By the Court,
That both, the parties to this suit acted under a radical mistake, either in matters of law or in matters of fact, in the transaction disclosed bj the record, can hardly admit of denial or doubt. That such was the case with the plaintiff seems still less questionable. It is impossible to suppose that he would have purchased the certificates in question at the price agreed upon, if he had known that they were worth less than so many pieces of blank paper. The fact that they were so, proves almost conclusively that he was in some way deluded or misled. As it is only against mistakes of fact that courts will grant relief, it becomes necessary, in the first instance, to ascertain the nature of that here complained of, in order to determine whether the plaintiff is entitled to maintain his action on that ground. If it was a mistake of law, there being no averment or proof that any fraud or imposition was practiced upon him, he must abide the consequences of his ignorance, and cannot, on that account, be permitted to avoid his contract. But if it was a mistake of fact, the action may be maintained, unless it falls within some of the exceptions to the general rule, that “ignorance of a material fact may excuse a party from the legal consequence of his conduct.”
A mistake of law happens, when a party, having full knowledge of the facts, comes to an erroneous conclusion as to their legal effect. It is a mistaken opinion or inference1 arising from an imperfect or incorrect exercise of the judgment, upon facts as they really are; and like a correct opinion, which is law, necessarily presupposes that the person forming it, is in full possession of them. The facts precede the law, and the true and false opinion alike imply an acquaintance with them, Neither can exist without it. The one is the result of a correct application to them of legal
An error of fact, ignorantia facti, is ordinarily said to take place, either when some fact which really exists, is unknown, oí¡some fact is supposed to exist, which really does not exist. The most frequent, familiar and striking examples of such error, are found in those cases in which the books abound, and to which we need not here particularly refer, where the parties are deceived or .mistaken as to the existence or non-existence of certain facts, materially affecting the transaction, and which are present in their minds at the time of entering into the agreement, and directly influence their conduct in so doing. But as is implied from the maxim, igno-rantia facti excusat, and from the definition which we have given, of a mistake of law, a mistake of fact has, in legal parlance, a much more enlarged signification, and extends to and includes the case of a party who, through mere ignorance of the existence or non-existence of a material fact, is induced to do an act, or enter into a contract injurious to himself, where, if he had been informed of the existence or nonexistence of such fact, he would not have performed such act or made such contract. Ignorance of the existence or non-existence of a material fact, precludes the idea that the party, at the time of the transaction, should have been influ
In the case of Kelly vs. Solari, 9 M. & W., 54, it was held, that money paid under a bona fide forgetfulness of facts, might be recovered back in an action for money had and received. The late husband of the defendant had effected a policy on his life in the Argus Assurance Company. He died in October, 1840, leaving the defendant his executrix,
These cases are understood as expressing the doctrines of
The case of Champlin and others vs. Laytin, and Laytin vs. Champlin and others, in the coru’t of chancery of New York, 6 Paige, 189, and afterwards in the court of errors, 18 Wend., 407, cited by the counsel for the defendant, so strikingly resembles that which we are now considering, in many of its features, its doctrines so clearly accord with those of the English courts, and sustain the definitions we have given of a mistake of law, and a mistake of fact, that we feel warranted in stating the facts, and the conclusions of Chancellor Walwoeth and Judge Bronsoh, somewhat minutely. The facts, as they appear from the opinions of Judge Brohsoít and Vice-Chancellor McOohh, were these. Eifth street, in the city of New York, running from Broadway to Mercer street, through lands owned by Elizabeth Dupeyster, deceased, of whose estate Champlin and others were executors and trustees, was laid down on a map, made for the corporation of the city in the year 1817. In 1821, the executors caused a map of the lands of the testatrix to be made, on which Eifth street was laid down to correspond with the city map. They afterwards made sales in pursuance of this survey, and, in January, 1822, they sold and conveyed a lot to Samuel Whittemore, extending from Broadway to Mercer street, and which, by the terms of the deed, was bounded on one side for the whole distance by Eifth street. According to the decision of the supreme court of that state, made in 1825, Mercer Street Case, 4 Cowen, 542, such sale and conveyance did not amount to an implied grant of a right of way to the purchaser over the proposed street, and the executors, when the street should be opened, would be entitled to be paid the full value of the land, without regard to the supposed easement. The executors, acting on their belief that ¿¡heir sale to Whittemore had not affected their
The material fact upon which the rights of the parties turned, was the bounding of the Whittemore lot by the street in the deed to him, and because it did not affirmatively appear that Laytin’s attorney had notice of it, be was relieved. Tbe attorney and Laytin himself both knew of the map of
An application of the foregoing principles to the facts of the present case, renders its determination a very plain matter. The material fact upon which the validity of the certificates for lots 116, 118, 120, 121 and 122 depends, is whether the commissioners of the school and university lands did, in the years 1853 and 1854, reoffer the lots for sale at public auction, by reason of the non-payment of the interest and damages due for those years upon the certificates of sale of them made in 1850. If they did, then
The argument of the counsel for the defendant, founded upon the character of the instruments transferred, deserves notice: They liken the transaction to a sale of real estate, and say that where there is no fraud,-and no covenants are taken to secure the title, and it wholly fails, the purchaser is without a remedy, either at law or in equity. It is said that if the plaintiff can recover in this, action, then a quit-claim deed is as good in every case of the sale of an interest in lands as a warranty deed; for in every case the vendee holding title by quit-claim, 'can; in case of a failure of title, recover back the consideration paid, and he could do no more where he has taken a warranty deed; that in every case of a pinchase of land by quit-claim, when the vendee pays a valuable consideration, he does so on the supposition and belief that he receives an interest in the land, which is an .equivalent, &c. If the assignments of the certificates in question could be considered as conveyances of real estate, according to any of the forms known to the law or in general use, this argument would undoubtedly be correct. But they are not. The certificates, provided they had been of any validity, were chattels real, and the assignments were the means or evidences of their transfer. They do .not purport, nor were they intended, to transfer the title to real estate. The parties were not dealing with reference to, or on the supposition that the title was in either of them. They both
Tbe rule that there are no implied covenants on a deed of lands, and that when there are no express covenants, and no fraud, tbe vendee is without remedy, unless there be some mistake against which the law will relieve, grows out of the character of the instrument, and is not founded upon the nature of the property transferred. The purchaser of land who intends to have recourse in case of eviction against the former proprietor, takes care to have inserted in the instrument of conveyance the necessary covenants for that purpose, thereby ascertaining the precise extent of the liability. If the sale is made upon the understanding that the title is to be at the risk of the grantee, who is to have no remedy in case of defect, express covenants are omitted, and deeds of quit-claim are used. Frost vs. Raymond, 2 Caines’ R., 188. The price often depends as much upon the nature of the title and form of the conveyance, as the intrinsic value of the land itself, and where there are no covenants, it is presumed that the title is at the risk of the grantee, and that there was a corresponding deduction in price. This is the interpretation which the law puts upon the contract, and unless there is some clearly relievable mistake of fact, the failure of the vendee to protect himself by proper covenants, is regarded as so grossly negligent, that courts will afford no redress, even though the title wholly fails.
This rule, however, applies only to executed contracts for the sale of real estate, and has no reference to those which are executory, upon which relief, on the ground of mistake or failure of consideration, is granted as freely as on contracts concerning personalty.
There are other grounds upon which I am of opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to maintain this action. In every sale of a chattel there is an implied warranty that it exists, and that the vendor has title to it. So, in the assignment of an instrument, even not negotiable, for a full and fair price, I think the assignor impliedly warrants that it is valid, and that the obligor is liable upon it, unless it clearly appear that the
I also think that the action could be maintained on the ground of a failure of consideration, by reason of the plaintiff's not having obtained what he bargained for; that the instruments did not answer the description of those which the defendant professed to sell, or the plaintiff to buy. The instruments assigned, though resembling school land certificates, were not such certificates at all. They were mere worthless pieces of paper drawn up in the form of such certificates. The fact that they were signed by the commissioners in their official capacity, can make no difference, so long as they were wholly unauthorized to do so. Their acts in signing and issuing them, under the circumstances, were wholly void, and the certificates, in that respect, were no better than if they had been signed by some other persons and were sheer forgeries, except so far as recovering back the money already paid was concerned. In this respect the case seems to me to fall directly within the principle of the cases of Young vs. Cole, 3 Bing., N. C., 724 (32 E. C. L., 302), and Gompertz vs. Bartlett, 24 Eng. Law and Eq., 156. The length of this opinion will not allow a recital of the facts of those cases here. It is sufficient to' say, that they were both actions between two equally innocent persons, the former as holders of four Grua-tamala government bonds, the latter of a bill of exchange. All the instruments appeared upon their face to be good,
On these two last propositions, however, I have not consulted my brethren, and they are, therefore, given as my own conclusions, and not those of the court.
Although we agree with the circuit judge on the main question involved in the case, still the judgment must be reversed on another point. We think he erred in not allowing the defendant to show that the plaintiff had bought in the original certificates for the lots to which the title failed, at a less sum than the price agreed to be paid by him to the defendant for his interest. In analogy to the rule of damages which obtains in actions for a breach of the covenant of seizin (2 Parsons on Contracts, 498, and cases •„ there cited), and in actions upon executory contracts for the sale of real estate (Thredgill vs. Pintard, 12 How., U. S., 24, and authorities there cited by counsel for appellee), where the vendee in possession, has bought in an outstanding or paramount title, we are of opinion that if the plaintiff here has bought in the outstanding certificates, so- as to procure a
The judgment of the circuit court is, therefore, reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
