42 Minn. 511 | Minn. | 1890
The owners, of the land included within “Edmund Rice’s Fourth Addition” made duplicate plats thereof, or what were intended and supposed to be duplicates, each of which was duly executed, attested, certified, and acknowledged, and certified as accepted and approved by the plat commission of the city of St. Paul, who certified on one that it was a true and correct copy of (the other) an original plat of said addition, and which plats were recommended by the city engineer for acceptance by the common council, who thereupon accepted the same, and the two were filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of the county, who placed the one taken as the original on record as such in the book of original town plats, and the other as a certified copy in the book of certified copies of town plats. Though, as we understand, there was at that time no statute requiring that certified copies of town plats should be filed and recorded, we infer that it had been and was the practice in Ramsey county. In the certified copy the lots in block 4 were numbered consecutively from 1 to 32, inclusive; there being 32 lots, and no more, in the block. The numbering commenced at one corner of the block, with lot 1, and was carried down that side of the block, and back on the other, ending with lot 32. In that taken and recorded as the original, the numbering commenced at the same corner with lot 1, and was carried down the same side, and back on the other, but by mistake No. 4 was omitted and “5” placed on the lot which should have been marked “4;” thus, 1, 2, 3, 5. From that on, the numbers are consecutive, and end with 33. So that after No. 3 the numbers of the lots do not correspond with those on the certified copy, which has the correct numbers, and those intended by the owners. Some 13 lots have been sold, the sale in each instance, as shown by the proofs, being according to the numbering on the certi
The confusion and mistakes and complications that may arise in titles and conveyances of lots in the block are obvious. If it be in the power of the court to arrest the mischief now, to anticipate and prevent the evils sure to arise from the present condition of the plats, of course it ought to do so. In one view of the case, which, probably, was not suggested to the court below, it comes clearly under one of the best-known heads of equity jurisprudence, — jurisdiction to correct mistakes in deeds and written instruments, so as to make them conform to what the parties to them intended. Each of the conveyances was in terms made to convey the lot described according to the recorded plat, — the original of the duplicates, — when the parties to the conveyance intended another lot, to wit, the lot bearing; the same number on the certified copy. Thus the deed to the defendant Johnson conveys in terms lot 21 according to the numbering on, the original plat, whereas the parties intended lot 21 as numbered, on the certified copy, which lot is number 22 on the original, so that, the mistake in the original makes the deed convey a lot which the-grantors did not intend to convey, nor the grantee to buy; and it is; the same with each of the conveyances. Either the grantors or the; grantee might maintain an action against the other to correct the description in the deed. That can most readily be done by going to the source of the mistake, the erroneous plat, which, by reference, is part of the deeds, and making that conform to what the parties supposed it to be. The deeds will then be correct, and will convey the property intended; and, though all parties interested in the block are before the court, no one objects to that course. True, that plat, is a public record, but it is one in which private persons have rights,, and the public ■ is in no way interested in the matter in respect to which the correction is asked. As to that, the owners of the lots alone are interested. The objection that the plat sought to be cor
Judgment reversed.