Opinion by
Mary A. Benson agreed to buy a lot of ground from John H. Scott, located on what was known as the Bonsall tract, in Delaware County. The land had not been acquired by the proposed grantor at the time the agreement was executed, July 4, 1908, and it in no way described the boundaries. On the same date, Edward C. Benson, the husband, purchased a property adjoining, his wife acting as agent for him in the transaction. The court below has found that the payments for the latter were fully made by Mary, who became the equitable owner.
The Bensons went upon the ground which they believed had been bought by them, and began the construction of a dwelling. This was nearly completed on December 8,1909, when a deed was demanded and received from the seller. It was prepared by the vendor himself, and conveyed to the wife lot 415, referring to the number upon the plan, prepared in the preceding January, after Scott had acquired title. At that time, she had also paid in full for lot 414, though no transfer of it was made. When the house was built and the deed given, the Bonsall tract was unimproved, there being but one street laid out, and no definite marks on the ground designated the location of the various parcels. The court below
After the house was practically completed, the Radnor Building and Loan Association advanced $2,000, which was secured by bond and mortgage on lot 415, executed by husband and wife on December 14, 1909, and duly recorded. Later, judgment was entered on the bond, and an execution issued. Both 414 and 415 were sold, and the complainant became the purchaser. Possession of the property was taken by it in 1916, and leased to tenants, who resided thereon until the institution of the present proceeding. In 1919, a sale was effected, and a search by the title company disclosed the fact that, through error, the building was erected on adjoining land. A bill was filed asking for reformation, and, after hearing, a decree was entered directing that the devisees of Scott, who had become owners by virtue of his will, convey lots 416 and 417, upon which the house was built, and that the complainant reconvey lots 414 and 415, and, in addition, pay such sum as would measure the difference in market value, the former being twenty-five feet greater in depth than those called for by the deed of Scott to Benson. From the order made, this appeal has been taken, and many assignments of error have been filed, largely directed to findings of fact which, of course,
It is first insisted that the proper remedy of the complainant was an action in ejectment, though he was in possession. In some cases defects in descriptions, such as here claimed, have been reached equitably in such a proceeding (Trexler v. Fisher,
It is urged the mistake, if existing, was not mutual, and, therefore, the decree entered is not justified. The rule is that jf error occurs as to the identity of the property itself, reformation cannot be had, although the contract may be rescinded, for there has been no meeting of
The court below has found that Mary Benson paid for two lots, though the agreement to purchase the one was in the name of the husband, and a deed for No. 415 was made on December 8, 1909, after the dwelling house had been practically completed. The money advanced by the building and loan association was used to pay the contractor and the materialmen. After completion, the Bensons lived therein for several years, paying the taxes and, subsequently, the complainant purchased both parcels at the sale on execution, and retained undisputed possession under the sheriff’s deed which it received. At the time the dwelling was erected, nothing appeared on the ground to indicate definitely where the lots were located, and the 12th finding expressly declares that the building was erected “through the mutual mistake of the parties to the transaction.” No claim was made by the grantor of any interest in the property during his lifetime. It seems clear, and the court was justified in so finding, that Mary Benson desired a conveyance of the land which she was then occupying, and upon which her house had been constructed. Scott, when he drew and executed the deed, knew that the building was practically completed, and it is fairly to be assumed that he was aware of the situation, and that the grantee was to re
Appellants further argue that the decree in the present case cannot be enforced, since it is required therein that a good title be conveyed by complainant for the lots Nos. 414 and 415, which it purchased at the sheriff’s sale. This contention is based on testimony that the mortgagors were both dead at the time of the entry, in 1915, of the bond secured by the mortgage given in 1909, and that, therefore, the proper parties not having been brought upon the record, the sale on the judgment obtained was ineffective to pass title, though it related back to the date of the mortgage itself: Morris v. Campbell,
The decree is affirmed at the cost of appellants.
