Three issues are presented on this appeal:
1. Is the land contract void for failure to satisfy the statute of frauds ?
2. Did the trial court err in adopting the legal description suggested by the vendees?
3. Did the trial court err in denying the vendors’ motion to review the judgment?
Statute of Frauds and Legal Description
The question of whether the description of the excluded property covered by the land contrаct satisfied the statute of frauds arises in this case because of the *191 relief sought. Here, by amended complaint, the vendees sought the specific performance of the land contract insofar as it required the vendors to give them an abstract and warranty deed to the land conveyed.
Whеn a statute of frauds question arises, as here, several years after the agreement in question was made, the statute in effect at the time of the agreement controls.
Trimble v. Wisconsin Builders, Inc.,
“Contract for lease or sale to be in writing. Evеry contract for the leasing for a longer period than one year or for the sale of any lands or any interest in lands shall be void unless the contract or some note or memorandum thereof, expressing the consideration, be in writing and be subscribed by the party by whom the lease or sale is to be mаde or by his lawfully authorized agent.”
This section was repealed by 1969 Wis. Laws, ch. 285, which also created the current statute, sec. 706.02, Stats., and codified much of the decisional law which had developed under the old statute. Under sec. 240.08, Stats., this court has uniformly held that the memorandum or contract must describe with reаsonable certainty the property to which it relates.
Wiegand v. Gissal,
The question of whether the description contained in the memorandum, together with properly admitted parol evidence, fulfills these criteria is a mixed question of law and fact:
“The question of the application of a desсription to its proper subject matter is for the jury, who may have the aid of all competent extrinsic evidence. The question of the identity of the location is always one of fact for the jury. The construction of the terms used in a deed, aside from extraneous evidence, is for the court. It is, howеver, the province of the jury to determine the boundaries in controversy from all the evidence, including the description in the deed.” 6 Thompson, Real Property §3027 at 479 (Replacement, 1962).
Therefore, the trial court’s factual determination that the plaintiff’s survey identified to a reasonable certainty the land described in the memorandum will not bе reversed on review unless it is against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence.
See e.g., Paterson v. Paterson,
*193 In the instant case, the following surveyor’s drawing illustrates the various interpretations of the exemption description by the parties:
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The bold, double line represents the boundaries of the рrincipal parcel which fronts Highway 12 to the west. During the trial, there was no dispute concerning the boundaries of this parcel (hereinafter parcel A) and the trial court concluded that the drawing accurately depicted its metes and bounds description in the contract.
The dispute at trial, of course, involved the description of the exemption (hereinafter parcel B): “Except that portion lying South from cottages commonly known as cottage #2 and cottage #4, the excluded area being about 120 feet by 460 feet; excluded in this conveyance *194 are cottages commonly known as cottage #1, cottage #3, and cottage H-F H-R.”
The trial court adopted the vendee’s surveyor’s drawing as depicting the boundaries of parcel B as described in the agreement. (Shown in Figure 2 by the alternating long and short dash line). This conclusion was based on the court’s belief that the drawing estаblished the boundaries of parcel B in a manner which closely approximated the written description. The surveyor who prepared this drawing, John Hamel, testified that the boundary locations were established in a manner which attempted to fulfill the dictates of the description as closely as рossible. Cabins 1 and 2 were not in existence when Hamel’s survey was made. However, based upon the description’s indication that the exempted portion was “about 120 feet by 460 feet,” Hamel concluded that a rectangular exemption was contemplated and that the northern boundary of parcel B was to be parallel to the southern boundary of parcel A.
The eastern boundary of Hamel’s survey of parcel B was established by a reading of the whole description. In the contract’s description of parcel A, the southern boundary is not perfectly straight. Proceeding from eаst to west, the line runs “true west” for 334 feet. There it changes direction slightly to the north (north 88 degrees, 8 minutes west) and intersects the centerline of Highway 12 and 13. The length of this latter portion of the southern boundary is stated as 460.75 feet which, in fact, was about 90 feet short of the highway’s center-line. In accordance with standаrd surveying practice, the line was extended to the center of the highway. Nevertheless, because the description of the exempt parcel B also referred to 460 feet, Hamel concluded that the eastern boundary of parcel B was meant to intersect the point at which the sоuthern boundary of parcel A deviated to the north and was so drawn in figure 2.
*195 The appellants criticize the trial court’s acceptance of Hamel’s survey of parcel B on two grounds. First, they argue that the position of the northern boundary of parcel B was arbitrary and speculative. In supрort of this argument, the appellant cites Hamel’s admission that the line was run through a point two feet south of cottage 4 because, as Hamel stated, “someone could walk around” that cabin within that space. The actual distance between cabins 3 and 4 is not indicated in the record but it clеarly appears that Hamel sought to position the northern boundary of parcel B in such a way as would approximate the directions of the written description — about 120 feet, and south of cabin 4 — as closely as possible. Thus, the position of this line is not wholly arbitrary and without reference to thе writing.
Second, the appellant criticizes the trial court’s adoption of the Hamel suryey because it was not made with reference to two other monuments cited in the exempting description: cabins one and three. These cabins did not exist when Hamel took his survey. Because of this, and because his interpretation of the description as calling for a roughly rectangular exemption, Hamel drew his survey so that the northern boundary of parcel B would parallel its southern boundary.
The location of monuments will generally control over conflicting courses and distances when a descriрtion contains both. F. Clark,
Law of Surveying and Boundaries,
sec. 480 at 472 (3rd ed. 1959); Thompson,
Real Property,
§3044 at 571-75 (1962), citing
Fehrman v. Bissel Lumber Co.,
We are convinced that the description of the land conveyed by this instrument is not insufficient under the statute of frauds. The surveyor’s map submitted by the vendees was competent extrinsic evidence which aided the written description in identifying with reasonable certаinty the land to be conveyed. Moreover, the trial court’s determination that the vendee’s survey identified the disputed boundaries of parcel B is not against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence and thus its adoption of a legal description based upon this survеy may not be reversed on this appeal.
Motion to Review Judgment
The appellant brought a motion to review after the trial court granted judgment for specific performance in favor of the vendees. The grounds for this motion were alleged as follows: (a) that the appellant’s trial counsel, James H. Hill, Jr., was unablе to adequately conduct the trial due to illness; (b) that the appellant was prejudiced by the trial court’s decision to proceed to trial on the amended complaint; (c) that the vendees failed to file an appropriate lis pendens; (d) that the description contained in the land contract was void under the statute of frauds; (e) that the judgment requires the vendors to give vendees a warranty deed to lands to which they do not have title; and (f) the description of the land contained in the judgment is contrary to the intent of the parties.
The function of the motion to review judgment in this case is set forth in sec. 269.46(1) and (3), Stats. (1973) :
*197 “269.46 Relief from judgments, orders and stipulations; review of judgments and. orders. (1) The court may, upon notice and just terms, at any time within one year after notice thereof, relieve á party from a judgment, order, stipulation or other proceeding against him obtained, through his mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect and may supply an omission in any proceeding. In addition to the required affidavits, all motions to vacate a judgment entered upon default or cognovit and to obtain a trial upon the merits shall be accompanied by a proposed verified answer disclosing a defense.
((
“ (3) All judgments and court orders may be reviewed by the court at any time within 60 days from service of notice of entry thereof, but not later than 60 days after the end of the term of entry thereof.”
The appellant failed to indicate on her motion under which of the two subsections she was seeking this relief. Nevertheless, the principle governing the granting or denying of the motion are the same: the motion is addressed to the discretion of the trial court and, on appeal, this court will reverse the trial court’s determination only if there has been a clear abuse of discretion.
Compare Buchm v. Wisconsin Tobacco Co., Inc.,
The trial court found the aрpellant’s first ground for the motion — illness of trial counsel — without merit. In view of the record, this determination was hot an abuse of discretion. Appellant’s trial counsel, Hill, submitted an affidavit stating that during the first day of trial he suffered a “cerebral accident” which caused him to become confused and ill. On this day, Hill did seek аn adjournment of the trial, but only for the reason that *198 he needed more time to prepare his defense to the amended complaint. At no time did counsel mention his alleged physical disability.
The trial court similarly rejected the appellant’s second grounds for the motion: prejudice resulting from thе vendee’s amendment to the complaint. Again, from the record, the trial court’s decision did not constitute an abuse of discretion. The trial court’s written decision on the motion indicates that most of the parties to this action resided in Chicago, and that they desired that the trial of the action be hеld during the summer of 1975. The trial had originally been scheduled for July 11, 1975, but was cancelled and rescheduled for August 19.
The vendors had been served with the amended summons and complaint on June 26, 1975. Although the relief requested in the amended complaint differed from that requested in the original, the essential issue sought to be resolved did not: the boundaries of the land to which the vendees, under rights arising from the land contract, were entitled. The record shows that the appellant’s trial counsel objected to proceeding to trial because an essential witness to the defense was not available, not because he was unprepared to protect his client’s interest while the plaintiffs put in their case. A second day of trial to accommodate this witness was scheduled at which time the witness did testify. Therefore, under these circumstances, it does not indicate that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the appеllant’s motion to review judgment solely on these grounds.
The trial court’s denial of the appellant’s motion on the grounds of the vendees’ failure to file an amended
lis pendens
was not error. Appellant claims that the vendees were required to file an amended
lis pendens
because the description of the land сontained in the original complaint differed from that contained in the
*199
amended complaint. However, in
Hailey v. Zacharias,
The appellant’s final two grounds for the motion— that the contract description failed the statute of frauds and that the description contained in the judgment did not properly reflect the description in the land contract —were properly denied by the trial court. The plaintiff’s survey identified to a reasonable certainty the land described in the memorandum.
In the instant case the motion is denominatеd as a motion to review judgment, but the relief sought is a vacation of the judgment with leave to introduce new evidence or, in the alternative, a new trial. Thus, appellant’s motion is in the nature of a motion for a new trial under sec. 270.49, Stats. (1973) (renumbered sec. 805.15, Stats. (1975)). A new trial on the grounds of newly discovered evidence must be based upon a showing that the new evidence was discovered after trial, that the movant party was not negligent in seeking the evidence, that the evidence is material and not cumulative, and that it is probable that a new result would be reached.
Naden v. Johnson,
*200 We conclude that the evidence adduced at trial, particularly the extrinsic evidence which established by a surveyor’s drawing the extent and location of parcel B, was sufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds so as to permit specific performаnce of this land contract.
With respect to appellant’s contention that the motion to review should have been granted on the ground of the lack of proper pretrial procedure and illness of former counsel, we conclude that the trial court, under the facts of this case, correctly denied the motion.
By the Court. — Judgment and order affirmed.
