193 Ky. 805 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion op the 'Court by
Affirming.
About tbe year 1878 appellee, J. D. Holbrook, became the owner of a tract of ninety-two acres of land in Ohio county, on to which he moved and has since resided with his family, up to about the. time of the commencement of this action, when he sold what remained of the tract to appellant Wigginton for $3,100.00. Appellant Wigginton brought this suit against appellee Holbrook and wife to recover for a deficiency of acreage amounting- to more than $7’00.00 at the average price per acre. He basés his action upon the following facts:
In 1895, 'Holbrook sold one Hudson 13% acres from the most southernly part of his ninety-two acre tract, and Hudson took possession of said 13% acres and has since held and claimed the same. His deed was properly recorded in the office of the clerk of the Ohio county court soon after it was delivered to him by Holbrook. At a later period Holbrook sold to F. M. Hoover five acres from the southern end of his tract. At a later period Holbrook sold to said Hoover 5% acres from the southern part of the tract. At another time Holbrook sold to Eobert Holbrook nine acres from tbe southern part of the tract. At another time fourteen acres of the said tract were sold under judgment of the court, and this Is
“There is excepted from the above boundary of land the following tracts, which have heretofore been sold and conveyed: A tract sold to F. M. Hoover and bounded as follows:
“Beginning at a stake being the corner of F. M. Hoover’s tract of land bought from the Farmers Tobacco Warehouse Company; thence with Wm. Boils’ line 14 poles to a, comer on Wm. Boils’ line; thence E. 68 poles and 10 links to a large oak stump on the road leading from Harmon’s Ferry road by R. O. Hudson’s; thence with said road S. 9 poles and 6 feet to a stake, being the corner of F. M. Hoover; thence with his line 68 poles and 10 links to the beginning, containing 5 acres.
“Also 5% acres of land sold to F. M. Hoover off the south end of said tract of land and adjoining the five acres above described.
“Also 9 acres sold off the west side of the north end of said tract heretofore sold to Robert Holbrook.
“Also 14 acres, now owned by F. M. Hoover, which were cut off the said tract of land by an order.of the Ohio circuit court, on the south end of said tract.
“Making in all 33% acres which have heretofore been conveyed, and leaving approximately 58% acres which is conveyed by this deed. ’ ’
It will be observed that the 13% acre tract conveyed to Hudson, and the half acre tract occupied by the school, are neither mentioned in the exceptions, and these two tracts are the one's that form the basis of appellant Wigginton’s complaint, for he .says that the tract conveyed to him by Holbrook contains only 43 acres instead of 58% acres as recited in the deed from Holbrook to Wigginton.
It is well settled that a vendee of land may have a recovery for a .shortage in acreage if it amount to ten per cent (10%) or more in quantity sold, and this is true whether the sale be in gross or by the acre. The words “more or less” in a deed relieve only from the necessity for exactness, and not from gross deficiency. Nor is this right confined to cases of fraud or mistake, but relief may be had in every case where there is a deficiency of 10’% or more, even though the deficiency result from mistake or ignorance of the parties. Harrison v. Talbott, 2 Dana 266; Smith v. Smith, 4 Bibb 81; Shelby v. Shelby’s Heirs, 2 A. K. Mar. 504; Hall v. Ely, 76 S. W. 48; Boggs v. Bush, 137 Ky. 95; Rust v. Carpenter, 158 Ky. 672, 166 S. W. 180; Gragg v. Levi, et al., 183 Ky. 182.
That rule has no application to the facts of this ease, for Holbrook did not sell to appellant Wigginton any land except that which lay north of the New Bethel road in the farm owned by Holbrook, and that was the land contemplated by both Wigginton and Holbrook at the time of the sale, and there was no thought or intention on the part of either of them that the 13% acres, which causes the deficiency of which Wigginton complains, should be or would be included in the conveyance. Their minds met upon the sale of the tract north of the New Bethel road. Holbrook agreed to take $3,100.00 for that boundary of land, and Wigginton agreed to buy it at that price and to pay the money at certain stated times. Both parties intended to-describe the boundary of land so as to include all that Holbrook owned at the time of the sale to Wigginton, and to exclude all the boundaries or parcels sold by Holbrook to others, thus leaving in the conveyed boundary only that owned at the time by Holbrook. It was merely a mutual mistake in the description of the land sold.
It is insisted by appellant Wigginton that Holbrook represented this boundary as containing 58% acres, but we do not think that the evidence sustains this insistence. The most that Holbrook said was that he had been listing the property with the assessor as 50 acres, but that he did not know how many acres were contained in the boundary, that there might be more, or
As soon a's Wigginton made complaint about the shortage of acreage, appellee Holbrook offered to rescind the contract and give him back his money with interest, but this Wigginton declined to accept. Holbrook, by his pleading, offered to rescind the contract and to return to appellant Wigginton his money with interest. Later appellee Holbrook asked to have the deed, which expressed the contract between them, reformed so as to embody the real contract of the parties, and this the trial court granted. In this the trial court was supported by the opinion in the case of Railey v. Roberts, 33 R. 221, 109 S. W. 903, where a tract of 70 acres of land was sold for $9,000.00, but represented to contain 85 acres; the deal was negotiated by some real estate brokers for the owner. The purchaser sued for $1,500.00 damages for shortage in acreage, and in disposing of the matter this court said:
“It appears from the record that appellee placed this land with the real estate firm of Morris & Shelton for sale, and they alone negotiated the trade with appellant. It is conceded that this firm represented to appellant that the survey contained 85 acres. They executed a writing witnessing the trade, and signed the name of appellee to it, in which it was stated that the survey contained 85 acres. The agents, Morris & Shelton, stated*812 in their testimony that their recollection was that appellee stated to them that there was 85 acres in the survey. It appears from the record that these agents intended no wrong. They believed that the survey contained 85 acres, and that appellee had so represented it. Appellee testified that he did not make any statement to them as to the number of acres in the survey; that he knew at the time that it contained only 68 or 70 acres; that he directed them to sell the survey for $9,000.00; that the land was worth that much and more, and that he had no intention of parting with it for a less sum. The proof for appellee showed that the land was worth that amount. He denied any fraudulent purpose to cheat or defraud appellant, and alleged his willingness to rescind the trade if she did not desire, to keep the land at the price fixed 'by him. The court on motion struck this allegation from his pleadings. We are of the opinion that the court erred in this. We are convinced by the evidence that there was no fraudulent intent or purpose on the part of appellee or his agents to obtain any advantage in the trade; that there was a misunderstanding between the.parties, their minds having never met. Appellant thought she was buying 85 acres of land for $9,000.00. Appellee believed that he was selling a survey consisting of 68 or 70 acres for that sum, and did not know at the time of the sale that appellant was laboring under a false impression as to the number of acres in the survey. Under these circumstances, it would not he equitable to hold appellant to the trade and make her pay the whole of $9,000.00 for the survey of land, for it -contained 15 acres less than she was led to believe it contained at the time she purchased it. It would also be inequitable to force appellee to lose the price of 15 acres, for he did not intend to part with his land for less than $9,000.00; nor did he knowingly or intentionally commit any fraud in obtaining the contract of sale. Under these facts, the court erred in dismissing her petition. It is true sire prayed in her petition for $1,500.00 in damages for the deficiency, but she also prayed for all proper and general relief. The court correctly dismissed her claim for damages, but it should have allowed her to rescind, if she desired to do so on equitable principles, -and, on the return of the case_ to the lower court, it should grant her this relief, allowing her to reconvey the land to appellee upon the payment to her of the purchase price — that is, the cash she has paid,*813 with its interest — and the return to her of the two notes she executed and the value of any permanent improvements made upon the land, if .any, to be credited by the reasonable rental value of the land during the time she has held it, giving her the option to rescind upon the principle stated, or to keep the land and confirm the trade as made and pay the notes which she executed.”
The rule applied in that case does exact justice here. A recovery in this case by Wigginton would be gross injustice. It would not 'be applied, however, if the parties had intended a sale by the acre, or it had been claimed by Holbrook that the boundary contained any specified number of acres; in such case, the vendee is entitled to recoup damages equal to ’ the deficiency in acreage, but as this whole controversy arose out of a mutual mistake it can be corrected in the manner adopted by the trial court in its judgment.
For the reasons indicated the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.