5 Or. 169 | Or. | 1874
By the Court,
This suit was instituted in the court below by the appellants against the respondents, to correct an alleged mistake in a deed, and to enjoin an action at law for the recovery of possession of a portion of the land described in the deed;
That said Hooker paid plaintiffs, for said land, six dollars per acre, amounting to $1225.92; and they executed and delivered to him a deed, a copy of which is appended to the complaint, containing the above description, and dated December 20, 1855; that Hooker died in 1857, and the defendant, Delia B. Lewis, is his devisee, and succeeded to whatever rights Hooker had under the deed aforesaid; that the description contained in said deed was furnished by said Hutchinson, by accident, surprise and mistake, or through fraud, “the plaintiffs do not know which,” and was false, and was not according to the agreement, intention or design of the plaintiff, or said Hooker.
That a true description of the real property agreed to be sold by plaintiffs to said Hooker, and included in the agree-, ment aforesaid, and none other, is as follows: “Beginning
It is also alleged that the description contained in the deed embraces eighteen acres more land than the last above mentioned description, which plaintiffs did not intend to sell, nor said Hooker to buy; that the plaintiffs remained, and have been continually since the date of the deed, in the exclusive occupation and possession of said eighteen acres; and that said Hooker, during his life, and his devisee, the defendant Delia, recognized plaintiffs’ right and title until some time in 1870; and plaintiffs have, with the knowledge of the defendants, made permanent and valuable improvements thereon of the value of six hundred dollars.
The plaintiffs then aver the commencement, by defendant Delia, of an action at law against these plaintiffs to recover the possession of the said eighteen acres; prays an injunction against said action, and to have the deed reformed and corrected so -as to convey only 186.37 acres, conformably to the alleged agreement and intention of the parties; averring also a tender by plaintiffs to the defendant, before suit brought, of an amount of money equal to the value of the eighteen acres, at six dollars an acre (the original purchase-price), without interest, and a willingness to submit to any terms or conditions of relief imposed by the court.
The defendants demurred to this complaint, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of suit, or to entitle the plaintiffs to any relief; and on the special ground, that there was no equity on behalf of plaintiffs shown, in that there was no sufficient tender pleaded.
The court below sustained thé demurrer and dismissed the complaint, and the plaintiffs bring this appeal.
It is to be observed that the complaint in this suit does not state directly and clearly what was the original verbal
It is further to be observed that tbe description given in the deed differs from tbe one claimed by tbe plaintiffs only in tbe length of tbe lines. In both descriptions tbe starting-point is tbe same, aúd tbe west and southeast lines of tbe tracts are upon tbe same course, and as far as both reach are identical. In tbe deed tbe west line is stated to be 59 chains long; in tbe description contended' for, that line is stated to be 54.50 chains, a difference of 4.50 chains.
It is also to be particularly noticed that tbe complaint shows upon its face that tbe plaintiffs received pay according to tbe terms of tbe agreement (six dollars an acre) for all tbe land described in tbe deed, including tbe eighteen acres now in controversy, and that tbe courses and distances stated in tbe deed include precisely tbe amount of ■ land paid for. Tbe case, as presented, is simply this: Tbe plaintiffs sold for a price agreed upon and received by them, and conveyed, with covenants of warranty, 204.82 acres of land, but by some means remaining in possession, or being found, fifteen years after tbe conveyance, in possession of eighteen acres
If this Court shall hold that upon this complaint the plaintiffs are entitled to relief, a precedent will be furnished for attacking titles, deemed most secure, upon the most frivolous pretext, provided the grantors shall deem it to their advantage to rescind their bargains and are prepared to allege, in general terms, and procure proof of mistake, in description and quantity of land sold.
We do not, after careful examination, think that the law of this case is as the plaintiffs claim it to be, nor do we think that the authorities cited by the counsel for the plaintiffs sustain their positions concerning this complaint.
It is not every mistake in a conveyance that can call for the interposition of a court of equity. (Willard’s Eq. 71.)
To entitle the party to relief the fact must be material, and also such that he could not with reasonable diligence have obtained knowledge of it. (Id. 70.)
In Marvin v. Bennet (26 Wend. 169), a case where a purchaser, who had received a deed for land and given back a mortgage to secure a part of the purchase-money, and on finding a deficiency in the quantity of land described, sought relief in equity, on the ground of mistake, against payment of the purchase-money for the amount of land deficient, the court say, that relief will not be-granted if with ordinary vigilance the purchaser, before the completion of the contract, by viewing the premises or properly settling the description, might have guarded against the alleged mistake, and relief was denied.
The case here differs from Marvin v. Bennet, in respect to the party seeking relief. In that case it was the purchaser who sued; in this it is the vendor: but the relief sought is
Again, the class of cases wherein courts of equity interfere to correct mistakes are said (1 Story Eq. Jur., § 138) to be those where the mistake is of so fundamental a character that the minds of the parties have never in fact met, or where an unconscionable advantage has been gained by mere mistake or misapprehension, and there was no gross negligence on the part of the plaintiff either in falling into the error or in not sooner claiming redress, and-no intervening rights have accrued and the parties may still be placed in statu quo. But even in cases like these it is said that equity will interfere in its discretion in order to prevent intolerable injustice. The prevention of intolerable injustice appears to be the cause which, according to this authority, impels the court to grant relief.
The case now before us does not present a state of facts bringing it within any of the classes referred to by these authorities, nor is it one parallel to those cited by appellants’ counsel. There was no injustice suffered by plaintiffs in having made a deed for two hundred and four acres of land, if they received the agreed price for that quantity, which the complaint show's.
This is not a case like Gillespie v. Moon (2 Johns. Ch. 585), where the agreement, clearly alleged and proven, was to sell and purchase only two hundred acres of land, but the deed was, by mistake, made to describe by metes and bounds a tract containing in fact two hundred and fifty acres. In that ease the vendee had paid only according to his agreement, for two hundred acres, and was attempting unconscionably to hold fifty acres for which he had never paid anything, and which he had acquired through a mere mistake. The case presented other circumstances that rendered the existence of the deed, as made, a peculiar hardship to the vendor.
The case before us is not like the case of Lindsay v. Davenport (18 Ill. 380), where the deed described the “northwest quarter ” of a certain section, while the land actually sold and paid for was the “southeast quarter, ’’—a totally
The allegations of the complaint in this case do not present a case like Johnson v. Taber (6 Selden, 319), where it appeared that the boundaries of the land sold were pointed out on the ground by the vendor to the vendee before the deed was made, and it appeared that the vendee understood and was informed by the vendor at the time that a certain tree and a fence shown him constituted the boundary, but by a mistake of courses and distances, recited in the deed, the boundary, as defined therein, was made to go beyond or across the fence and take in more land or other land than was pointed out to the vendee. In that case the vendor was relieved from his covenant of warranty, as to the land outside of the designated and understood boundaries, and the mistake in the deed substantially corrected.
Nor does this case present any such equities as Brown v. Lamphear (35 Vermont, 252), wherein it was alleged that there was an express agreement before the conveyance was made, that a certain spring and aqueduct, within the tract sold, on which the vendor depended for water to supply his dwelling-house, and other houses which he had contracted to supply with water, should be reserved and excepted, but by a mistake of the scrivener the reservation was not put into the deed, and the complainant signed it without reading it and without noticing the omission, having full confidence in the scrivener and supposing that the deed conformed to the agreement and understanding of the parties.
In that ease the vendee attempted to hold property for which he had never paid anything and which he had not purchased. In addition to the gróat damage and inconvenience to which the vendor would be subjected, by having the spring taken from him, it appeared that the aqueduct and improvements, at the spring, had alone cost more than the entire purchase-price paid by the vendee for the land. The advantage sought by the vendee, through the mistake
But in the case at bar there is no allegation that the boundaries were pointed out upon the ground before the survey was made; nor that the parties viewed the premises and gave instructions to the surveyor, which he violated in making his survey and description to be inserted in the deed. It does not appear that the eighteen acres in dispute are relatively of any greater value than the rest of the two hundred and four acres, or that the eigliteen-acre tract contains any spring, or quarry, or mine, or timber, or watercourse, or any other thing rendering it of peculiar value to plaintiffs, and making it unconscionable for defendants— having paid for it according to agreement, as shown by the complaint—to keep it.
The only allegation raising any equity in favor of the plaintiffs is that concerning improvements, but that is not sufficient, because it' does not appear what the improvements are, nor when they were made. Although it is alleged that they are permanent, yet they may have been only such as were necessary incidents to the use and occupation of the premises during the fifteen years that the plaintiffs aver they have been in possession, and only a fair offset to the value of such use and occupation. The improvements may have been made, so far as anything in the complaint shows to the contrary, since the plaintiffs knew of this alleged mistake, and since demand for possession was made.
Upon all the authorities cited upon the argument of this cause, the Court hold that in cases of this kind the complaint should distinctly show what was the original agreement and understanding of the parties, and should point' out with clearness and precision wherein there was a mistake, and should show that it did not arise from gross negligence of the plaintiff. There should also appear some circumstances relating to the nature or situation of the property which shows an unfair advantage to have been gained by the defendant, and that it is unjust to allow the alleged mistake to stand.
The complaint in this cause, being defective in three particulars, is deemed insufficient.