17 Haw. 66 | Haw. | 1905
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
On October 1, 1902, tbe plaintiff M. E. Scott, being indebted to the defendant in the aggregate snm of $1908.27, on two book accounts, as collateral to one of which the defendant held two due bills, executed at the request of the defendant a note for that amount and a mortgage of certain lands to secure it. His wife, the other plaintiff, joined in the note and mortgage. Part of the mortgaged property belonged to her. On September 19, 1904, this bill was brought for the annulment of the mortgage and incidentally to enjoin a foreclosure which the defendant was instituting under the power of sale contained in the mortgage. The defendant filed an answer and also a cross-bill asking for an accounting and a decree requiring the plaintiffs to pay the amount found due and in default of payment that the mortgaged premises he sold and the proceeds applied, etc. The circuit judge, after a hearing, decreed that the note and mort
The theory of the plaintiffs is that the note and mortgage were given on condition that the due bills should thereupon be assigned back to the plaintiff M. E. Scott, and that the note and mortgage should now be annulled because that part of the consideration was not performed by the defendant. The plaintiffs do not seek to enforce such performance or to have the note and mortgage reformed so as to make them accord with the contract. as they claim to have understood it, nor, indeed, is it disputed that the note and mortgage were drawn and executed precisely as intended by both parties at the time. The specific prayer of the bill is that the mortgage be declared null and void for want of consideration. The circuit judge, however, did not sustain that theory, and in that he was quite right as we think, but, perhaps under the general prayer for further and other relief, decreed an annulment on the ground of mistake — finding that the plaintiffs understood that the due bills were to be assigned back upon the execution of the note and mortgage but that the defendant understood the contrary, in other words, that the minds of the parties never met in respect to a portion of the antecedent oral contract which was not intended to be executed in writing. The plaintiffs state in their brief that they do not accept the court’s theory of a misunderstanding, although they state also that that theory is sufficient to establish the voidability of the note and mortgage.
The defendant contends that there was not sufficient proof of want of mutuality in the understanding of the parties to justify a decree of annulment of the written note and mortgage and cites authorities for the purpose of showing that proof in cases
The decree appealed from was based on the finding that Scott and Hime, the defendant’s agent in this matter, were equally positive, the one that the reassignment of the due bills was to be part of the consideration for the execution of the note and mortgage, and the other that such was not the case; that Scott’s testimony is supported by Mrs. Scott’s statement that she was familiar with her husband’s business and that immediately after Scott’s agreement with Hime she was informed by Scott that the claims were to be returned and that if such had not been the plan she certainly would not have executed the note and mortgage; and that the appearance of these witnesses did not
In view of the nature of the testimony at this late date as to what statements were made orally between Scott and Hime prior to the execution of the mortgage and Scott’s subsequent conduct and statements prior to the filing of this bill, it does not seem sufficiently clear that there was a misunderstanding of the parties to justify the annulment of the note and mortgage. It may be that Scott’s memory is at fault as to just what was stated at the time of the agreement and that, as some of his subsequent statements and acts tend to show, the agreement was that the book accounts should be canceled and the due bills reassigned not upon the execution but upon the payment of the note and mortgage, or that Scott’s present view is merely his construction upon what was actually stated at the time of the original agreement. However that may be, he has not made out a clear case for the annulment of the note and mortgage. It is unnecessary to consider whether the doctrine of estoppel, or laches or ratification would preclude the plaintiffs from obtaining the relief desired, if they had made out a case otherwise. The other portions of the decree naturally fall with the portion relating to annulment.
The decree appealed from is reversed and the case remanded to the circuit judge for such further proceedings as may be proper.