Anderson v. Juanita Coal & Coke Co.

267 P. 400, 83 Colo. 562, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 30, 1928
DocketNo. 11,794.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 267 P. 400 (Anderson v. Juanita Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Juanita Coal & Coke Co., 267 P. 400, 83 Colo. 562, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 278 (Colo. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the Juanita Coal & Coke Company, a corporation, defendant in error, against plaintiffs in error and others, to obtain a reformation of a deed. The trial court granted the reformation, and to that decree this writ of error is prosecuted.

The deed involved was made by James M. Freeman, October 31, 1898, to the Fire Mountain Canal Company, a mutual ditch corporation, and was recorded November 17, 1898. It is in the usual form of a warranty deed. The deed grants and conveys “a right of way 50 feet in width across any portion” of a certain parcel of land in Delta county, which is then described by metes and bounds, following which is this language: “Containing 6.66 acres, and being a strip of land lying south of the Deer Trail ditch and north of a line 26 feet south of the center line of the Fire Mountain canal as now surveyed, with the right to move or change the line of said ditch to and over any portion of the above described land. ’ ’

*564 The reformation sought by the complaint, and granted by the decree, consisted only in striking from the deed the words “a right of way 50 feet in width across any portion of.” The ground upon which this reformation was granted was that the contract between Freeman and his grantee, the canal company, was for the conveyance of the land itself, and not of a right of way, and that the insertion of the clause last quoted was a mistake of the draftsman of the deed. The defendant in error is grantee by quitclaim deed, in 1924, from the Fire Mountain Canal Company, of a portion of the tract included within the mete and bound description. Plaintiffs in error are remote grantees by warranty deeds from James M. Freeman, and the descriptions in their deeds include the portion of the tract claimed by the defendant in error. The deed from Freeman to the first of the intermediate grantors of the plaintiffs in error, Charles Morgan, was made in 1899, and was expressly made subject to “a certain right of way given to the Fire Mountain Canal Company” as described in the deed of Freeman, to the record of which reference is made in the deed. In deeds from Charles Morgan to Alpha Morgan, and from Alpha Morgan to Charles Morgan, the same reference is made to the right of way. In all subsequent conveyances in the chains of title of plaintiffs in error, no exception whatever is made either of the right of way or the tract here involved.

We are of the opinion that the decree of the trial court can not stand. The evidence relied upon to support it does not either in quantity or quality meet the well settled requirements prescribed in cases of reformation, and if it did, the relief would not under the circumstances of this case be available against the plaintiffs in error.

1. In Merrick v. Morelock, 73 Colo. 245, 215 Pac. 133, this court said, “To justify reformation of a contract, the proof must be clear, unequivocal and indubitable.” In 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jurisprudence (3rd Ed.) at page 1515, the author says: ‘ ‘ Courts of equity do not grant *565 the high remedy of reformation upon a probability, nor even upon a mere preponderance of evidence, but only upon a certainty of the error.”

This language was quoted with approval in Wilson v. Morris, 4 Colo. App. 242, 36 Pac. 248; and again in Wells v. Crawford, 23 Colo. App. 103, 127 Pac. 914. Other Colorado decisions in which the rule has been announced in substantially the same language are: Loukowski v. Pryor, 46 Colo. 584, 106 Pac. 7; Gibbs v. Wallace, 58 Colo. 364, 147 Pac. 686; Insurance Co. v. Smith, 10 Colo. App. 121, 51 Pac. 170. A host of authorities announcing and illustrating the rule will be found in the note to the case of Perkins v. Herring (110 Va. 822), reported in 19 Am. & Eng. Annotated Cases, at page 342'; and in the note to Williams v. Hamliton (104 Ia. 432), reported in 65 Am. St. Rep. 475.

The proposition which the plaintiffs were obliged to establish by the character and degree of evidence required by the above authorities, was that James M. Freeman and the Fire Mountain Canal Company, prior to the execution of the deed, reached an agreement for the sale and conveyance of the land itself, and not for a right of way; that such agreement continued concurrently in the minds of both parties down to the time of the execution of the deed; and that the insertion of the clause reducing the estate to an easement was unknown to and unauthorized by both grantor and grantee. Coppes v. Keystone P. & F. Co., 36 Pa. Super. Ct. 38; Koen v. Kerns, 47 W. Va. 575, 35 S. E. 902; Whitney v. Smith, 33 Minn. 124, 22 N. W. 181; Crawford v. Willoughby, 192 N. C. 269, 134 S. E. 494; 8 Mo. App. 585; Nebraska Loan & Trust Co. v. Ignowski, 54 Neb. 398, 74 N. W. 852; Carter v. McArtor, 28 Grat. 356; Kerr on Fraud & Mistake, (4th Ed.), p. 498. The application of these tests to the evidence introduced in this case required that the reformation of the deed be denied. Freeman, the grantor, died several years before the suit was brought. Of the five persons constituting the board of directors of the grantee *566 corporation at the time the deed was given, four are either dead or their whereabouts unknown. The scrivener who drew the deed was Charles L. Pike, whQ was at the time secretary of the Canal Company. He was a lawyer. He had also died before the trial. The deed was witnessed by Pike and one Amy E. Williams. The latter was not a witness at the trial, and there was no explanation of her absence. The plaintiff below, to establish the mistake, relied chiefly upon the testimony of E. M. Duke, who was one of the directors of the Canal Company at the time of the transaction, and was its president in the year 1897. Plaintiff also relied upon proof of statements made by Freeman after the execution of the deed. Duke testified that he acted upon a committee of three appointed July 29,1897, by the board of directors, to make arrangements for a right of way for the ditch of the canal company then about to be constructed across Freeman’s land; that of the committee he only entered into the negotiations with Freeman, and that he carried them to a conclusion. He testified that no one was present at the time of the negotiations except himself, Freeman, and Freeman’s wife. He was unable to tell the conversation, and said it was difficult to recall, it having occurred more than twenty-five years before. The following excerpts will show the tenor of his testimony:

“I went up to look over the ditch right of way to see what could be done with Mr. Freeman to secure a right of way through the place. Mr. Freeman contended that we damaged him on all of this land between the Fire Mountain canal and the Deer Trail ditch. So we settled on that basis, that we would pay him $20 an acre for all of that land. * * * Why, we were securing a right of way over Mr. Freeman’s land for our ditch, that was our idea, and after looking over the ground we thought we were damaging this piece of ground above the Fire Mountain canal, so we bought all of the land from Mr. Freeman.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P. 400, 83 Colo. 562, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-juanita-coal-coke-co-colo-1928.