Bowling v. Poole

756 N.E.2d 983, 2001 Ind. App. LEXIS 1759, 2001 WL 1192202
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 10, 2001
Docket69A01-0105-CV-173
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 756 N.E.2d 983 (Bowling v. Poole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowling v. Poole, 756 N.E.2d 983, 2001 Ind. App. LEXIS 1759, 2001 WL 1192202 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

BAKER, Judge.

Once again, our courts are called upon to interpret the order of preference for the location of boundaries in a real property dispute. Appellants-plaintiffs Sulvan Bow!ling, Jr., and Barbara Bowling (collectively, the Bowlings) appeal the trial court's judgment denying their contract claim against appellee-defendant Joyce Poole. They claim that there was no mutual mistake of fact in the formation of the-sale contract and that the description of the land was adequate and unambiguous.

FACTS 1

This case arises from a real estate transaction between two neighbors who owned adjoining farms in Ripley County. The Bowlings owned a 125-acre farm to the south and east of Poole's 87-acre farm. According to the Bowlings, sometime during the spring of 1998, Poole stopped at the Bowlings' farm and told Barbara that she was thinking about selling her farm. Barbara told Poole that she would be interested in buying Poole's farm. 2 Several days later, Poole telephoned the Bowlings, asking that Barbara come to Poole's farm and make an offer. During the telephone conversation, Poole remarked that she was not sure whether she would sell the front tract or the back tract of the property, but that she would sell the house.

Barbara examined Poole's property and asked Poole to name her price. Afterward, Poole telephoned Barbara once more, this time offering to sell only the unimproved, eastern tract adjoining the Bowlings' farm. Poole said that she wanted to keep her house and a surrounding tract of improved land. Poole offered the eastern tract for $15,000.

At trial, Poole saw the meeting with Barbara from a different perspective. Poole testified about the amount of land she considered selling and the price: "We kind of, [it was kind of vague, what we talked about were the three acres that I knew, and I said that there were three acres over there that would be real nice for you.... So anyway, then she said well I'm interested in the other acreage, well *986 we didn't get to cost charges, on the other acres in our conversation." R. at 48. Then, when asked if they talked about price at all that day, Poole responded: "I don't think so, I think, well we probably, there is no probably about it.]" R. at 48.

Barbara later went to the site to examine the eastern tract, thinking that she would buy the land between the road that currently separated their two properties and a creek that ran roughly parallel to that road. The two women "walked out the land" and described the borders of the proposed parcel. While they were examining the property, Poole suggested that the land fifteen feet west of the creek ought to be included in the sale. Poole explained that if the Bowlings ever needed to clean out the creek or erect a fence, the fifteen feet of land to the west of the creek would afford easier access to vehicles. After they completed their walk of the property, Poole told Barbara the price would be $15,000. R. at 18. Barbara said that she and her husband would have to contact their bank to finance the purchase. At trial, Poole testified about her recollection of the transaction: "Well, I said three acres $15,000 and then the other [half] we'd talk about it." R. at 50.

After their initial walk around the property, Poole's adult son then arrived, followed shortly thereafter by Poole's boyfriend. Poole said that she had previously surveyed a three-acre portion at the south end of the eastern tract in 1994 or 1995, believing that her son might put a mobile home on it. Poole said that they would need a new survey for the entire eastern tract and that the same survey company could survey the eastern tract because its surveyor knew the land. All four walked the south boundary line to make sure that Poole would still have access to the western tract she was retaining and that the Bowlings would have access to the eastern tract they were purchasing. According to Barbara, everyone agreed that Poole would still have access to the western tract if the west boundary line of the eastern tract was placed fifteen feet to the western edge of the creek.

Afterwards, the Bowlings called the Ripley County Bank to obtain a $15,000 loan to purchase the eastern tract. - Frank Samples, the senior loan officer, told the Bowlings that they would need a written purchase agreement. Samples sent Barbara the bank's generic one-page purchase-agreement form for Barbara and Poole to use. But Barbara was unsure how to fill out the form because there was no separate deed or survey available describing the eastern tract. When she called Samples for assistance, he told her to fill out the description by describing the north, south, east, and west boundary lines as they would appear to someone standing on the eastern tract. Bowling related that Poole and her son had said that a three-acre portion of the tract had been previously surveyed and contained about three acres. Samples told Barbara to include in the description that the property was "three acres, more or less." R. at 17.

Barbara filled in the blank spaces on the form. She described in her handwriting the land that Poole was selling to the Bowlings:

3 Ac, more or less[,] East bound[alry being Farmers Retreat Road{,] South bound[alry being 875 South[,]l North bound[alry being north bound[alry of Joyee Poole farm{[,] West bound[alry being 15 feet west of sm. creek between Joyce Poole Home and Farmers Retreat Road to run from 375 South to north bound{[alry of Joyee Poole Farm.

Appellant's App. at 8. The blank for the purchase price was filled in as $15,000, while the earnest money blank was marked as $50.00. Closing was set for *987 ninety days. July 21, 1998. The agreement was dated

Barbara and Poole reviewed the agreement in Poole's living room on July 21, 1998. According to Barbara, Poole read the agreement, including the description, and told her that it was "just fine." R. at 20. After Barbara gave Poole the $50 earnest money, Poole signed the agreement. But at trial, when asked on direct examination whether she had read the agreement, Poole responded, "Not very well."" R. at 52. Then, when first asked whether she had read the legal description, she answered, "Not very well." R. at 52. Poole later testified that she had not read the description "at all" before signing the agreement. R. at 58.

Barbara brought the purchase agreement to the bank, and Samples approved the loan. Samples told Barbara that the loan would close after the survey was completed. Poole asked Barbara to call the surveying company. When Barbara called the surveying company, the company told her Poole would have to sign a request form. The company sent the form to Barbara who, in turn, brought the form to Poole. Poole read and signed the form, and Barbara returned it to the company.

According to Barbara, the surveyor met with Barbara and Poole at Poole's home. Poole told the surveyor to survey the west boundary line of the tract at fifteen feet west of the creek. The surveyor, however, placed the survey markers fifteen feet west of the center of the creek, not fifteen feet west of the western edge of the creek. Poole later noticed that the surveyor had placed the markers from the center of the ereek.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
756 N.E.2d 983, 2001 Ind. App. LEXIS 1759, 2001 WL 1192202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowling-v-poole-indctapp-2001.