154 Iowa 317 | Iowa | 1912
On June 11, 1908, the plaintiffs, owning certain lands in Davis and Appanoose counties, and the defendants, owning other land in Mahaska county, entered into a written contract for the exchange of said properties substantially as follows: Plaintiffs undertook, for an expressed consideration of $16,000, to convey to Harter a tract described as being all that part of “a two hundred and eighty-acre farm” situated in section 18, twp. 68, range 15, in Davis county, and in section 13, township. 68, range 16, in Appanoose county, “being all that part of said farm of two hundred and eighty acres which lies about two miles east of Moulton, Iowa, which is north, of the public highway which runs east and west through said land, which part contains two hundred acres, more or less, according to government survey.” In payment or exchange for this land, defendants undertook to convey to plaintiff
The deeds, pursuant to this contract, were to be delivered on February 18, 1909, and possession of lands delivered on March 1st following. Other stipulations were made; but their statement is not at present material. No money was paid or received. Soon after the contract was executed, the defendants, making the claim that the land proposed to be conveyed to them had been misrepresented by the plaintiffs, and that the same was incumbered by a railroad right of way, which had not been disclosed to them, notified plaintiffs they would not carry out the contract. On the date provided therefor in the contract, plaintiffs tendered defendants a conveyance and demanded fulfillment of the agreement on part of the latter, and, this being refused, the present action was begun for its specific enforcement. As already noted, the court found for the plaintiffs, granted the relief prayed, and defendants appeal.
The dispute of fact between the parties is a narrow one. The evidence tends to show that at the opening of negotiations, through agents and brokers, the defendants had never seen plaintiff’s farm, and were unacquainted with its character and condition, except as stated by plaintiffs or their agents. It was finally arranged that defendants should go to Mahaska county and see the place for themselves. Accompanied by one of the plaintiffs and an agent, they went by railroad to the station nearest the land, and there, taking a carriage, drove to the house and farm buildings, which were on the south side of the, tract, and thence in a northerly direction for some distance over the premises. The defendant, Oliver L. Harter, then left the carriage, and with another member of the party walked farther to the north, but how nearly they approached the boundary on that side is a matter of some dispute; but it is reasonably clear that they went far enough to obtain a
The farm included all of the seven forty-acre subdivisions indicated upon the plat, less the railroad right of way and the triangle north of the railroad, containing about two and three-fourths acres. They also owned the
By reference to the contract, it* will be seen that the part of the farm lying north of the public road, which is the only part involved in this litigation, consists of five of said forty’s or quarter-quarter sections, minus the part cut from the northwest corner by the railroad right of way, and plus the smaller part added thereto south of the railroad. Assuming that these subdivisions are of full dimensions according to the standard of the government survey, the tract would contain two hundred acres, less the amount cut off by the railroad, or substantially one hundred and ninety-eight acres.
It is testified by defendants and admitted on the trial that before presonally inspecting the land defendants inquired as to the shape or outline of the tract, and one of the plaintiffs thereupon drew a diagram to illustrate it. That figure was put in evidence as Exhibit V, and is here reproduced.
It will be seen that the diagram fails to note the existence of the railroad, and it is also conceded that nothing was said about the existence of the railroad. The irregular
Defendants further say that while on the farm they drove to a point near the common corner of the west four of the forty-acre tracts, and there, in reply to a question by defendants, plaintiff said these tracts constituted a “square” quarter section. This, too, is denied, and there is corroboration on both sides. Defendants swear they had no knowledge of the existence of the railroad upon the land, and would not have entered into the contract, had they known the truth about it. They also offer the testimony of several witnesses, who testify that the existence of a railroad on a farm, as here shown, is a source of inconvenience and annoyance to the landowner. Other witnesses on part of plaintiff give it as their opinion that the railroad does not injuriously affect the value or use of the farm. ' '
Further recitation of the testimony is unnecessary. The general rules governing equitable actions for specific performance of contracts have been quite thoroughly discussed in hehalf of both appellants and appellees. Upon abstract propositions, there is little difference in their posi
These are the circumstances upon which defendants claim to have relied, and that in such reliance they entered into the contract without having seen the railroad on the premises, or known of its existence there. At the time the -plat was made there was, so far as appears, no thought on part of either party of making an exchange without personal inspection of plaintiffs’ farm by the de
We are not disposed to give much weight to plaintiffs’ claim that, even if the charge of fraud and deception be true, defendants should have discovered it and kept out of the trap set for their feet, and if the plaintiffs’ case rested upon no surer foundation we should have no hesitation in denying them specific performance. The doctrine is as incompatible with sound equity as with good morals; but the difficulty with the defense in this case is in its failure to make good, by a fair preponderance of'the evidence, the claim that they were in fact deceived. The discrepancy in acreage is not so large as to raise any presumption, or suspicion even, that they did not know just what they were getting in the exchange. It is difficult to believe that, having made the trip for the express purpose of examining a farm they had never seen, having gone upon the premises and driven and walked over them to such an extent that they felt satisfied to make the exchange, they were still in ignorance of the patent and unconcealable fact of the existence of the railroad there.