84 Ky. 241 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant brought snit in ejectment in the Hopkins Circuit Court against Gill & Randall to recover-
Randall answered, disclosing the fact that Grill was his tenant, and that he held said lot by the-authority of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, which was the owner of said property,, and asked that said company be allowed to defend. The company appeared and answered.
The answers of Randall and the company disclose that the Evansville, Henderson & Nashville Railroad Company bought all of the real property owned by appellant from him situated on said street, on which to construct its road-bed ; that said purchase included for said purpose lots Nos. 6 and 7, 8 and 9. And if the deed, which was made some, time after said purchase, and which the company' exhibited with its; answer, failed to cover all of said property, then the omission was the result of a mistake. It asked in that case that the deed be reformed so as to cover . it. Appellant, in his reply, denied that, by the terms of said contract of sale, lots Nos. 6 and 7 were included, or intended to be included. That, by the terms of sale, only lots 8 and 9 were sold to the Evansville, Henderson and Nashville Railroad Company.
The deed exhibited by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company from appellant to the Evansville, Henderson & Nashville Railroad Company, describes the lots sold to it as lots Nos. 8 and 9, situated on the north side of Main Cross street, in the town of
The proof in the case satisfactorily shows that in 1869 the Evansville, Henderson & Nashville Railroad Company proposed to buy from appellant simply a right of way, for the location of its road-bed, over the lots of appellant situated on the north side of Main Cross street, in the town of Madisonville; that appellant, believing that the location of the road-bed on parts of his lots would destroy the value of the remaining parts, declined to sell simply the right of way, but proposed to sell all of the lots that he owned on said street on which the road-bed would be located. This proposition was accepted by the company. The sale thus made was verbal.
It also appears that, at the time of this verbal sale, appellant did not remember that he owned lots 6 and 7; having sold said. lots to Israel Davis several years before by title bond, and Davis having failed to pay for them, the contract of sale was rescinded, and the property reverted back to appellant, which fact he had forgotten at the time he sold said lots to said company; he therefore supposed that he owned only lots Nos. 8 and 9.
It also appears that, at the time of said sale, appellant did not know the precise location or identity of any of said lots, nor did said company.
After said sale appellant and said company, dif
Appellee is positive in his testimony that said factory ‘was situated on lots Nos. 8 and 9, and not on lots Nos. 6 and 7. Another witness, who testified for appellant, gave it as his opinion that said factory was situated on lot No. 10.
Appellees are equally positive that said factory was situated on lots Nos. 6 and 7, and not on Nos. 8 and 9. It may be regarded as a fixed fact, that appellant thought he' was selling, and intended to sell, the lots on which the factory was located; so if it is a fact that the factory was located on lots Nos. 6 and 7, then the question is at once settled that said lots were included in the terms of sale.
On the part of appellees, it was proven by the county surveyor that he surveyed all of said lots carefully and accurately, and that said factory was situated on lots Nos. 6 and 7; also, that he did business in said factory just before it was torn down by the Evansville, Henderson & Nashville Railroad Company, and knows that the factory was situated on lots Nos. 6 and 7. Another witness swears that Israel Davis, the person that once
So we have no hesitation in saying that the weight of the evidence clearly establishes the fact that the factory was situated on lots Nos. 6 and 7, and not lots Nos. 8 and 9, or any part of them. It is also clear that said railroad bed is on parts of lots Nos. 6, 7 and 8, but is not on any part of lot No. 9. The proof is also clear that appellant intended to, and did sell to said company, all of the lots on which its road-bed was constructed, in whole or in part, but no more. It is also clear that the deed made by appellant to said company does not embrace, by mistake in the draftsman, all of the lots sold. This mistake evidently grew out of the fact that neither party knew the identity or quantity of the property' sold.
The lower court, upon these facts, attempted to reform the deed, so as to make it conform. to the terms of the contract made between these parties, by decreeing that appellee, the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, was entitled to the four lots, Nos. 6, 7, 8 and 9.
All mistakes occurring in agreements, executed or executory, relate either, first, to the terms of the contract, or, second, to the subject-matter of the contract. The terms of the contract may be .-stated according to the intention of the parties, •but there is an error of one or both in reference to the property to which the terms apply — such as a mistake in reference to its identity, situation, boundaries, title, quantity or ' value.
Here the terms of the contract were', the sale to ■appellee’s vendor of all the lots owned by appellant, on the north side of Main Cross street, over which the road-bed was constructed in whole or in part. The mistake occurred in reference to the identity, location and number of lots included in the terms of sale.
The appellant’s attorney suggests that, although the mistake may exist as to the' subject-matter of the contract, yer as the statute of frauds requires the contract to be in writing, parol evidence can not be heard to correct the mistake, because that would be virtually making a contract by parol evidence that the statute of frauds required to be in writing.
The courts of a few of the States have held that
The courts of the States that have put the most, stress on this doctrine had no general equity jurisdiction, but only such limited equity jurisdiction as the statutes of the State conferred upon them. This view of the question, therefore, grew out of that fact. A few other States, however, with general equity jurisdiction, followed in the same line of thought.
On the other hand, the courts of a large majority of the States have held that contracts required by the statute of frauds to be in writing' may be reformed by courts of equity, so as to-enlarge or restrict the terms or the subject-matter'
The courts of equity go upon the ground that the statute of frauds is no real obstacle in the way of administering equitable relief, so as to promote justice and prevent wrong. They do not overrule the statute, but, to prevent fraud or mistake, confer remedial rights which are not within the statutory prohibition. In respect to such needful remedies, the statute as to them “is uplifted.” It has also been said, that in case of a written conveyance of land, which does not convey as much land as was agreed, or different or more land than was intended by the parties, the court will fasten a personal obligation upon the party benefited by the mistake to correct it, upon the ground that he was holding the property as trustee.
Whether the parol evidence offered to correct the writing on account of fraud or mistake shows the verbal contract to be broader than the written instrument — covering more or a different subject-matter, or enlarging the terms — or is narrower than the written instrument, either in the terms or subject-matter of the contract, courts of equity will grant relief by reforming the contract, so as to prevent fraud or mistake. The statute of frauds, in granting such relief, is not violated, but “is uplifted,” that it may not perpetrate the fraud that the Legislature designed it to prevent. (See Pomeroy’s
Also, the majority of this court, in the case of Worley v. Tuggle, &c., 4 Bush, 168, held the same doctrine. The same view has also been held since then by all the members of this court. We adopt them now as correct.
We think the court did right in reforming the deed to make it conform to the contract of the parties, but think, it erred in adjudging that appellee, the- Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, was entitled to all four of said lots.
As we have said, it is clear that appellant intended to sell, and did sell, all of the lots he owned on the north side of Main Cross street, to the Evansville, Henderson & Nashville Railroad Company, on which the road-bed of the company was constructed, in whole or in part, but no more. It is also clear that lot No. 9 was not needed or used by said 'company for said purpose. The road-bed does not touch it, but is constructed on lots Nos. 6, 7 and 8. Therefore the lower court, upon equitable principles, should have reformed the deed so as to cover lots Nos. 6, 7 and 8, and have quieted appellee’s title to them; and also, unless the rights of innocent third parties have intervened, have reformed the deed as to lot No. 9, so as to release said lot from said deed and restore the title to appellant.
As the appellee, the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, bought only the title of the Evansville, Henderson & Nashville Railroad Company, as above set forth, and is itself seeking' to reform said
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the lower court is affirmed, in so far as it reformed the deed and quieted the title to lots 6, 7 and 8, to appellee, the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, ■and is reversed as to lot No. .9, with directions to restore the title to said lot to appellaant, and for other proceedings consistent with this opinion.