69 Mo. App. 263 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
This case was argued and submitted at the October term, and an opinion prepared by Judge Biggs. A motion for rehearing was filed and sustained. The case was resubmitted on September 22; has been reargued orally, and an additional brief filed by respondent’s counsel. I am indebted to Judge Biggs for the following full statement of the facts as set forth in the opinion prepared by him.
“On the tenth day of February, 1893, the defendants executed and delivered to the plaintiff their promissory note for one thousand, three hundred dollars, due and payable on March 1, 1895, and with interest from date at the rate of six per cent per annum. The present action is on the note, the defendants having failed to pay it at its maturity.”
The defendants admitted the execution of the note, but claimed that they were equitably entitled to a credit thereon of $602.10. In support of this it was alleged in substance that the note was given for the balance of the purchase money of a farm bought by the defendant Adolphus Frick from the plaintiff; that the farm was purchased at an agreed price of $45 per acre; that the plaintiff represented that there were one hundred and eleven and seventy hundredths acres in the farm, whereas in fact there were only ninety-eight and thirty-two hundredths acres, being thirteen and thirty-eight hundredths acres less than the plaintiff represented, and which by his deed he purported to convey, and that Frick settled for the land upon the basis of one hundred and eleven and seventy hundredths acres, and that the note sued on represented the final payment.
The reply put in issue the new matter set up in the
In support of the right of set-off or recoupment, the evidence offered by defendants (which consisted of the testimony of the defendant Adolphus and his son) tended to prove that the land was bought by the acre; that the plaintiff represented that there was one hundred and eleven and seventy hundredths acres in the farm, and that the farm was purchased at an agreed price of $45 per acre. There was evidence also to prove that after the deed was made the land was surveyed, and that it contained only ninety-eight and thirty-two hundredths acres.
On the other hand the plaintiff testified that he and Magdalena Roseman sold the farm to Erick, and that for it and some personal property the latter agreed to pay the gross sum of $5,300, and as a further consideration for the conveyance Erick agreed to allow Magdalena to occupy a certain room in the house (situated on the premises) during her life, and he also agreed to provide for her suitable food, nursing, and medicine so long as she might- live. The above considerations were set forth in the deed and the land was described therein as “the west half of the northwest fractional quafter of section ten (10) in township forty-four (44) range two (2) west, containing sixty-three and eighty-six hundredths of an acre; also the
The court refused the following instruction:
“If from the evidence the court finds the issues for the defendant upon the allegations of said answer and plaintiff’s denial thereof, as made in said replication, then the defendant is entitled to a rebate on the note sued on equal to the value of thirteen and thirty-eight hundredths acres of land at the price of $45 per acre, together with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from the tenth day of Eebruarv, 1893.”
In Cabot v. Christie, 42 Vt. 121, the court says: “The agreements as to consideration and mode of payment need not be embraced in a deed, for the instrument purports to be the deed of but one of the parties. But it does purport to contain the covenants of the grantor, with respect to the property conveyed,”
In Martin v. Hamlin, 16 Mich. 354, the facts were, complainant entered into a verbal agreement with the defendant to purchase of him a farm occupied by him, and well known to both, but which had never been surveyed. A few days prior to the execution of the deed and mortgage and notes for purchase money, defendant verbally represented the land to complainant to contain one hundred and ten acres, and that he would warrant that quantity; and it was also verbally agreed that complainant should get the land surveyed, and if the amount fell short, the deficiency should be indorsed on the mortgage. The description in the deed of warranty was “according to- government subdivision,” and it called for one hundred and ten acres. No fraud or mistake is charged by complainant, upon a survey, made some months afterward, when a •deficiency of sixteen and one half acres was discovered. In a bill to compel defendant to indorse upon the mortgage the amount of the deficiency, held, that “the verbal agreement was merged in the deed, and must, in the absence of fraud, be presumed to contain all the terms finally agreed upon.”
In Caughenvins, Adm’r, v. Stauft, 77 Pa. St. 195, the rule laid down in this class of cases, “is not to open the contract to allow a deficiency, or to recover for an excess, even if the sale be by the acre.” To the same effect is Hardin v. Kelly, 15 S. E. Rep. 894.
Counsel for appellant has cited us to a number of cases, apparently announcing a different rule. Some of the older cases sanction the defense made in this case, and hold that recovery may be had for a deficiency, and that proof may be made of the sale by the acre, and of the warranty of quantity by verbal testimony.
The case of Housman v. Adams, number 6269, a recent case decided by this court (not yet reported) is one of this class. Here it was practically admitted that the sale was by the acre. The descriptions of the lands in the deed were vague and uncertain; in the language of Judge Rombauer, who wrote the opinion, they amounted to nothing. The defendant, by his answer, sought to have his deed corrected, so as- to have the metes and bounds of the land actually sold set out and the land properly described. In this state of the pleadings the wfyole contract of sale was before the court to be ascertained and declared. The description of the 'and in the deed (if there was any at all) was by quantity, rather than by metes and bounds. The equity side of the court was addressed by the answer, and a prayer made for equitable relief. The defendant was asking equity, and before he got it, he was required to do equity. The verbal testimony admitted in this case did not vary or contradict the deed, for that was incomplete, uncertain, and, at law, was void for want of a description of the thing attempted to be conveyed.
The doctrine laid down in Cook v. Combs, supra, and other cases cited in this opinion supporting that doctrine, in our opinion announces the true rule, and is based upon sound legal principles. To adopt a contrary doctrine would be to establish a rule, by which verbal warranties could, ad infinitum and ad libitum, be engrafted upon deeds of conveyance of real estate, and grantors held to answer for breaches of warranties, not contained in their deeds, and of which they, perhaps, never heard until sued for their breach. Where there is fraud or mistake, or a false representation, upon