93 S.E. 951 | N.C. | 1917
This is an action brought for the purpose of having a certain deed, absolute in form, declared to be a mortgage.
At the conclusion of the evidence his Honor entered judgment of nonsuit, and the plaintiff excepted and appealed. There is neither allegation nor proof that the deed which the plaintiff asks to have reformed was not executed as it was intended to be, or that the clause of defeasance was omitted by reason of ignorance, mistake, fraud or undue advantage, and this, under our authorities, is fatal to the plaintiff's action.
Pearson, J., stated the principle clearly and succinctly in Sowell v.Barrett,
This excerpt from the opinion has been quoted literally and with approval in Bonham v. Craig,
Nor does the alleged agreement, if established, raise a trust in favor of the plaintiff. This question was dealt with in Bonham v. Craig, in which the authorities are discussed, and the Court says: "Nor will it avail the plaintiff to treat the alleged agreement as raising a trust which, not being within our statute of frauds, may be enforced upon sufficient parol proof. The case made in the complaint on which relief is sought is the omission to insert in the deed a clause limiting the estate conveyed upon the grantee's undertaking to restore the property and reconvey title when the grantor returned, and the equity arising out of his refusal to do so. This is not a trust within the scope of any of the numerous adjudications to which our attention was called in the elaborate argument of counsel. It involves the question of the admissibility of evidence outside of the deed to control its operation and impose upon the grantee an obligation, on the contingency which has happened, to reconvey the land. Upon principle and authority, we think this cannot be done." This is approved in Gaylord v.Gaylord,
The case of Ray v. Patterson,
Not only is the case not opposed to the doctrine we have declared, but it clearly recognizes the same principle, when it is said in the opinion, "Equity will reform a written contract or other instrument inter vivos where, through mutual mistake of the parties or the mistake of one of them, induced by the fraud or inequitable conduct of the other, it does not as written truly express their agreement." *425
The judgment of nonsuit was properly allowed.
Affirmed.
CLARK, C. J., not sitting.
Cited: Williamson v. Rabon,