81 So. 78 | Ala. | 1918
Lead Opinion
Appellant, complainant in the chancery court, sold a tract of laud to appel
Our judgment is that the decree must he affirmed against all the appellants.
Affirmed.
Lead Opinion
Appellant, complainant in the chancery court, sold a tract of land to appellee *577 and conveyed by deed containing the general covenant of warranty. There was at the time an outstanding mortgage on the property in favor of one Bannister, as everybody connected with the transaction knew. Appellant filed its bill in this cause to reform its deed to appellee by inserting a clause which would except the Bannister mortgage from the warranty of its deed to appellee, averring that the omission of the excepting clause from the deed had been the result of a mutual mistake. In its answer and cross-bill appellee prayed judgment against appellant and its stockholders for the amount of the damage it had suffered by reason of a breach of the covenant; the mortgage having been foreclosed whereby appellee lost the land. Counsel in elaborate and carefully considered briefs discuss two questions: Whether there was in the deed any mistake common to the parties, and, if so, whether complainant in drafting and signing the deed was not guilty of negligence which should bar the relief sought. Upon due consideration we are of the opinion that the chancellor's decree, in which he denied the relief sought in appellant's original bill and awarded relief on appellee's cross-bill, may be justified on either of the grounds proposed, and should therefore be affirmed. Hardly more than a question of fact is involved in either proposition — certainly so as to the first — and we think no beneficial purpose can be served by a detailed discussion of the evidence in all its phases. It is deemed enough to say with reference to the first-stated proposition that it seems very clear to us upon the whole evidence that, while there was a verbal agreement between Stokely, who owned one half of the capital stock of appellant corporation, with Smith and Brazelton, who between them owned the other half and who had purchased the land (except the minerals under it) on credit from appellee, and had a scheme from which they expected to realize great profits, that Smith and Brazelton would pay the outstanding mortgage on its due date, and while appellee, or its managing agent, had notice of this arrangement, there was no agreement, to which appellee was a party or by which it was in any wise bound, by virtue of which appellee was to look to Smith and Brazelton alone for the discharge of the mortgage upon their property; certainly no specific agreement or mutual understanding that the deed should be drawn in terms at all different from those in which it actually found expression.
There is no suggestion of fraud, and the law is clear and undisputed to the proposition that in such circumstances there can be no reformation by the courts. Betts v. Gunn,
It remains only to say that appellants, the South Highland Company and its individual stockholders, against whom decree was rendered on the cross-bill, have appealed and severed in the assignment of errors, cannot be heard to complain that the decree against them was for less than the amount secured by the covenant. If that be a fact, but that is not all clear, and if that circumstance exhibits some inadvertence on the part *578 of the chancellor, as appellant suggests, we have not found that such inadvertence affected his finding on the main issue, the question of reformation vel non.
Our judgment is that the decree must be affirmed against all the appellants.
Affirmed.
McCLELLAN, SOMERVILLE, and GARDNER, JJ., concur.
Rehearing
On Rehearing,
Application overruled.