Chantler v. Wood

430 P.2d 713, 6 Ariz. App. 134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedOctober 16, 1967
Docket1 CA-CIV 424
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 430 P.2d 713 (Chantler v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chantler v. Wood, 430 P.2d 713, 6 Ariz. App. 134 (Ark. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

*136 DONOFRIO, Judge.

This is an appeal by Lawrence G. Chantler and wife, who are one of two sets of defendants below, the other being Leonard F. Geiler and wife, from a judgment and decree in favor of plaintiffs, Allen Wood and wife, reforming a deed executed by the Geilers to the Woods and quieting title in Woods to certain realty in Yavapai County, and also from a judgment entered at the same time in favor of the Woods and against the Chantlers for attorney’s fees. Hereafter we will at times refer to the parties by their surnames.

The question involved is whether the trial court had the power to reform a deed and quiet title to a certain strip of land, and ■whether it properly awarded attorney’s fees in-the action.

Since on this appeal the evidence must be taken in the strongest light to support the judgment, we set forth briefly the following facts which are supported by the re,cord:

-The Geilers owned five adjoining lots of a subdivision in the City of Prescott. On this property were two groups of apartments. The groups were on opposite ends of the property with a space in between which was planted with grass and trees. To place them in their order from the north end, they are the Paramount and the Paramount Annex apartments forming one group; next, the space in between which we will hereafter call the courtyard; and then the Chesterfield Apartments forming the other group. The Geilers had the entire property up for sale, but answering an inquiry from a real estate firm, decided to sell the Chesterfield apartments separately. The interested prospects, Chantlers, inspected the Chesterfield apartments and agreed to buy them. The north boundary of the Chesterfield property was described as the north boundary of the Chesterfield building itself. A contract was prepared which the parties executed that erroneously recited the lots on which the Paramount group of apartments was located. Before discovery of the error, and the day after the contract was signed, Chantler inspected the property and discovered that since the building was on the lot line he needed an easement for access to his basement. The easement was then provided for by the sellers. Thereafter the Geilers sold the Paramount apartment group to the Woods.

In connection with these two sales several different descriptions of the properties were attempted by the individuals drawing the instruments, apparently none of which were correct, to convey the properties as intended. The disputed property was included in a deed to the Chantlers dated March 31, 1961. It was not until several months later that Woods learned the description omitted the courtyard and that what he obtained had not conformed to what was the mutual intent between themselves and the Geilers. The courtyard was included by mistake in a deed to the Chantlers. Woods then employed counsel, other than the one originally preparing the deeds, who prepared a quitclaim deed describing the courtyard which they stated they purchased and which the Geilers had intended they should receive. . This deed, along with a check in the amount of $5.00, was tendered to the Chantlers pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-1103, and was refused by them.

The Woods thereafter filed this action against the two sets of defendants for reformation of their deed to include the courtyard as described in the quitclaim deed, and also to quiet title to the same property. The principal basis of the action for reformation was that by the mutual mistake of the Geilers and both sets of grantees, the deeds did not correctly describe the properties which the Geilers intended to convey to each of the sets of grantees. The Geilers admitted practically all of the allegations of the complaint and consented to the reformation of their deed as requested by the Woods.

At the trial, in addition to the evidence regarding the property transactions, proof was made that plaintiffs’ counsel expended 15824 hours in handling the litigation. *137 This did not include the final day of trial and the time spent thereafter.

The area in dispute, which is the property described in the judgment, is the same area described in the quitclaim deed and forms the northerly portion of the lot on which the courtyard is located, namely, the north 34.14 feet of Lot 10 of the subdivision involved.

One of the essential issues raised is' whether the Court erred in reforming the deed from the Geilers to the Woods. It is appellants’ contention that since the deed (recorded July 14, 1961) from the Geilers to the Chantlers for the same area was prior to the reformation by the Court of the deed (recorded Oct. 10, 1961) from the Geilers to the Woods, the decree of the Court is ineffective to convey title to the premises. They urge the Woods may have a good case against the Geilers for damages for breach of warranty, but they have no title to the area in dispute.

In support of their contention, appellants cite the general authority that as between the parties the reformation of an instrument relates back to the time of the original execution of such instrument and would therefore not affect the prior deed which placed title in the Chantlers, and that as to the quiet title action, the plaintiffs cannot prevail unless they show title in themselves which it is claimed they cannot do, citing, among others, the case of Saxman v. Christmann, 52 Ariz. 149, 79 P.2d 520 (1938). They sum up their contention by urging that the plaintiffs in a quiet title action may not divest the title of another and acquire it solely upon the basis of parol evidence.

Our first question is whether, when the deed from Geilers to Chantlers covering the courtyard went of record, it divested the grantors of title irrespective of the mistaken description, to the extent that the subsequent deed by the Geilers to the Woods cannot be reformed to include the courtyard.

We would hold, in keeping with what we ¡believe to be the better reasoned authorities, that the Court did not err in granting reformation.

The recording of an instrument involving land does not always irrevocably transfer the rights in the land embraced by the instrument, and particularly so as against an innocent third party when the grantee would be conscious of the error committed. Recording a deed gives constructive notice to persons who might otherwise have acquired the position of bona fide purchasers, A.R.S. §§ 33-411, subsec. A, 33-412 and 33-416, County of Pinal v. Pomeroy, 60 Ariz. 448 at 455, 139 P.2d 451 (1943), however the facts of this case do not involve this principle of estoppel.

The purpose of the recording statute is to create notice in the form of constructive notice so that a party or his transferee may not claim to be a subsequent purchaser for value without notice. As a result, one subsequent in time cannot be in a position to cut off prior equities by estoppel. However, the act of recording does not create an estoppel for the recorder against the holders of conflicting rights and equities and their transferees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 P.2d 713, 6 Ariz. App. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chantler-v-wood-arizctapp-1967.