Tabor v. Cilley

53 Vt. 487 | Vt. | 1881

*489The opinion of the court was delivered by

Redfield, J.

The orator seeks by his bill to reform and enlarge the mortgage, so that it may include other than the notes expressly named in it.

The defendant Cilley, at the time the mortgage was executed, was indebted to the orator in the sum of $2750, specified in six promissory notes, five of which were for $500 each, and one for the sum of $250. The two first notes, only, are named in the mortgage, amounting to $1000. The mortgage contains an accruing clause in these words, viz.: “ And also for the payment to said Tabor, his heirs and assigns, of all other sums of money which may hereafter become due from said Cilley to said Tabor on promissory notes or otherwise.” This secured such indebtedness, as should thereafter accrue and become payable. The master reports that the mortgage was read to the orator and the defendant, and both parties were satisfied with the language used as expressing the contract made by the parties. The master also finds the fact that the parties intended to secure the six notes and all future indebtedness; and supposed the language used in the mortgage, embraced in meaning and effect, the six notes.

I. The objection of the defendants that parol testimony is not admissible, to show that the actual contract was different from that expressed in the deed, we think, is not well taken. The jurisdiction of a court of equity, to reform a contract, and make it conform to the actual agreement of the parties, is well established ; and from the nature of the case, when the written contract expresses a different, agreement, the actual and real contract can only be proved by parol evidence.

II. The parties having expressed concurrence and satisfaction with the language of the deed, and having executed it, with full knowledge of the language of the contract, it is claimed there is no error of fact; and if there be a mistake, it is, rather, a mistake of law, against which there can be no relief in this court. But when the written contract, as applied to the subject-matter, conveys a different right, or effectuates a different purpose, from *490that intended by the parties; and that is made clear and certain, courts of equity will not refuse redress, although the language of the contract was intentionally used, and will treat the mistake as one of fact.

III. The defendant Cilley, the mortgagor, was insolvent, at the time the mortgage was executed. It was competent for the unsecured creditors, by legal proceedings, to have obtained an equal distribution of the mortgaged property among all the creditors. The master’s report states that Josiah White, a creditor of Cilley to the amount of $300, examined the records at the town clerk’s office, and found that the mortgage secured only $1000 of old indebtedness, and made inquiry of Cilley as to the state of his indebtedness to the orator, and was informed by him, that the orator was to advance money, to pay Ciliey’s unsecured debts ; and that White would have instituted proceedings in insolvency, before the orator’s lien became absolute, if he had not understood that $1000 of old indebtedness was all that was secured by the mortgage. And that one Hunt signed anote, as surety for said Cilley, for the sum of $250, understanding and believing, that the orator’s mortgage was only $1000, which he would not have done if he had supposed the orator’s mortgage was for $2750 — the entire value of the farm.

It is certainly, not in the natural and ordinary course, that one attempting to secure six notes, should name but two, and use no language in the deed, that would indicate or give the least intimation, that he held more than the two notes described in the deed. There is, at least ground for suspicion, that the mortgage was thus written, to lull the creditors into security, and avoid proceedings in insolvency. The fact is found in the case, that such has been its operation. The rights and interests of third parties would be changed to their detriment, if the orator should now be allowed to reform and enlarge the mortgage; and to that extent it would operate as a fraud upon them.

The decree of the Court of Chancery is reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to enter a decree for the orator covering the two notes described in the mortgage with interest. The costs to be equitably apportioned by the Court of Chancery.