8 N.Y.S. 145 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
In the complaint no allegations of fraud or mistake are found in respect to the deed in question; nor does the evidence indicate, or the findings of fact present, any mistake or fraud in respect to the execution and delivery of the deed of the premises in question. In Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, in laying down the rule for guidance of courts of equity in setting aside, canceling, and directing to be delivered up agreements and other instruments, it is said, in section 695, vol. 2„ that the court will so do— “First, where there is actual fraud in the party defendant, in which the party plaintiff has not participated; secondly, where there is a constructive fraud against public policy, and the party plaintiff has not participated therein; thirdly, where there is a fraud against public policy, and the party plaintiff has participated therein, but public policy would be defeated by allowing it to stand; and, lastly, where there is a constructive fraud by both parties, but they are not in pari delicto.” In Stoddard v. Hart, 23 N. Y. 562, it is said; “If a writing does not truly express the agreement of the parties, if anything was omitted which was agreed to be inserted, or if anything was inserted contrary to their intention, equity will relieve against the mistake by reforming the contract.” In that case it was “not pretended that this understanding was to be expressed in any form of writing;” and it was therefore held that equity will not “reform the writing to make an agreement of a different effect from that which the parties intentionally entered into. ” In Nevius v. Dunlap, 83 N. Y. 676, it was held that “to entitle a party to a decree of a court of equity reforming a written instrument, he must show first a plain mistake, clearly
So far as the plaintiff’s case rests upon a reformation of the deed, we think it must fail. First. The complaint neither alleges a mistake or fraud. Secondly. The findings of the court do not present a case of mistake of fact or fraud in fact. Third. The evidence, when carefully examined and considered, does not warrant a conclusion that there was a mistake in fact on the part of the parties to the deed, or that there was any fraudulent practice which led to its execution. On the contrary, it appears that the intention of the grantor was to transfer the legal title to the property to the grantee. The ordinary and apt words of a warranty deed were used for such a purpose, and at the time of the execution of the deed the grantor declared his intention to vest the legal title in the grantee; and the testimony of Oipperly, the magistrate who witnessed the execution of the deed, and took the acknowledgment thereof, supports the inferences and intendments to be drawn from an inspection of the deed itself. He says: “When I got into the house the deed was showrn to me. There was no consideration expressed in the deed. I told them it was necessary to have some consideration in it, I thought. The old man replied: • Well, I don’t know as it is very particular how much, as he was giving it to his daughter. He had given one house and lot to his son, and he was going to give this to her,’—and finally decided to put in $500 as the consideration. He directed me to put that in; and I put it in, and then took the acknowledgment.” This evidence is not contradicted, and the strength of it is increased by the circumstance that the plaintiff, though present at the trial, was not sworn as a witness to contradict it. Rider v. Miller, 86 N. Y. 510. We think a proper case for reformation of the deed was not made out, and that the conclusion of law directing a reformation of the deed was erroneous, and the exception thereto well taken.
2. Ought the deed to have been canceled and set aside? In considering this question, we must bear in mind that the complaint does not contain any averments of fraud in fact on the part of the grantee in obtaining the deed; nor is she charged with undue influence, or any other improper practice, to induce the execution and delivery of the deed to her. If we assume that there was a paroi agreement, as found by the trial judge, that the grantee was to care for, support, and furnish a home for the plaintiff, one-half of the time, during the remainder of his natural life, as a -consideration for the premises in question, and that that agreement was carried out for two years, and afterwards it was not observed and carried out in its exact tenor and spirit, yet
3. Assuming that a paroi arrangement was made that the plaintiff should have a home, for one-half of the time, during the remainder of his" natural life, with his daughter, and that arrangement was made contemporaneous-with the execution and delivery of the deed, and that she received the deed with the promise to carry out that agreement, and furnished no other consideration to the plaintiff for the deed, and that the plaintiff, in accordance with, that agreement, enjoyed the privileges thereof for two years on the premises, and subsequently received, or was offered, a fulfillment thereof by the daughter and her husband, having himself consented to a modification thereof by receiving fulfillment at the home of a daughter, at another place than the-premises in question, we think there had been such a part performance of the-agreement as to take it out of the statute of frauds; and the plaintiff would be entitled, upon satisfying the court, by clear evidence, that such an arrangement was made, to a specific performance thereof, and if, for any reason, a specific performance cannot be had, to such damages as he sustains by reason of a breach thereof. Inasmuch as this is in the nature of a purchase price or consideration for the premises which he had voluntarily conveyed to his daughter, we see no reason why, as against her, the same may not be enforced, and, as against the premises while held by her husband and daughter under her will, with the like force and effect that might be given to a vendor’s lien for