69 P. 838 | Cal. | 1902
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment rendered against him on demurrer to the complaint. The case as alleged is in substance as follows: *85
April 7, 1888, one Alexander More was the owner of certain lands in the Sespe Rancho in the county of Ventura, and of a contract of the Pacific Improvement Company, agreeing to pay him one half of the proceeds of the sales of land conveyed to it by his deed of even date; and on that day executed to the defendant Calkins a deed conveying to him the lands and assigned to him the contract referred to, in trust to sell the same and with the proceeds to pay to himself — after the expenses of executing the trust — the sum of fifteen thousand dollars, with interest as provided, with the additional sum of ten thousand dollars, without interest, and the amount of a mortgage to one Dreyfus, the payment of which was assumed by him. But the deed was taken by Calkins as the trustee of Morton B. Hull, the plaintiff's assignor, who was the real beneficiary. The deed purports to convey to the grantee certain lands specifically described, and also all the right, title, and interest of the grantor in the Sespe Rancho. The land conveyed to the Pacific Improvement Company comes within the boundaries of the tract first described, but is excluded by specific description. It is, however, included in the Sespe Rancho. Subsequently orders were drawn on the trustee by More in favor of several parties for various sums, aggregating something over six thousand dollars; and to secure them another deed was executed by More to Calkins, purporting to convey to the latter all the right, title, and interest of the grantor in and to the Sespe Rancho (described as "being the same property described in" the former deed).
In the year following the above transactions More commenced a suit against Calkins, which upon his death was continued in the name of his administrator (one of the defendants in this suit), and resulted in the judgment considered in More v. Calkins,
But it is alleged that, in the conclusions of law on the facts found (which were substantially as above given), it was by the court "decided and ruled that said J.W. Calkins had full power and authority, under and by virtue of said deed of April 7, 1888, to sell . . . all the property mentioned in said deed of trust (including the contract with the Pacific Improvement Company), for the uses and purposes therein expressed, and to apply the proceeds thereof as directed in said deed," and out of the balance to pay the orders above mentioned; and it was ordered that judgment should be entered accordingly; but that the contract was omitted from the description in the judgment of the property to be sold, by mistake of Calkin's attorney, who supposed "that a sale of the said lands would transfer to the purchaser the said contract, and all the rights of the said Alexander S. More under said contract"; that all the parties to the suit and the judge, and also the commissioner appointed by the court, and the purchaser at the sale, participated in the mistake; that the commissioner and trustee supposed they were selling, and the purchaser, and his principal, Hull, supposed they were purchasing, the contract in question, with the rights of the plaintiff thereunder; and that the whole property including the contract was not worth over the amount bid.
The mistake, it is alleged, was not discovered until the year 1897; and there are other allegations explaining how it was that it was not sooner discovered; but these, under the view we take of the case, need not be considered. The prayer of the complaint is for the amendment of the judgment *87 by including in the description of the property to be sold the contract in question, and for a similar reformation of the commissioners' deed.
It is assumed, and in fact alleged, in the complaint that the sale of the lands described in the judgment — which included in the general description of the Sespe Rancho the lands previously conveyed to the Pacific Improvement Company — did not operate to transfer the contract with that company, or the rights of More to the payments therein stipulated; and — as otherwise the plaintiff would have no cause of action — this assumption must, for the purposes of this appeal, be admitted. Assuming, then, this to be the case, the object of the suit is not only to amend the judgment, but to reform the commissioners' deed, by making it purport to convey property that had not been sold, and which the commissioners were not authorized by the writ to sell. This, it is obvious, cannot be done. Where there is a mistake in a conveyance by the owner of the land himself, or by his agent, the deed may be reformed. But the commissioners to sell were not the agents of the plaintiff, except to the extent of the power conferred upon them by the order of sale; and there was therefore lacking that essential element to the reform of a contract, an actual contract to be embodied in the reformed instrument. A sheriff's or other officer's mistakes in the exercise of his power may doubtless be rectified; but when he acts in accordance with his power there is no mistake to be corrected or contract to be reformed. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 684; Heyman v. Babcock,
Many cases are cited by the appellant's counsel in support of his contention to the contrary, but none have application to this case. In one of them a mortgage was reformed (Blodgett v. Hobart,
Of these, one was, that there was not in any of them any mistake as to the property intended to be sold, and in fact sold, which, in the case first cited at least, and probably in the others, was pointed out by the sheriff to the bidders on the ground. The property intended was therefore, it may be said, itself sold, though by a mistaken description; and there was some color for the application of the maxim, Praesentia corporistollit errorem descriptionis. But here the mistake of the judgment was not in describing the property to be sold, but in omitting to provide for the sale of a part of the property that might have been sold.
The other difference between the cases is, that in the cases cited the mistake occurred originally in the mortgage, from which it was carried into the foreclosure proceedings; and this feature of the case in Quivey v. Baker,
There still remains the question whether the suit can be maintained for the purpose of amending the judgment; and this, we think, must also be answered in the negative. The alleged mistake is a mere clerical error, appearing on the face of the record, and, as appears from the authorities cited by the appellant's counsel, could be corrected by the court at *89 any time; nor does it appear that the interests of others are affected than parties to the suit, or parties represented in the suit by them. There is lacking, therefore, any ground for the interference of equity. The cases in which equity will interfere notwithstanding the existence of a legal remedy, are all, we believe, cases of original equity jurisdiction, where the jurisdiction at law was subsequently acquired. Our attention has not been called to any case where courts of equity have intervened to correct merely clerical errors.
For the reasons given the judgment appealed from must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Hearing in Bank denied.