44 Mo. 332 | Mo. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a suit in ejectment, brought in the Livingston Circuit Court, to recover possession of block 46, in the city of Chillicothe. The petition was in the usual form, describing the property as follows : “Lot number forty-six (46), the same being block forty-six (46).” The answer denied that plaintiff was entitled to possession, and set up title in one of the defendants. There was a replication filed. The plaintiff deduced title by virtue of a sale made under a deed of trust.
The cause coming on to be heard, the plaintiff introduced William Keith as a witness, who testified that he was the grantor in the deed of trust, executed by himself and wife, to W. Y. Slack as trustee, dated October 8, 1860, and resided on the property conveyed by the deed of trust. It was always known as block 46 ; was known to him by that description; so given to the assessor; and witness never heard it called anything else until the deed was made. The deed described it as lot 46. Mr. Jennings made the deed, and said that the new survey of the town
The first objection that will be considered is the action of the court in admitting parol testimony to show that block 46 was intended by the description “lot 46.” The rule is that to render a deed or other instrument void for uncertain description, the ambiguity must be patent and appear on the face of the instrument ; hut where the uncertainty is raised by matter outside of the instrument, the ambiguity is latent, and may be explained by the application of extrinsic evidence. (Hardy v. Matthews, 38 Mo. 121, and cases cited:) “A latent ambiguity,” says Sugden, “ is that which seems certain and without ambiguity for anything appearing on the face of the instrument, but there is some collateral matter out of the instrument that breeds the ambiguity; and, as it is raised by extrinsic evidence, it may fairly be dissolved by the same means.” Where words apply equally to different things or subject-matters, evidence is admissible to show which of them was the thing or subject-matter intended. If, in a deed conveying premises, the description is certain, parol evidence of
Where there are certain particulars in the description of the thing intended to be granted which can be sufficiently ascertained, the addition of any mistaken or uncertain circumstance will not, and ought not to, defeat or frustrate the intention of the parties.
In this case the description is plain, explicit, and certain. The deed of trust conveys lot 46. Were it shown that there were two lots in Chillicothe numbered 46, then a latent ambiguity would arise, which might be removed by extrinsic evidence, and it would be competent to prove by parol testimony which lot was intended. But it is not pretended that such a state of facts exists. The plat shows that Chillicothe is laid off in blocks and lots, none of which lots are numbered as high as forty-six; and when a deed is clear and precise, and conveys a lot, its terms can not be varied or altered so as to show that a block was thereby intended. If the description was inaccurate, and failed to express the intention of the parties, the plaintiff should have applied to the grantor, or, in case of his refusal, to a court of equity, to havq the deed reformed and the mistake corrected. The court therefore erred in overruling the defendant’s objections and admitting the parol evidence. For like reasons the deed of the trustee was ineffectual to convey anything more than the lot as described in the original deed of trust. The deed of trust conveyed lot 46 ; and, in the
I think the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.