Cool v. Hubbard

199 N.W.2d 510, 293 Minn. 349, 1972 Minn. LEXIS 1197
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 23, 1972
Docket43263
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 199 N.W.2d 510 (Cool v. Hubbard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cool v. Hubbard, 199 N.W.2d 510, 293 Minn. 349, 1972 Minn. LEXIS 1197 (Mich. 1972).

Opinion

William D. Gunn, Justice. *

Defendants, Stanley S. Hubbard and Karen E. Hubbard, ap *350 peal from a judgment entered following trial of an action by plaintiffs, Richard F. Cool and Helen M. Cool, for specific performance of a contract or damages and a counterclaim for reformation of the same contract. The trial court granted plaintiffs’ request for specific performance but allowed them no damages and denied defendants’ request for reformation.

The primary questions in this case are whether a mutual mistake or a unilateral mistake occurred- in the formation of the sales agreement in which defendants agreed to sell, and plaintiffs agreed to buy, a 23-acre tract of land located in Washington County. The tract in question is roughly rectangular in shape and lies a short distance from the St. Croix River. In the southwest corner of the property, a hill, or high bluff, rises and extends for some distance through an adjoining tract of land to the south. This bluff property commands an impressive view of the St. Croix River valley and for that reason has value as a scenic home or apartment site. A deep ravine is so situated on the 23-acre tract that it renders the bluff property inaccessible to vehicular travel from the remainder of the tract. The only vehicular access to the bluff property is via adjoining property not owned by plaintiffs.

A full understanding of the factual background requires an analysis of the events leading up to the institution of this lawsuit as they occurred in basically three stages.

Pre-negotiation stage: Originally the 23-acre tract in question was part of a larger tract that belonged to Stanley E. Hubbard (Hubbard, Sr.), the father of defendant Stanley S. Hubbard (Hubbard, Jr.). Hubbard, Jr., first took possession of the 23-acre tract in 1959 but did not acquire title to the property from Hubbard, Sr., until 1965. Hubbard, Jr., had a survey made of the tract on February 17,1964, for the purpose of determining a legal description to place in the deed from Hubbard, Sr. This survey is of interest because the only topographical feature depicted, other than buildings and roads, is the bluff area, which *351 is designated by hash marks and is clearly included within the boundaries of the survey. Another survey, made on March 2, 1965, contains a similar designation of the bluff property. In both surveys the hash marks are accompanied by the following caption, “Approx, top [of] hill.” In his testimony at trial, Hubbard, Jr., stated that although he had seen the markings which designated the location of the bluff, he had thought they designated a smaller hill located to the north of the bluff property, and this mistake was not discovered because he never paced off the boundaries. Hubbard, Jr.’s contention at trial was that at no time before or during the negotiations for the sale of this property did he believe that the bluff property was included in the tract conveyed to him by his father. Nevertheless, there is no dispute that the legal description contained in the deed his father gave him included the bluff property. Nor is there any dispute that a mortgage placed on 12.8 acres of the tract by defendants in March 1965, and assumed by plaintiffs when they purchased the tract, included the bluff property.

Negotiation stage: Hubbard, Jr., and plaintiff Richard Cool had been business and social friends for some time, and thus plaintiffs visited defendants in their home on the property on several occasions. During the fall of 1965 the Cools learned of the Hubbards’ desire to sell the property, and the parties began to negotiate the sale at that time. In September or October of 1965, Hubbard, Jr., gave Cool surveys and an appraisal of the property. These surveys included the two described above which included the bluff property as well as a third survey made in July 1965 for the purposes of assuring access to Hubbard, Sr.’s adjoining property and to eliminate the northerly portion of the tract so that a gravel pit in that area would be excluded. This latter survey did not include the bluff property. The appraisal report given by Hubbard, Jr., to Cool for his study contained the same legal description as that found in Hubbard’s deed, which, of course, included the bluff property. Hubbard, Jr., testified, however, that he personally showed the appraiser the boundaries *352 of the tract and in doing so excluded the bluff property. Thus, it was contended by Hubbard, Jr., at trial that the appraisal figure of $40,000 excluded the bluff property regardless of how the legal description read.

Plaintiff Richard Cool, on the other hand, testified that he had no idea throughout the entire negotiation period that Hubbard, Jr., did not desire to include the bluff property in the tract. In fact, he had no idea where the exact boundaries were located when negotiations began. Cool testified that he first became aware that the bluff property was included when, with the assistance of a surveyor’s helper, he walked off the boundaries of the property. Sometime thereafter Cool had another appraiser give him an oral appraisal of the property, based on the boundaries, as he, Cool, understood them. This appraiser also found the value of the tract to be $40,000. Cool testified that he had subsequently mentioned the bluff property to Hubbard, Jr., several times during casual conversations but got no response. Hubbard, Jr., denied that Cool ever made such references.

Defendants prepared a contract for deed to the 23-acre tract and the parties signed it on May 5, 1966. Again, it is without dispute that the legal description contained in that contract for deed was the same as that used in the earlier surveys, the appraisal, and Hubbard, Jr.’s deed, all of which included the bluff property. Nevertheless, Hubbard, Jr., testified that on the date the contract for deed was signed he did not intend to convey the bluff property and did not know it was included within the legal description in the contract for deed. Cool, on the other hand, testified that he had no reason to believe at that time that Hubbard, Jr., did not know the bluff property was included.

Postnegotiation facts: The first indication that a dispute existed over the bluff property came when Cool and Hubbard, Sr., had lunch together during August 1966. The subject of the bluff property arose, and Hubbard, Sr., informed Cool that none of the bluff property had ever been sold. Cool testified that this was the first time he knew that there was any question about *353 the inclusion of the bluff property within the tract he had purchased. Hubbard, Jr., testified that this was the first he knew of Cool’s understanding that it was included.

Cool testified that later that month Hubbard, Jr., visited him at his home and requested that an adjustment be made in the deed. He testified that Hubbard, Jr., even offered to buy it back, to which Cool replied that such an arrangement was unnecessary because he would gladly give Hubbard, Sr., a life estate in the bluff property. Hubbard, Jr., denied making any such offer. He testified that he had heard Cool and Hubbard, Sr., discuss the problem several times in the latter’s office with a final resolution that Hubbard, Jr., had nothing to convey and thus the deed would have to be changed.

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Bluebook (online)
199 N.W.2d 510, 293 Minn. 349, 1972 Minn. LEXIS 1197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cool-v-hubbard-minn-1972.