109 Minn. 273 | Minn. | 1909
Lead Opinion
The real estate involved in this action was situated in Morrison county, within the indemnity limits of the grant made by the United States-to the territory of Minnesota March 3, 1857 (11 St. 195), for the purpose of aiding the construction of certain railroads, and also within the indemnity limits of the grant made to the state- of Minnesota- for the same purpose by act of -congress March 3,- 1865 (13 St. 526, c. 105), as amended by-act of March 3, 1871 (16 St. 588,. c. 144). The interest of the state was conferred upon the Western Railroad Company of Minnesota by act of the state legislature on March 1, 1877 (Sp. Laws 1877, p. 257, c. 201). On December 31, 1877, the Western Railroad Company filed in the United States land office at St. Cloud a list -of- lands, including those in question, which it selected as indemnity lands under' the grant. In 1889 the St. Paul & Northern Pacific Railroad Company, successor in interest to the Western Railroad Company, filed in the same land office' an amended selection list of indemnity lands, including the lands here involved.
These selections had not been acted upon by the secretary of' the interior when, in 1900, respondent, being duly qualified, and the lands in question being then vacant, made settlement thereon with the bona fide intention of entering the same under the homestead laws. Respondent has ever since maintained possession of and-resided on the land and improved the same to the. extent of -'$1,800. In 1902 re-
■ About a year after the ultimate rejection of respondent’s application, and after the vesting of title in appellant, negotiations were opened between it and respondent! Appellant, asserting its title, offered to sell those lands, together with two adjoining lots which formed a natural part of the tract, for $5 per acre. A contract was entered into, and respondent .undertook to pay $5 an acre for the land, exclusive of minerals. This agreement was subsequently consummated, and respondent paid the purchase price and received a deed to the premises, exclusive of minerals. This action was brought for the purpose of rescinding and canceling the deed, and to recover the sum Of money paid as purchase price for the premises, and for the purpose of securing the judgment of the court that the equitable title be declared to be in respondent, and that the railway company be declared the trustee of the legal title, and be required to convey the same to respondent.
The complaint asserts that the secretary’s approval of the railroad company’s selection was without authority and void; that he had no discretion, but was legally bound to approve the homestead application of respondent; and'that respondent’s action in subsequently entering into, an agreement to purchase was the result of a mistake of fact on his part, and of fraudulent misrepresentations and intimidating threats made to him by appellant 'and its agents. The allegations of the complaint were put in issue by the answer, an'd it was alleged that
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Wass, 104 Minn. 411, 116 N. W. 937, is decisive of the first question argued. The lands had not been segregated from the public domain at the time respondent made settlement, . for the reason that the lists of selection had not been approved by the secretary of the interior. This leaves for consideration the question whether the evidence sustains the finding of the cburt that respondent purchased the land under a mistake of fact and as a result of duress.
During all the time the contest was in progress-in the general land office and before the secretary of the interior, and until the issuing of the patent to the railroad company, respondent undoubtedly believed, and had every reason for doing so, that he was entitled to the land by virtue of his settlement and application as- a-homesteader, and that the final decision would be in his favor. Those who take advantage of such opportunities to acquire a home are not generally well posted as to rules of law governing titles to public lands, and there is nothing in the record to indicate 'that respondent possessed any knowledge upon the subject, save that which came to him through his. experience in connection with his contest. He had settled on the land and made it his permanent home, improving the property to.the extent of $1,800, and was still in possession when he was notified by the company that the land was for sale, in connection with two contiguous lots, minerals reserved, and that he must make up his mind within thirty days to either purchase or remove his improvements, or the land would be sold to other-parties. Hnder such circumstances it would have been quite natural for respondent to accept the' statements of the railway company that they:.had absolute title, and that there was nothing more he. could do to assert his claim; ■ and being confronted
" - The court -also found that "respondent entered into the contract under a mistake of facts, viz., that-he assumed from the representations' made to him :that the final step had been reached in the determination of his title- and in assuming that the railway company had acquired absolute title in fee." There is no evidence to indicate that the agreement of-purchase was a compromise. Respondent unquestionably believed that he possessed no title. He was ignorant of his own rights in the premises, 'and one of the important questions is: Does such mistake or misapprehension as to the nature of his title afford him any ground' for equitable relief %
A mistake of law may-be the result of ignorance, or error, with respect to some general rules of the municipal law applicable to all persons, which' regulate human conduct, determine rights of property, of contract, and the like, or ^the term may mean the ignorance or error of "a particular person with respect to his own legal rights and interests which are affected by' or which result from- a certain transaction in which he engagés.” 2 Pomeroy, Eq. Jur. (3d Ed.)' § 841 A mistake of law is not adequate ground for relief where a. party, with'knowledge of- all the material facts and in the absence of equitable circumstances, for a valuable consideration enters into a transaction affecting his interests, rights', and liability, under ignorance - or error with respect to the rules of law controlling the case. Perkins v. Trinka, 30 Minn. 241, 15 N. W. 115, is an illustration of the-doctrine where the rights of the parties were doubtful. Each had equal means-of ascertaining what those rights were, and got together and settled the dispute. Such an agreement must be sustained, when freely made, although a judicial' decision- was rendered afterwards
- In the case under consideration the court found that the statements; and representations made by the agents and representatives of appellant company regarding the title were believed by such parties to be true, and that they were not made for the purpose of misleading,, deceiving, or defrauding respondent. There was no evidence that the parties compromised and settled their claims as to the title to the land. It is clear that both the company and respondent assumed that the decision of the secretary of the interior was final and that the title vested in the company. As we view the question, it is not necessary to determine whether the mistake made be called a mistake of law, or one of fact. The English courts class misunderstandings of this character as mistakes of fact. The striking feature of the' ease is that appellant succeeded in selling respondent land' of which he was already the equitable owner, and which he did not have to purchase,, and unless it appears clearly that respondent voluntarily entered into the contract, with full knowledge of all the material facts, he is not estopped by his conduct from repudiating the contract and insisting upon being restored to his own.
Some of the authorities, in, dealing with this subject, place the right to repudiate a contract of this kind upon the ground that there was a failure of consideration; but, to whatever source the technical legal right to rescind may be traced, the reason why courts of equity respond in such cases is that the demand for relief is based upon manifest justice. In an examination of the authorities we will confine ourselves to those cases where the mistake was with reference to title, or interest in property.
The earliest English case is that of Lansdowne v. Lansdowne (decided in 1729) 2 J. & W. 205. Certain heirs divided real estate according to their supposed rights,- as advised by a third party. Suit
relief. The opinion of Lord Westbury in this case has often been referred to as stating the proper rules applicable. to cases of this character. The maxim, “Ignorantia juris haud excusat,” has no application where the parties contract under a mutual mistake and misapprehension as to their relative and respective rights. See, also, Earl Beauchamp v. Winn, 6 L. R. Eng. & Irish App. Cas. 223 (1873). In Jones v. Clifford, 3 L. R. Ch. Div. 779 (1876), the court passed upon a similar question, and, reviewing Bingham v. Bingham and Cooper v. Phibbs, supra, approved of the doctrine, and held that, the parties having dealt with each other upon a mistake of law as to the title, they had a right to have the same rectified in a court of equity. Again, in 1895, in Huddersfield Banking Company, Limited, v. Lister & Son, Limited, 2 L. R. Ch. Div. 273, the court referred to and approved of the doctrine of the preceding cases, and held that a mortgagee was entitled to have a release set aside which it had made under a misapprehension of the law.
In our own country there has been a wide diversity of opinion as to the exceptions to the general rule that there is no relief against a mistake of law; but the particular question involved in this case; where a, party purchases from another property which he already owns,- has not often been presented to the courts. In Blakeman v. Blakeman, 39 Conn. 320, the court applied the English rule in a case
The New Jersey court held, in Swedesboro v. Gans, 65 N. J. Eq. 132, 55 Atl. 82, that where, on the death of a mortgagor, the mortgagee secured a release of the widow’s right of dower, and also a deed to the premises from the mortgagor’s father, under the belief that the property descended to the latter, and canceled the mortgage, the complainant, as against the heirs of the mortgagor, was entitled to a decree for the re-establishment and foreclosure of the mortgage. After ■referring to authorities, both English and American, the court say: “The ability of courts of equity to rectify mistakes arising from ignoxance of the law is everywhere acknowledged to exist in certain instances. The propriety of exercising this power must depend upon the circumstances which surround each case. It will depend upon whether a party who asks relief has been negligent, whether he has been led into his belief by the other party, whether other innocent parties will be injured by a rectification of the' mistake, or whether the mistake can be regarded as one of fact, although indirectly resulting from a mistaken notion of the law. All these and other features are to be considered in deciding whether it is equitable and politic to put the mistaken party in statu quo. * * * The mistake was in respect to the ownership of the property upon which the canceled mortgage was an incumbrance, and the English cases treat such a mistake as one of fact.”
A review of some of the authorities will be found in a note to
We are of opinion that in a case of this kind, where a person enters, into a contract for the purchase of property with the understanding that it belongs to another; when in fact it belongs to' himself, that he is entitled to relief, unless the circumstances are such that it'would be. inequitable to restore the title. In this case respondent was an ignorant person, and, while he may have consulted- an attorney in a general way, the time given him to either purchase or remove from the land was so short that it cannot be said' he fully considered and understood the effect of his act. We are aware of the case of Erkens v. Nicolin, 39 Minn. 461, 40 N. W. 567, wherein it was said: “Money paid under mistake of law cannot be recovered back, where the transaction is unaffected by any fraud, trust, confidence, or the like, [and] both parties * * * .knew all the facts [and] had equal means of knowing them.” The facts were different and the case is distinguishable.
Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result, but prefer to place the decision upon the ground, which appears without serious controversy, that the parties entered into the transaction under a mutual mistake as to their legal rights. Both knew the facts, but understood and believed that the decision of the United States land department was a final and conclusive determination of their respective claims to the land. In this they were both mistaken — a mutual mistake of law, from which equity will relieve either.