Cummins v. Bulgin

37 N.J. Eq. 476
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 37 N.J. Eq. 476 (Cummins v. Bulgin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cummins v. Bulgin, 37 N.J. Eq. 476 (N.J. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

Van Eleet, Y. C.

This suit is brought to reform a mining léase. Reformation is asked on the ground of mistake. The power of a court of equity to reform deeds and other writings for the correction of mistakes stands among its most ancient and useful powers. To warrant its exercise, however, the proof in demonstration of mistake must be clear and satisfactory, such as produces a strong conviction of its truth. That which is written will not be changed on loose, doubtful or equivocal evidence. A mistake, in a legal sense, may be defined to be the doing of an act under an erroneous conviction, which act, but for such .conviction, would not have been done.

The lease in question bears date August 26th, 1881, and was executed by the complainant, as lessor, and by Edwin G. Bulgin and George G. Bulgin, who were then copartners, in their partnership name, and by Aurelius J. Swayze, as lessees. The lessees subsequently assigned their rights to. A rio Pardee, subject, however, to his right to re-assign to them on three months’ notice. The lease grants a term of twenty-one years, and. gives the lessees the right to erect and remove buildings and machinery, to make roads and to dig and remove minerals; the lessees covenant to commence mining within ten days, to pay fifty cents a ton on each gross ton of merchantable ore mined the first year, and after the first year to mine and raise two thousand gross tons each year, or pay for the same at the rate of fifty cents a ton. The mistake which the complainant seeks to correct, is found in the description of the land covered by the lease. The description, up to and embracing the error, is in these words:

“ Beginning at a point in Andrew J. Cummins’s and- Scranton’s line, at a point on the north side of the public road, on the south side of the great meadows, and known as the Hopkins Mine Hole, on said Cummins’s, and runs, first, by said Cummins’s line southeasterly, to the north edge of said Cummins’s timber land; thence, a northeasterly course, along said timber land, to a point where a line running parallel to the first line will strike a black cherry tree, on the north side of said road and about one hundred feet southwesterly from said Cummins’s barn.”

[478]*478The first line given, the one running from the Hopkins Mine Hole to the north edge of Cummins’^ timber land, although described as running but a single course—southeasterly—and should, therefore, in the absence of other indication of intention, be understood to require a straight line, is, in fact, a broken line with three angles. It runs, first, southerly, then easterly, then southeasterly, and lastly, southerly.

Now, the third line, the one extending from a point along Cummins’s timber land to the black cherry tree, is, according to the words of the description, to be run parallel to this broken line. To do this, it is necessary to extend the second line, the one along the timber land, more than twice as far as would be required to reach the cherry tree by a straight line. The area of the tract demised is thus very greatly enlarged. The complainant says that the line to the cherry tree was to be straight; that the line along the timber land was to be extended to a point opposite the cherry tree, and then to run straight to that tree. As the description now stands, it is obvious that if it is possible to run the third line so as to make it parallel to the broken line, the lease will embrace a much larger quantity of land than the complainant intended it should, if it be true that he intended, at the time the contract was made, that the line from the timber land to the cherry tree should be a straight line.

There can be little doubt, under the evidence, that such was the complainant’s intention, and that the person who negotiated the lease on the part of the lessees so understood at the time the contract was made. The negotiations on the part of the lessees were conducted by Mr. Edward G. Bulgin. It is not disputed that Mr. Bulgin understood that the complainant would not lease his whole farm. It was, therefore, of the first importance, as an initial step in the negotiations, to have a clear understanding where the line should run separating the part he intended to lease from the part he intended to retain. It is scarcely possible to believe that any sensible person would conclude a bargain of this kind without a distinct understanding upon that subject. The lessees had agreed to pay a fixed sum on a certain number of tons of ore annually, whether they raised that quantity or [479]*479not; ordinary prudence would, therefore, it would seem, have restrained them from making such an agreement until the boundaries of the land from which they should have a right to • take the ore, had been clearly defined and finally agreed upon. The complainant swears that he pointed out to Mr. Bulgin, on the day the lease was executed, and before they went to the scrivener’s to have the lease drawn, where the line would run, that he directed his attention to a dead chestnut tree up in the woods, and stated to him that the line would run from near that tree to the black cherry tree. Mr. Bulgin, on his cross-examination, testified on this point as follows;

“Q. Did not you understand from Mr. Cummins that the line ran from the tree straight up to the woods? A. No, sir. Q. You did not? A. No, sir; lie may have told me where he thought it would run; I would not say but what he did; probably he has—yes, sir; but then I did not understand it so by the lease. Q. Did he ever point out a chestnut tree that he thought the line would run somewhere near? A. Afterwards he did; I think he did; a dead tree; I don’t think anything was said before that.”

Ifc is impossible not to understand this evidence as containing a plain admission, made too, manifestly, after the witness had had a pretty severe struggle with his conscience, that the complainant had told him where the line should run. How, where did the complainant say it should run ? The complainant has told us, and has also mentioned the monuments he designated. How, what has Mr. Bulgin done? He has denied that the complainant designated the monuments he said he did, but he has not told us where the complainant said the line should run, or what the complainant said when he told him where he thought the line would run. The matter then stands in this wise: the line was agreed upon; nobody pretends that it was the line now claimed by the defendants; so far as appears, that line was never thought of by either of the parties; the complainant says he pointed out a line; Mr. Bulgin admits that he did; the complainant tells where that line runs, but on that point Mr. Bulgin says nothing. How, with the proofs in this condition, it would seem to be very clear that the line designated by the complainant must be taken as the line agreed upon by the parties.

[480]*480The complainant mainly furnished the information from which the scrivener drew the description. He says, in giving the description, when he reached the point where the line was to be extended from the timber land to the cherry tree, he stopped and stated that that point could be designated by a stake, or as being, near a chestnut tree, and then said that the line should run from that point straight down to the cherry tree.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.J. Eq. 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cummins-v-bulgin-njch-1883.