90 So. 2d 7 | Miss. | 1956
The appellee, H. F. McCormick, sued the appellant, Albert Sullivan, in the Chancery Court of Hinds County for the reformation of a deed of trust given by the defendant on September 7, 1954, to secure the payment of a promissory note for $2,075.80, for most of the purchase price, including interest to maturity, insurance, etc., on a Tandem Van Trailer. The bill of complaint also sought the determination and adjudication of the amount due by the defendant to the complainant under the terms of the promissory note; to have a lien declared upon the Tandem Trailer and an order for the sale of the same to enforce the payment of such lien; and to appoint a commissioner to foreclose the alleged lien.
The reformation of the deed of trust was sought on the ground of an alleged mutual mistake of the parties in describing the Tandem Trailer in the deed of trust. An answer and cross bill were filed by the defendant and cross-complainant Sullivan denying that there had been a mutual mistake.in describing the trailer in the deed of trust, and the cross bill alleged that the cross-defendant McCormick had represented to the cross-corn
The purchase price charged the defendant by the complainant was the sum of $2,150.00, but on which purchase price the seller was to give a credit of $650.00 in exchange for a Nabor’s Trailer which was traded to the seller by the purchaser and the latter was to receive as a credit on the note any excess of $650.00 that the complainant may be able to get on a resale of the trailer traded in by the defendant. The complainant later sold the Nabor’s Trailer for $1,000.00.
There is no dispute in regard to the facts alleged in the cross bill as to the charging of usurious interest on the note nor as to the facts alleged in the next preceding paragraph of this opinion as to the credit that the defendant was to receive on the purchase price of $2,150.00 for the Tandem trailer by reason of the fact that the defendant had turned in his Nabor’s Trailer on the trade.
It appears from the evidence without dispute that the appellee, who lived at Forest, Mississippi, had purchased the trailer through one Abernathy from the Fruehauf Trailer dealer in Jackson, and the chancellor therefore found that the appellee was under the impression that the same was a Fruehauf Trailer. Moreover, when the appellant, together with his wife and John Wesley Flowers and Joseph Chambers, went to the City of Forest and contacted the appellee, who was an experienced deal
There is nothing in tbe proof to indicate tbat the appellee ever withdrew tbe representations tbat be made on tbe former occasion in tbe presence of tbe appellant, bis wife and John Wesley Flowers and Joseph Chambers, to tbe effect tbat tbe trailer which tbe appellant bad observed and proposed to buy was a 1951 Model Fruebauf Tandem Van Trailer. In fact, tbe appellee testified tbat be did not know on tbe occasion of tbe appellant’s first visit to bis place of business what make or model trailer be was proposing to sell. He bad been in tbe business of handling used trucks, trailers, etc., for nearly 20 years and be introduced two witnesses who bad bad far less experience in tbat business than be, and who testified tbat they could tell a 1951 Fruebauf Trailer from a 1946 Trailmobile Tandem Van Trailer. Tbe record is clear tbat at the time tbe appellee made tbe repre
On November 28, 1954, after the sale was consummated on September 7, 1954, the $2,150.00 trailer purchased by the appellant from the appellee became involved in a wreck or collision in the State of Tennessee, and it was then discovered for the first time by an insurance adjuster that the trailer was a 1946 Model Trail-mobile Tandam Yan Trailer, bearing factory serial number 46-102-11089, whereas the appellee had procured the insurance thereon, a charge for which was included in the amount of the note and deed of trust, and had furnished the local insurance agent at Forest the description contained in the insurance policy as being a 1951 Model Fruehauf Tandem Yan Trailer. The insurance adjuster recognized that the wreck or collision of the trailer had resulted in a loss of $1,500.00 and agreed to pay the appellant only the sum of $935.00 therefor after the appellant had agreed to pay $350.00 for the salvage value of the same. The appellant accepted the $935.00 and retained the trailer. The policy contained a $250.00 deductible provision. While it is not fully developed in the record, the insurance adjuster evidently took advantage of the fact that his policy covered a 1951 Model Fruehauf Tandem Yan Trailer and not the 1946 Model Trailmobile Tandem Trailer bearing factory serial number 46-102-11089.
The chancellor stated in his finding of fact that: “Although the evidence is sufficient to establish that the complainant represented to the defendant at the time of the purchase of the trailer in question that the trailer was a 1951 Model Fruehauf Tandem Van Trailer when in
The proof discloses that after the appellant thereupon learned for the first time that the trailer was a 1946 Model Trailmobile Tandem Van Trailer instead of a 1951 Model Fruehauf Tandem Van Trailer, he sought an adjustment on the balance of the purchase price, represented by the note and deed of trust. While it is not fully developed by the proof, he was evidently not able to rescind the sale in toto since the trade-in trailer had been sold to a third party at the sum of $1,000.
The result was that the appellant used the $935 paid to him by the insurance company and caused the trailer that he had purchased from the appellee to be repaired. The proof is silent as to whether or not it was in as good condition after being repaired, following the wreck or collision, as it was prior thereto.
The appellant had made no payments on the note prior to that time except as to credits to which he was entitled on the resale of his own Nabor’s Trailer by the appellee.
We do not think that under the foregoing statement of the facts the appellee, who brought this suit, was entitled to have the deed of trust reformed so as to describe therein “One 1946 Model Trailmobile Tandem Van Trailer, bearing factory serial No. 46-102-11089”, since the proof shows, according to the finding of the chancellor, that the appellant thought he was buying, and intended to give a deed of trust on, a 1951 Model Fruehauf Tandem Van Trailer. Neither party mentioned a 1946 Model Trailmobile Tandem Trailer or had the same in mind. There was no mutual mistake. The seller merely represented that the trailer was a 1951 Model Fruehauf Tandem Van Trailer without knowing what year or make it was, and in reckless disregard of whether it was such a trailer or not, since he had negligently failed
The proof being insufficient to show a mutual mistake of the parties, we do not think that the appellee as complainant in the chancery court was entitled to have the deed of trust reformed. Nor do we think that the appellee was entitled to enforce the collection of any balance that may be due him except by means of the enforcement of a purchase money lien as provided by law which would not carry a liability in the sum of $233.52 as a reasonable attorney’s fee, or any other sum as attorney’s fee provided for in the note for the payment of which the deed of trust was given to secure. In other words, the appellee would only he entitled to collect such indebtedness against the trailer as may he justly and legally due him, and at the legal rate of interest of 6 percent per annum.
Even if it should be conceded that there was a mutual mistake of the parties in regard to the kind of trailer the purchaser was buying and intended to describe in
The chancellor found as a fact on conflicting evidence that a 1946 Model Trailmobile would be worth as much as a 1951 Fruehauf Trailer, if each were shown to be in good condition, as found from the evidence. This does not take into consideration whether or not the appellant was damaged in that he paid approximately $300 for an insurance premium on the truck, procured by the seller of the trailer, for which he was charged in calculating the aggregate amount of the note sued on, and on which the appellant was charged a commission on the premium by the appellee, and such insurance was evidently not as valuable to the appellant as it would have been if the property had not been incorrectly described in the insurance policy.
We have concluded to reverse and remand the cause in order that the note and deed of trust may be disregarded and the appellee relegated to the right to assert his purchase money lien against the trailer in the amount
Reversed and remanded.