92 Ala. 492 | Ala. | 1890
It is well settled that the reformation df a conveyance, or other written instrument, because of an alleged mistake therein, Will not be decreed unless such mistake is fully and satisfactorily shown by clear and distinct proof. Marsh v. Marsh, 74 Ala. 418; Guilmartin v. Urquhart, 82 Ala. 570; 1 Brickell’s Digest, 358. Though much of what was .said by the witnesses in this case must be discarded as irrelevant and incompetent evidence, and though it is impossible to reconcile the conflicts in the testimony, still, after carefully going through the evidencie, and sifting out such of it as is illegal, and rejecting what is obviously unsatisfactory and untrustworthy, we can not avoid the conclusion that in the drafting of the deed of Pittman and wife to Weathers a mistake was made in including that paid of the land which was also included in the descriptions in the conveyances subsequently made to G. W. Hill and to I. G. Hill respectively. The deed in question was written by Mr. Handley, who was a disinterested witness of what occurred at the time of the sale and conveyance of the land. It clearly appears from his testimony that the understanding of both Pittman and Weathers was that the deed was to cover only that
The bill as amended sufficiently avers wherein the mistake •consists and the ground of relief therefrom. It does not, however, aver that a request had been made for the correction of the mistake, and one of the grounds of demurrer sets up this lack of averment as a defect in the bill. The allegations in the bill to the effect that the defendant Weathers had commenced to trespass upon the stip of land in dispute and was actively setting up a claim thereto under his deed show a state of facts sufficient to relieve complainant of the duty of requesting a correction of the mistake before filing the bill; for the bill makes it plain that Weathers had.assumed such an attitude in reference to the matter as to exclude all hoi)e or ex
It. is further urged in behalf of the appellant that a reformation of the deed to him should not be decreed because the effect would be to leave him with twenty-one acres less land than he bought and paid for. The testimony does strongly tend to show that it was understood between Weathers and his vendor that there were at least two hundred acres in the tract intended to be conveyed and that the purchase price was fixed by counting two hundred acres at seven dollars and a half per acre. The result of a survey made not long before the commencement of this suit was to show that the description in the deed to the appellant includes a fraction over two hundred and fourteen acres and that about one hundred and seventy-nine acres would be left after excluding the strip of land in-dispute. It may be that if Weathers had made timely application he would have been entitled to an abatement ol" the purchase-money because of the deficiency in quantity of the land acquired by him under the purchase. — Hodges v. Denny, 86 Ala. 226. It satisfactorily appears, however, that he got the whole of the tract of land which he intended to purchase, that he went into possession and thereafter paid the notes given for the deferred instalments of the purchase-money without claiming any abatement therefrom because of the alleged deficiency, and continued in possession for more than fifteen years without setting up any such claim against his vendor. After the lapse of so long a time, during which the purchaser was in possession of the land and enjoying full opportunities to observe any deficiency in the area which he supposed he had acquired, it must be presumed either that the quantity of land was not regarded as of the essence of the contract or that the objection on account of the deficiency has been waived or adjusted. — Ferson v. Sanger, 1 Wood & M. 147; Farley v. Briant, 32 Me. 483; Grymes v. Sanders, 93 U. S. 62; Davis v. Evans, 62 Ala. 401. The claim, urged now for the first timé, has the appearance of an afterthought suggested to defeat the correction of a mistaken description rather than to secure to the appellant a part of what he thought he had acquired. The position of the ajtpellee in reference to the erroneous description which casts a cloud over his title is very different from that of the appellant as to the alleged deficiency in the area of his land. The former has promptly sought the correction of the mistake against his interest; while the latter, all along enjoying the fullest oppor
It was decreed by the Chancery Court that the strip of land in dispute lying East of said W. D. Mickle road be divested out of said defendant I. T. Weathers and invested in the complainant I. G. Hill. Such direct divestiture of title is not authorized by the statute upon this subject. — Code of 1886, § 3595; Prewitt v. Ashford, 90 Ala. 294. The decree will be here so modified as to direct that said defendant I. T. Weathers shall, before the 15th day of August, 1891, under the supervision of the register, execute a proper deed of conveyance to the complainant, I. G. Hill, of said strip of land lying East of said W. D. Mickle road, and in default' of the execution of such deed on or before the date mentioned, said decree as so modified shall operate \o vest the title to said strip of laud in said complainant as fully as if said conveyance had been made.
With this modification the decree is affirmed.
Modified and affirmed.