(After stating the foregoing facts.) The description of the lot as contained in the lease and option contract, giving the State, county, and district, and describing the lot as containing a half acre, 94 by 117 feet, as being on the north side of Shepherd Ford public road, and as being bоunded on all other sides by .lands of another person, where no starting point was designated, standing alone, was too indefinite to authorizе a recovery of the land, or a decree for specific performance.
Clark
v.
Knowles,
129
Ga.
291 (
But the plaintiff, by amendment, set up a complete and definite description of the lot, and asserted that the lot so described “ . . is the exact tract . . intended by both parties . . to bе embodied and described [in the lease and option agreement] . . as mutually agreed upon orally by the parties prior to and at the time of the execution of the same; that said lot , . was actually measured and staked off by both Ricks and Hargraves in accordаnce with [the description contained in the amendment] prior to the execution of said contract; but due entirely to mutual inadvertеnce, mistake of fact, and lack of understanding of the legal effect and significance of the same, the said parties failed to inform their draftsman, Hon. Wallace F. Mills, who prepared said contract and agreement, the complete and exact legal description of *293 said lands, . . and for said reason the same was omitted from said written contract at the time of the preparation and execution thereof.”
The Code, § 37-215, provides: “If the form of conveyance shall be, by accident or mistake, contrary to the intention of the parties in their contract, equity shall interfere to make it conform thereto.” § 37-205 provides: “A mistake of'law by the draftsman or other agent, by which the contract, as executed, does not fulfill or violates the manifest intention of the parties to the agreement, may be relieved in equity.” A portion of § 37-212 declares: “Belief may be granted even in cases of negligence by the complainаnt, if it appears that the other party has not been prejudiced thereby.” “Besort to parol evidence is necessary to rеform an instrument. Without parol evidence there can be no reformation.”
Green
v. Johnson, 153
Ga.
738, 751 (
In view of the foregoing authorities, we hold that the petition properly set forth a сase for reformation of the lease and option agreement.
While the description of the land involved, as set forth in the originаl petition, was not adequate to authorize a recovery of the land, or upon which to base a decree for specific performance of the contract, yet it was proper for the court to allow an
*294
amendment thereto -which set forth а specific and definite description. An insufficient description of the land sued for may be cured by amendment, where it appears thаt the description in the original petition and that in the amendment refer to the same land.
Polhill v. Brown,
84
Ga.
338 (2) (
The necessary description to authorizе a reformation of the lease and option agreement, having been supplied by amendment, the prayer for specific рerformance and other relief was consistent with and within the scope of the pleadings, and was not subject to the demurrer. While in
Harris v. Williams,
103
Ga.
324, 326 (
It is also insisted that there was a misjoinder of parties defendant in the equitable petition, in that Ricks, to whom the lease and option agreement was originally executed and who subsequently transferred it to Oakhurst Develоpment Corporation, should not have been made a party defendant. “All persons who are directly or consequentially interеsted in the event of the suit should be made parties.”
Blaisdell
v.
Bohr,
68
Ga.
56;
Taylor
v.
Colley,
138
Ga.
41 (
