This is the second appeal in a tortuous course of litigation triggered by a mutual mistake of fact concerning where on the face of the earth lay the southern boundary of certain shorefront property in Trenton. The parties aggrieved in the first appeal were the plaintiffs, Casper and Teresa Sargent; those aggrieved presently are the defendants, Phillip and Edward Coolidge. Once again, for reasons that are explained below, we set aside the judgment before us and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
In 1968, Margaret Coolidge, the mother of the defendants, attempted to convey to the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title, Paul and Dorothy Spates, a 175 foot square parcel of undeveloped shorefront property. The intended land is situated immediately to the south of her family cottage. In 1970, the Spates, by a description identical to that of their deed from Mrs. Coolidge, attempted to convey the same 175 foot square parcel to the plaintiffs. By will probated following her death on November 23, 1971, Margaret Coolidge, purported to leave the family cottage to her sons, the defendants. It is clear that none of these transactions were undertaken fraudulently or in bad faith.
The plaintiffs testified without contradiction that during the ensuing four or five years they treated the parcel south of the Coolidge cottage as their own, clearing trees, installing a septic tank, electric lines and a mobile home, putting in a road, and building a large deck next to the mobile home.
Around 1976, the plaintiffs were informed by the agent of an adjacent landowner named Mitchell that they were occupying her property. The plaintiffs hired a surveyor and discоvered from the results of the survey that the adjacent landowner was correct. According to the boundary calls in the plaintiffs’ deed, most of the plaintiffs’ property lay under the site of the defendants’ cottage. Thereupon, the plaintiffs moved off the parcel south of the cottage *740 and, on June 24,1977, brought a real action at law аgainst the defendants pursuant to M.R.Civ.P 80A to establish their title both to the cottage and to the land on which it was built.
The case was tried in Superior Court, Hancock County, before a justice sitting without a jury. The justice concluded that the plaintiffs had failed to prove their cause of action and ordered judgment for the defendants. On what amounted in effeсt to “convincing evidence,” see
Day v. McEwen,
Me.,
Uрon appeal by the plaintiffs, Casper and Teresa Sargent, we vacated the judgment of the Superior Court.
Sargent v. Coolidge,
Me.,
Following the receipt of our mandate, the defendants counterclaimed for reformation. They requested that, consistent with the original intent of the plaintiffs and of both parties’ predecessors in title, the property desсription in the Coolidge-to-Spates deed *741 and the Spates-to-Sargent deed be reformed to convey a 175 foot square piece of land located south of the now established lot 29-30 division line.
As if upon order for a new trial under M.R.Civ.P. 59(a) the single justice who had originally presided over the plaintiffs’ claim heard testimony concerning the defendants’ counterclaim. In his judgment he rеaffirmed the facts found in the prior trial, but concluded:
This Court cannot reform the Deeds as requested by Defendants in their counterclaim. To do so would not do equity to Plaintiffs because most, if not all of the land described in the Counterclaim is not owned by the Defendants, except by a possible claim of adverse possession. (emphasis added)
The ensuing judgment provided that the plaintiffs recover against the defendants so much of the land underlying the Coolidge cottage as had been owned by Margaret Coolidge at the time of her conveyance to Paul and Dorothy Spates — a parcel amounting to something less than 175 foot square feet. 4 Should this result stand, the plaintiffs would acquire land and a cottage they never intended to buy and the defendants would be ousted from possession of that which their mother never intended to sell.
It may be inevitable that one or the other or both parties may suffer in some degree from this mutual factual mistake. Once equity jurisdiction attaches, however, the court can go on to decide the entire controversy, including matters that would otherwise sound “at law.”
Matter of International Paper Co., Etc.,
Me.,
Neither side has argued the merits of remanding for trial on the adverse possession issue. Obviously content with the judgment, the plaintiffs, citing
Adams v. Stevens,
The plaintiffs also contend that Margaret Coolidge could have avoided her mistake, had she surveyed the boundary lines of her property before deeding away any part of it. However true this may be, the same can also be alleged of the plaintiffs. Under the cirсumstances of this case, a mere failure to survey is not so egregious an omission as would stay the hand of an equity court from reforming the deeds, especially where both parties were guilty of such neglect.
See Houlihan v. Murphy,
The defendants, for their part, urge us to reverse the judgment of the Superior Court and remand with an order that reformation be granted. They cite
Tibbetts v. Pelotte,
Me.,
The “possible claim of adverse possession,” noted above, is thus central to the disposition of the defendants’ request for reformation. According to the record testimony, the shorefront property entered the defendants’ family around 1946 through purchase by Nettie Moore, grandmother of Phillip and Edward Coolidge. The cottage was constructed shortly thereafter. The Superior Court found from uncontroverted evidence that the Coolidge family believed their southern boundary extended to a ravine over 175 feet south of the subsequently established true line. Phillip Coolidge testified that the parcel the plaintiffs thought they were purchasing was at one point being saved for Nettie Moore’s son, General Bryant Moore. The family knew that parcel as “The General’s Lot.” Bryant Moore was killed in Korea and, in 1954, Nettie Moore conveyed the disputed land to her daughter, Margaret Coolidge. The proрerty between the ravine and the true line continued to be used every year. The Coolidge children played there and the family picnicked there. To the defendants’ knowledge, no third party had ever claimed that property prior to the plaintiffs’ encounter with the agent of the adjacent landowner.
Whether title to the parсel south of the cottage ripened in Margaret Coolidge by adverse possession before she attempted to transfer her interest to the Spates is, such evidence suggests, a triable issue.
See, e. g. McMullen v. Dowley,
Me.,
Because all interested and necessary parties to the adverse possession claim of title to the parcel of land between the true southerly boundary of the Coolidge lot and the ravine raised by the defendants in support of their counterclaim for reformation of the original deeds were not made parties therein and in their absence full equitable disposition of the entire controversy between the partiеs cannot be had, we must vacate the Superior Court’s judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and remand the case for retrial only in connection with the defendants’ counterclaim. By their own testimony, the plaintiffs did not, and still do not, want the Coolidge cottage, provided they can obtain unclouded title to the land they thought they had purchased.
Should, howеver, the defendants on retrial of the counterclaim fail to sustain their claim that Margaret Coolidge or the Spates had acquired a superior title to the parcel they had intended to transfer, then, reformation must be denied. This result follows from the maxim that the law will prevail where the equities are equal.
Foster v. Kingsley,
The entry will be:
Judgment of the Superior Court vacated and defendants’ counterclaim for reformation remanded for further proceedings as may be necessary to determine the issue of adverse possession, the Court to order that all interested and necessary parties as indicated in this opinion be joined as parties to the counterclaim.
Accordingly, the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with the opinion herein.
All concurring.
Notes
.The property description in the Coolidge to Spates deed, which is identical to that in the Spates to Sargent deed, does not mention the lot 29-30 division line by name. Instead, the description refers to the “southerly side line of the premises described as conveyed” tо Margaret Coolidge by Nettie Moore, mother of Margaret Coolidge and defendants’ grandmother. During the first trial, a surveyor who had examined both the land and Margaret Coolidge’s chain of title testified that the above-mentioned “southerly side line” was the line dividing lots 29 and 30. No testimony to the contrary was introduced.
. Defendants’ failure to seek equitablе relief below was conceded at oral argument to be counsel’s “procedural strategy.”
. It has long been the law in Maine that in an
equitable
action to reform a deed parol testimony is admissible to prove mutual mistake.
See, e. g., Farley v. Bryant,
.
See
. The defendants’ mother, grantor of the deed to the plaintiffs’ predecessor in title, is dead. For purposes of seeking reformation, the defendants stand in her shoes.
See, e. g. Simmons
v.
Capra,
Nearly two weeks after trial had been completed on the counterclaim for reformation, the defendants did file a complaint against the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title, Paul and Dorothy Spates. The Spates entered a general appearance for the limited purpose of disclaiming all right, title, and interest in the disputed property. Subsequently, this third party complaint was dismissed for untimely filing.
Since we are satisfied that the Spates have nothing to gain or lose by the ultimate disposition of the defendants’ counterclaim, it is unnecessary that they be part of any further proceedings.
Cf. Day v. McEwen,
Me.,
. During a pre-trial conference discussing testimony that the defendants were about to offer, the cоurt put the rhetorical question. “You don’t think this court can decide the question *743 of adverse possession ... [when] the parties are not before the court or anything?” At the end of that conference, the presiding justice expressly told counsel, “I am not going to determine if adverse possession existed in this case.”
. Although this case may be settlеd without the expense of further litigation, in order to prevent further delay, we suggest a final caveat in the event the case is retried and adverse possession is not proven; this, without deciding any point of law in regard thereto. The plaintiffs might offer evidence of what they paid for the land they were asked to vacate together with the cost of all the improvements they made thereon. Similarly, the defendants might offer evidence of the current fair market value of the cottage together with the value of improvements they may have made while, unrealized by them but known to the plaintiffs, the cottage was no longer theirs. If it appears to the Superior Court that the value оf the latter exceeds the value of the former, an order compelling the plaintiffs to remit to the defendants the difference as part of the court’s judgment in favor of the plaintiffs respecting the reference land and cottage might not be unwarranted. We recognize that compliance with such an order might in effect compel the plaintiffs to immediately put the cottage up for sale. But we also recognize that an action for damages based on a deeds’ covenants — an action foreclosed here by the fact that the plaintiffs accepted a deed without covenants — could return to the plaintiffs no more than their purchase price and improvement expenditures.
