147 P. 899 | Utah | 1915
This was a proceeding in equity to reform a written contract and to recover judgment according to its terms, when reformed. The contract entered into is as follows:
‘ ‘ This agreement made and entered into at Salt Lake City, Utah, between John H. Bailey as first party and Frederick H. Weight the second party, both of Salt Lake City, Utah, witnesseth: That whereas said second party has this day by deed transferred and conveyed to the said first party an
“Dated this 17th day of November, 1893.
“[Signed] John H. Bailey.
“FRED H. Weight.”
The- circumstances which induced the parties to enter into the contract, as developed at the trial, in substance, are: That in March, 1887, one John Bailey, father of John H. Bailey, the respondent heré, and an uncle of the appellant, Weight, died, leaving a last will and testament in which he bequeathed all of his property to Elizabeth Bailey, his wife, for life, and after her death to his four children, one son, the respondent, and three daughters, and to the appellant, his nephew, in equal parts, one-fifth to each; that said will was duly probated, and said Elizabeth and the respondent were duly appointed executors in May, 1887; that said estate consisted almost entirely of real estate, and thereafter, in 1893, and before final or any distribution of said estate, the appellant and respondent entered into the agreement aforesaid; that, at the time said agreement was entered into, appellant conveyed by deed his one-fifth interest in said estate to respondent, and he, in consideration for appellant’s interest, conveyed to him a certain parcel of real estate in Salt Lake City, and as .additional consideration for said interest deliv
“That either through a mistake of the scrivener, or the fraud and misconduct of the defendant, the contract between the pláintiff and defendant, hereinbefore referred to and set out in full, was not so drawn as to express the true and real intent of the parties, and the contract which had really been
The appellant then further alleges that the one-fifth interest of said estate at the death of Mrs. Bailey was worth $7,180 in excess -of the $6,000 mentioned in said agreement, and prays judgment for said amount.
It is not necessary to set forth more of ¿he complaint, nor is it necessary to set forth the answer, both of which are quite long. It is enough to state here That respondent denied that the writing did not correctly evidence the actual agreement entered into- between himself and appellant, and averred that the agreement correctly stated the agreement entered into between them. Respondent also pleaded the statute of limitations as a defense to the action.
Upon a hearing of the case the court found the issues in favor of respondent, and upon such findings made conclusions of law and entered judgment dismissing the action upon the merits. The appeal is from the judgment. 'Although the findings of fact are assailed in some particulars, we shall not set them forth; nor shall we state the evidence,
While numerous errors are assigned, counsel have argued but three propositions, which, in substance, are: (1) That the court erred in not entering judgment reforming the contract referred to; (2) that the statute of limitations does not apply; and (3) that, even though the district court were right in holding that the evidence was insufficient to justify reformation, yet the court erred in not granting the prayer for judgment for the amount prayed for because, under a proper construction or interpretation of the agreement, appellant is entitled to such relief without reformation of the contract. We shall consider the foregoing propositions in the inverse order from that in which we have stated them, as that seems to us to be the more natural order to present the questions that arise upon the record.
“An action for relief on the ground of fraud or mistake, three years; the cause of action in such case not to be deemed to have accrued until the discovery"by the aggrieved party of, the facts constituting the fraud or mistake.” Comp. Laws 1907, section 2877, subd. 4.
This identical provision was in force when the contract in question was entered into and has been in force ever since. See 2 Comp. Laws U. 1888, section 3144, subd. 4; E. S. U. 1898, section 2877, subd. 4.
It will be noticed that the only matter which appellant sought to have reformed in the contract in question is the time that a certain act was done; he contending that it was agreed between respondent and himself that the act should not be done until after the death of Mrs. Bailey, while -respondent contends that it was to be done at the time specified in the contract, and that the terms of the contract were executed as written and were written as agreed upon. We cannot see how we can escape the effect of the plea of the statute of limitations in this case. Suppose A. had made and delivered his promissory note to B., whereby it appeared that A. had agreed to pay B. the sum of $1,000 in “two” years from date. Suppose further that in two years from date A. went to B. and offered to pay the note in question with the accrued legal interest, but B. said, “I will not receive the money because your note is not due.” A., however, insisted that the note was due, and, upon inspection of the note, B., for the first time, discovered that the time in the note was written “two” instead of “ten” years from dato, as he had supposed. He, however, still refused to receive the money, whereupon A. made legal tender of the amount due, and the matter rested there until ten years had actually ■ elapsed, when B. commenced an action to reform the note so as to make it read ten instead of two years, and prayed for reformation and for judgment after reformation for the amount specified in the note. A. now sets up the provision of the statute we have qitoted as a bar to the action, and the only answer B. makes
There is no essential difference between the supposed case and the case at bar. In both nothing was involved, except the time within which an act should be performed, and in both cases we assume the time was misstated in the written instrument either through fraud or mistake, which are the two elements named in the statute constituting the cause for relief. When the application for final distribution was pending in 1895, appellant was fully informed just what respondent claimed with respect to the time when, under the contract as written, the value of the one-fifth interest conveyed to him by appellant should be ascertained. Appellant then knew, in fact he concedes he always knew, what the language of the written contract was with respect to the time when the valuation should be made. He thus not only knew the language of the written contract, but he also knew just what respondent claimed the language meant, and that he disputed appellant’s contention in the very particular he now insists the writing does not correctly express the agreement entered into between him and respondent. Notwithstanding this occurred in 1S95, appellant remained silent until 1909, about fourteen years thereafter. To hold that, under these facts, the provisions of the statute relied on have no application, is to repeal the statute by judicial edict.
“Courts of equity do not grant tlie Mgli remedy of reformation upon a probability, nor even upon a mere preponderance of evidence, but only upon a certainty of tbe error.”
We refer to the numerous authorities cited in a footnote by the author in support of the foregoing quotation. This court is also committed to that doctrine. See Descret Nat. Bank v. Dinwoodey, 17 Utah, 48; 53 Pac. 215, and Ewing v. Keith, 16 Utah 312; 52 Pac. 4, and cases cited in both cases. In no view, therefore, is the evidence of such a character as to justify us in overturning the findings of the district court upon the record presented for review.
In what we have said, we have not considered the question urged upon us by respondent’s counsel, namely, that inasmuch as appellant, upon the trial, disclaimed all fraud on the part of respondent, the mistake, at most, is only one of law, or is one of misinterpretation of the- meaning of words on the part of appellant, and thus not a proper subject of reformation. Upon that question we express-no opinion.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs to respondent.