41 S.E.2d 744 | N.C. | 1947
Civil action to remove cloud from leasehold estate of plaintiff and to reform a deed from defendants Long to defendant Braznell.
In October, 1945, W. B. Hodges and the estate of C.D. Weeks owned the four-story building at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Main Street in Hendersonville, N.C. known as Commercial Building. The first floor thereof was constructed for use of a banking institution and the plaintiffs occupied the same under a ten-year lease from Hodges and Weeks. The executor of the will of C.D. Weeks was authorized to sell at private sale subject to confirmation by the court.
Hodges and Crowell, executor, agreed to sell said building to defendants Long provided the purchasers would agree to lease the banking room to plaintiff for a term of fifteen years. Thereupon, on 15 October, 1945, Long and wife executed an agreement to lease said premises to plaintiff for fifteen years, the agreement to become effective as a lease in the event and upon the day the Longs acquired title to the property. Thereafter, on 29 October, 1945, Hodges and Crowell, executor, separately executed and delivered to the Longs two deeds, each conveying a one-half interest in said building. These deeds contain the following:
"This conveyance is subject to lease with Southern Bell Telephone Company expiring May 1, 1948, and also lease with State Trust Company, date October 16, 1945, for a term of fifteen years, and is subject to any party wall agreements of record."
On 30 March, 1946, the Longs delivered to F. W. Ewbank option or contract to convey said building for $110,000. This option was never exercised. However, there were negotiations between the Longs and Carl W. Braznell, agent of defendant Braznell, Ewbank acting as a go *213 between. These negotiations culminated in a deed from the Longs to defendant Braznell dated 3 June, 1946, containing the following:
"It is understood and agreed that this conveyance is made subject to the leases of the several tenants; . . ."
During the negotiations the plaintiff's lease contract was discussed and it was understood that the Longs were selling subject to existing leases, particularly the lease of plaintiff, and that it was to be so stipulated in the deed. The lease contract was delivered to Ewbank and later by him delivered to Braznell.
Braznell recorded his deed and then notified plaintiff he would not accept the monthly rental of $250 theretofore paid and would not recognize any alleged lease under which it claimed. Plaintiff then recorded its lease and instituted this action, alleging that defendant's demands and claims cast a cloud upon its leasehold estate. It also seeks to reform the deed from Long to Braznell for mutual mistake of the parties by including a provision adequately protecting its rental contract.
At the trial below issues on the allegations of mutual mistake of the parties were submitted to the jury and answered by them in favor of plaintiff. From judgment on the verdict defendant Braznell appealed. The court below made no ruling in respect to the reservation contained in the deeds from Hodges and Crowell, executor, to Long and wife. Hence the question of its sufficiency to protect the leasehold rights of plaintiff is not presented for decision.
The defendant concedes that plaintiff "stands in the shoes or sits in the seat" of the Longs under whom it claims, and it may maintain this action to reform the deed to make it express the true contract in respect to its leasehold interest. Sills v. Ford,
There is evidence in the record tending to show that (1) the contract of purchase and sale was made subject to existing leases; (2) it was understood and agreed that the deed of conveyance should contain a provision fully protecting the leasehold rights of plaintiff and other tenants; and (3) this intent was inadequately expressed and a valid, enforceable provision was omitted by mutual mistake of the parties.
At the very inception of the somewhat extended negotiations Long discussed with Ewbank the outstanding leases and the rental income *214 from the building. He advised Ewbank that he would not under any conditions sell unless these leases, particularly the lease to plaintiff, were fully protected. Ewbank advised Carl W. Braznell (agent of defendant in active charge of the negotiations) by letter that the bank had a fifteen-year lease. He fully discussed this and other leases with Braznell and advised him of the conditions under which the Longs would sell. Braznell was furnished with a statement of monthly income from the building showing that the State Trust Company rental was $250 per month. Provision was inserted in the original option, in the contract to convey and in the deed, attempting to protect the rights of plaintiff. Ewbank actually acquired possession of Long's copy of the leases, made them available to the defendant, and later delivered them to him. At the time the deed was delivered Braznell was informed that the leases were there in Ewbank's office for his inspection. Braznell had his attorney prepare the deed and his attorney, on his behalf, inserted in the deed a provision attempting to make the conveyance subject to outstanding leases. Thus the intent of the parties in apparent.
There is, to be sure, some evidence in the record tending to support the inference that Braznell knew the language used in the deed was not sufficient to protect the plaintiff's lease and that he had the deed prepared and tendered to plaintiff as a proper and full expression of the contract of the parties, intending at the time to take advantage of the insufficiency of the reservation so soon as the deed was delivered and recorded. But it is more charitable to assume that he was acting in good faith in an honest attempt to express the will of the parties than to conclude he made a deliberate and successful effort to mislead and deceive the Longs. In either event he cannot now complain.
But the defendant contends that the Longs used the language they intended to use, believing it adequately expressed the intent of the parties. Thus, he says, there was a mistake of law and not of fact.
A bare, naked mistake of law affords no grounds for reformation. This, however, is the general rule, qualified by many exceptions. Pelletier v.Cooperage Co.,
Where the error of law induces a mistake of fact, that is, where, by reason of an error of expression or mistake as to the force and effect of the language used, the contract fails to express the intent of the parties, equity will afford relief. McKay v. Simpson,
"The phrase `mutual mistake' means a mistake common to all the parties to a written instrument and usually relates to a mistake concerning *215 its contents or its legal effect." Hubbard and Co. v. Horne, supra. "It is wholly immaterial whether . . . the parties failed to make the instrument in the form they intended, or misapprehended its legal effect." King v.Hobbs, supra; 45 Am. Jur., 615.
All the parties conceived that the language used adequately protected the outstanding leases. This was a mistake of law. They intended to include in the deed a provision which would fully protect plaintiff and other tenants. By reason of the use of language mistakenly believed to be, but which was not, sufficient to accomplish the common purpose, such provision does not appear in the deed. They intended the deed to include what it does not include. This constitutes a mistake of fact justifying reformation.
Even so, the defendant insists, the plaintiff claims under an unrecorded lease for more than three years and no notice, however full and formal, will supply want of registration. G.S.,
This principle which relates notice to registration only is strictly adhered to by this Court. But relief here is not granted on the basis of notice.
When a grantee accepts the conveyance of real property subject to an outstanding claim or interest evidenced by an unrecorded instrument executed by his grantor, he takes the estate burdened by such claim or interest. By his acceptance of the deed he ratifies the unrecorded instrument, agrees to stand seized subject thereto and estops himself from asserting its invalidity. Bank v. Vass,
The defendants, having offered no evidence, were entitled, as a matter of right, to the concluding argument. Rule 3, Rules of Practice in the Superior Courts,
We have examined the other exceptive assignments of error brought forward and discussed in defendant's brief. They fail to point out cause for a new trial.
In the trial below we find
No error.