Dameron v. Jamison

4 Mo. App. 299, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 91
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 Mo. App. 299 (Dameron v. Jamison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dameron v. Jamison, 4 Mo. App. 299, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 91 (Mo. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

HaydeN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity to correct a deed made by one F. W. Page to the defendant, on the grounds of mistake on the part of Page and fraud on the part of the defendant, and for partition of the land. The bill, in substance, states that one E. Page died, leaving as his only heirs three children,— a son, E. W. Page, and two daughters, Helen Page and Rosina Strange; that, while in embarrassed circum■stances, E. Page conveyed to his son, without his son’s knowledge or consent, by deed duly acknowledged and Recorded, certain real estate in Lincoln County; that in 1873, long after the death of his father, while in ignorance •of this deed, and believing he owned only one-third of the land, the son, F. W. Page, sold to defendant one undivided one-third, and, as Page thought, conveyed his one-third to the defendant; that F. W. Page at the time thought that his sisters owned the other two-thirds ; that the defendant, having learned of the execution of the deed fromE. Page to his son, with intent to defraud, etc., had a deed prepared •and signed by F. W. Page to himself, which conveyed the entire tract. The plaintiff claimed the equitable title to two-thirds of the land by conveyance from the daughters. The answer admits the making and recording of the deed from the father to the son; claims that it passed the full title ; denies all fraud; and asserts title in the defendant to the whole tract by the deed from F. W. Page. The answer further sets up title, by an agreement from the sisters and by certain tax deeds, to the land, and alleges that defendant made improvements, etc. The reply denies the affirmative allegations of the answer.

There was a trial, and the case was submitted to the court, when the plaintiffs asked and obtained leave to amend their petition by inserting the words, “ They further say [302]*302that they have purchased, also, and bold deed for legal title to, said land from F. W. Page.” The cause was then continued, and was tried at the next term. At the trial the plaintiffs introduced a quitclaim deed from F. W. Page- and wife to plaintiffs, of date February 12, 1875, conveying-the land for the consideration of $10; also a quitclaim deed from Ellen Page and Rosina Strange, the daughters, to plaintiffs of date April 18, 1874, conveying the land for $90.

The material part of the oral evidence introduced at the-trial was that the defendant went to F. W. Page with a view to purchase; that the result of this interview was that a written agreement was drawn up, which was signed by Page-for himself and his sisters, stating that they had sold to the defendant the land for $85, $10 of which was paid down,, and that the remaining $75 were to be paid as soon as the deed could be made. This writing was dated September-1.6, 1873, and the defendant paid Page $10 on receiving it. Shortly after this the defendant went to Troy, and there learned of the deed from E. Page to F. W. Page, and that by the records the legal title to the whole tract was in the latter. It appears that the defendant obtained and paid for an abstract of the title, and was advised that if he got F. W. Page’s deed he would have a good title to the entire tract. The defendant then went to F. W. Page, and asked him for what amount he would make his deed of the land to defendant, concealing from Page the facts as to the deed from his. father. Page said he would make his deed for $25, -which the defendant agreed to give, saying that if he wanted the sisters’ deeds he would get them. On the next day Page and wife went with the defendant before a justice of the peace, who testifies that he took the acknowledgment, and at the time asked Page, in the presence of the defendant, if he was selling his prairie land, and that Page replied that he was only selling his interest in his father’s land. The deed thus made, which was put in evidence by the defendant, shows a consideration of $35, and [303]*303on its face conveys the whole tract. Page testifies that be thought it was a deed of one-third of the land, and says that, in reply to a question asked him by the justice, in the presence of the defendant, he, Page, said that he was selling his interest in his father’s land. This interest, Page testifies, he understood to be one-third, and that his sisters owned the other two-thirds. He states that he knew nothing of the deed from his father until after he had made the deed to the defendant. It seems that he had no authority to sign his sisters’ names to the writing which he gave to the defendant in regard to the land.

It appears that one of the plaintiffs went to Page to buy the land, and that Page said he had sold his interest to the defendant, but that his two sisters would sell their interests. The plaintiff Dameron then went to the sisters and bought their interests, as appears by the deed put in evidence for the plaintiffs. Afterwards, and while they knew of the deed from Page to defendant, the plaintiffs procured from Page the deed of February 12, 1875. In regard to this deed Page testifies that when he made it he claimed no interest in the land, but thought he might as well make $10 as not.

There was evidence of other witnesses, tending to show that the defendant made statements to the effect that he had made a contract with Page and his sisters for this land, and that, after he had made the contract, he went to Troy, and there learned that the whole title was in F. W. Page, and that that was as good as he (defendant) wanted. The defendant relied on the deed from E. Page to F. W. Page, on the deed from F. W. Page and wife to defendant, on the writing of date September 16, 1873, on his tax deeds, and on the oral testimony of defendant.

The court below decreed that the deed from Page and wife to defendant be corrected so as to convey to him one-third of the land, and for partition accordingly; and the defendant brings this case here by writ of error.

[304]*304From what has been said it is clear that there was a mistake upon the side of one of the parties to the contract, and fraud upon the part of the other. The minds never met as to the terms, as written, for Page had agreed to convey, and thought he was conveying, only his one-third interest. The defendant, on the other hand, knew that Page had agreed to convey, and that Page thought he was conveying, only his one-third interest. As one party to a contract should be bound according to the sense in which he understands that the other party understands the agreement, the contract should be considered a transfer of a one-third interest, and equity proceeds upon the basis that such was the contract. It is true that by the writing of date September 16, 1873, Page, signing his own name and the names of his sisters, agreed to convey the land; but Page showed no authority to use their names, nor does the defendant prove Page had any. The deed did not, therefore, carry out any contract the sisters had made. Their interest remained unconveyed, and, as against them, it cannot be considered that F. W. Page either transferred, or had any right to transfer, the entire tract. He did not own it, as he had never accepted the deed from, his father; nor will equity presume, on the facts of this case, that he did accept the deed as against his sisters. The deed to the defendant, as prepared by him, expressed the design which the defendant intended to accomplish, not terms assented to by contracting parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Mo. App. 299, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dameron-v-jamison-moctapp-1877.