Ezell v. Peyton

Decision Date02 June 1896
Citation36 S.W. 35,134 Mo. 484
PartiesEzell v. Peyton et al., Appellants
CourtMissouri Supreme Court

Appeal from Cass Circuit Court. -- Hon. W. W. Wood, Judge.

Affirmed.

Burney & Burney and Noah M. Givan for appellants.

(1) There is no evidence that any of the purchasers in this case relied upon the statements of E. N. Peyton as to where the lines were. The purchasers had equal means with the sellers of information as to where the lines were. Neither law nor equity will afford relief where the subject-matter of dispute, which was the sale of land, was equally known to both parties, or about which both had equal means of information, and in regard to which they were equally negligent. Henderson v. Dickey, 35 Mo. 120; Dunn v. White, 63 Mo. 185; Morse v. Rathburn, 49 Mo 91; Langdon v. Greene, 49 Mo. 365; Key v Jennings, 66 Mo. 369; Clarke v. Baird, 7 Barb 65, affirmed, 9 N.Y. 183; Brooks v. Hamilton, 15 Minn. 26; Brown v. Fagin, 71 Mo. 563. (2) The deeds offered in evidence are complete within themselves. They constitute no evidence of intention to convey other land. The alleged agreement, if there was any, to convey part of lot 4, in block 29, is a parol agreement and void. A parol agreement for the conveyance of land can not be enforced. Glass v. Hurlburt, 102 Mass. 24; Steadwell v. Anderson, 31 Conn. 139; Elder v. Elder, 10 Me. 80; Toops v. Snider, 70 Ind. 554. (3) Every presumption is in favor of a deed whose terms are unequivocal, being a correct expression of the intention of the parties, and the description in a deed will be reformed for mistake, only where the evidence is most clear, positive, decisive, unequivocal, and convincing. Turner v. Shaw, 96 Mo. 26; Modrell v. Riddle, 82 Mo. 31, and cases cited; Bunse v. Hager, 47 Mo. 270; Able v. Ins. Co., 26 Mo. 56; Barker v. Hull, 71 Wis. 368; Southern v. Curley, 104 N.Y. 148; Bartlett v. Brown, 121 Mo. 353; Sweet v. Owen, 109 Mo. 7; Cooper v. Deal, 114 Mo. 527; Stiles v. Willis, 66 Md. 485. (4) The decree is erroneous as to John R. Dolan, defendant, who had purchased the strip of land in controversy from E. N. Peyton in his lifetime. There is no finding by the court that he was a purchaser with notice of plaintiff's equities, and no evidence upon which such a finding could have been based. 2 Pomeroy's Eq. Jur., sec. 740; Drey v. Doyle, 99 Mo. 459; Fox v. Hall, 74 Mo. 315.

W. L. Jarrott for respondent.

(1) "The law is certainly well settled that a court of equity will correct mistakes in deeds as between the parties thereto and those holding under them with notice." Seiberling, Miller & Co. v. Tipton, 113 Mo. 381. (2) It is the province of the court to enforce the contracts and conveyances of the parties, not to make or alter them; and when, by mistake, the contract is not expressed in such terms as to have the force and effect the parties intended, it is the duty of the court to correct the mistake. Leitensdorfer v. Delphy, 115 Mo. 161; Hook v. McClure, 32 Mo. 405; Young v. Coleman, 43 Mo. 179, and same case, 48 Mo. 259; Cassidy v. Metcalf, 66 Mo. 519; Griffith v. Townley, 69 Mo. 14; Summers v. Coleman, 80 Mo. 488. (3) A mutual mistake of grantor and grantee in supposing that land staked and pointed out to the grantee all belonged to the grantor, while in fact it included a strip belonging to an adjoining owner, whose land was made a boundry by the description of the premises in the deed, entitles the grantee to have the deed reformed so as to include such strip, and then to damages for breach of the covenants of warranty and for quiet enjoyment by the reason of the failure of title to such strip. Butler v. Barnes, [Conn.] Lawyer's Reports Annotated, Book 12, page 273; Johnson v. Tabor, 10 N.Y. 319; DeReimer v. De Cautillon, 4 Johns. N. Y. Ch. 85; Wiswall v. Hall, 3 Paige (N. Y.), 313; Diggs v. Kurtz, 132 Mo. 250. (4) When reformation is sought of a deed which, through fault or mistake, conveyed less land than was orally bought and paid for, the case does not stand as if there were no deed; and the error may be corrected without proof of such part performance compelling a conveyance of the whole land when no part of it has been conveyed. Hitchens v. Pettingill, 58 N.H. 386.

Burgess, J. Gantt, P. J., and Sherwood, J., concur.

OPINION

Burgess, J.

This is a suit in equity to reform two deeds, one dated October 16, 1889, and executed by E. N. Peyton and wife to John L. Harrison and John Hamilton; the other dated November 27, 1889, executed by said Harrison and Hamilton and their wives to plaintiff, both deeds conveying lot 3 and the west half of lot 2 in block 29, in Freeman, Cass county, Missouri.

The petition in effect avers that sixteen and one half feet off the east side of lot 4 (which lies immediately west of lot 3 in said block), was also sold and intended to be conveyed by said deeds; but that by mutual mistake of the parties thereto, as well also as of the scrivener who drew them, they were incorrectly written, and did not express the mutual intent of the parties.

The defendants with the exception of the grantors in the deed to plaintiff and John R. Dolan are the heirs of said E. N. Peyton now deceased. Dolan was made a party defendant after the suit was commenced; exactly how, or for what purpose, is not disclosed by the record, other than there seemed to be an impression that he owns that part of lot 4 in question.

The answer is a general denial.

From a judgment and decree correcting the deeds as prayed for, defendants appealed.

At the time of the sale of the property and the execution of the deed therefor by Peyton to Harrison and Hamilton he was the owner of lots 2, 3, and 4, in the north half of block 29.

The following plat will show the location of the lots, as well also as the location and boundary of that portion in controversy.

North Half of Block 29.

[SEE ILLUSTRATION IN ORIGINAL]

The dotted line running north and south through lot 2 is the east line of the property described in the deeds, and the dotted parallel line in lot 4 represents the true western line of the land that plaintiff claims to have purchased, including the land described in the deeds. So that the real controversy is over that part of lot 4 lying east of the dotted line running north and south through that lot.

When Harrison and Hamilton bought from Peyton, all of that part of lot 4 east of the dotted line, and lot 3, and the west half of lot 2, were inclosed by a fence, and so remained until after plaintiff's purchase from them.

There was also on the property described in the deed to them a three room frame dwelling house. At the same time there were on the land in dispute a small stable and cistern which were used in connection with the house, and the fence, which then stood on the dotted line in lot 4, was pointed out to them by Peyton as being the western boundary line of the land.

Hamilton testified that during his negotiations for the property, he and Peyton were on the west fence, and he said to Peyton, "Ed, I want to know how much land there is here, how much is it;" and Peyton said "there is a lot and a half of a lot;" and Peyton further said, "it is all inside of this fence, inclosed in this fence; what you see in here embraces that;" and, Hamilton testified, "I took it for granted that that fence was around a lot and a half of ground."

Hamilton also testified as follows:

"Q. Did he tell you what lot and a half it was? A. Yes, sir; just what was described in the deed; then I looked at the deed and found it...

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