promissory notes securing it.
About the fifteenth day of February, 1913, the plaintiffs and the defendant A. J. Zion entered into a preliminary agreement for the purchase of land owned by the plaintiffs and situated in Douglas county, Minnesota. As part of the purchase price, the defendant agreed to convey to the plaintiffs certain lands situated in Stanley county, South Dakota, the whole matter subject, however, to the examination and approval of the South Dakota lands by the plaintiffs.
The preliminary agreement provided for the annual payment of interest on the unpaid balance of the purchase price.
Subsequently, and about the twenty-fourth day of February, 1913, the plaintiffs went to Midland, South Dakota, -and examined the lands which were to be conveyed by defendants. Thereafter, an oral agreement was entered into, providing among other things for the conveyance by defendants to plaintiffs of South Dakota lands, including the homestead of the defendants, as part payment for the Minnesota lands. In this agreement it was specified that interest on the unpaid balance should be paid annually.
A controversy arose as to a certain quarter section, and that controversy and other differences between the parties were finally adjusted, and an agreement arrived at. As part consideration, the defendant was to deliver four horses to the plaintiffs, and the parties went out to the home of the defendants for the purpose of selecting the horses that were to be delivered.
The next day the plaintiffs and the defendant A. J. Zion went to Fort Pierre, the county seat of Stanley county; the titles were examined and a written agreement was drawn up.
This agreement failed to set forth that the interest on the deferred payments was to be paid annually, and the notes which were then drawn up and signed by the defendant A. J. Zion, failed to contain the “on or before” privilege, and failed to state that the interest on the notes was to be paid annually.
The deeds were delivered and recorded, and the contract was signed and executed by the plaintiffs and by the defendant A. J. Zion. The defendant Susie C. Zion did not sign the contract, nor was she present at any time when the negotiations were had.
Subsequently, a controversy arose as to whether interest on the deferred payments was to be paid annually or on the dates when the principal sums became due. A demand was made on defendant A. J". Zion for the reformation of the contract, which demand was refused.
The court found the facts as above stated, found that the contract made between' the parties was the contract set up in the complaint and hereinabove set forth, and that the scrivener, in reducing the contract in writing, through inadvertence, mistake and oversight, failed to provide in the contract for the annual payment of interest.
The court further found that the scrivener, in reducing the contract and agreement to writing, through inadvertence, oversight and mistake, omitted and failed to provide in said contract and the notes evidencing the unpaid balance of the purchase price that the interest should be paid annually, but, contrary to the agreement and the intention of the parties, worded said contract and the notes in such language that the interest would not be payable until the due date in each, and ordered the contract and notes to be reformed accord
The cause was tried on these issues. On the trial the defendants-took the position that the contract sought to be reformed was the. contract actually entered into between the parties.' The defendant. Susie C. Zion was not present and did not testify at the trial. This issue, among others, was found against the defendants and -we are-satisfied that the evidence is sufficient to sustain the findings.
We do not think the point well taken. This action was brought to reform an instrument to which she was not in any sense a party. She was not one of the contracting parties. She did not sign the instrument. The contract was between her husband and the plaintiffs, and, although she might have an inchoate interest in the fruits of the contract if it were finally performed by her husband, she has-none under the terms of the contract itself.
She executed the deeds for the South Dakota lands, signed, acknowledged and delivered them to her husband, presumedly that he might deliver them as part payment of the purchase price of the Minnesota lands. All this was done before the contract in litigation had been signed or even reduced to writing.
Tbe case was ably tried by competent counsel. Tbe learned trial court bas made exhaustive findings against tbe defendants on tbe issues. We have examined tbe record carefully and find no error in tbe proceedings which would affect tbe result.
Tbe order appealed from must be affirmed.