Durrett v. Simpson's Representatives

19 Ky. 517, 3 T.B. Mon. 517, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 6, 1826
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ky. 517 (Durrett v. Simpson's Representatives) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Durrett v. Simpson's Representatives, 19 Ky. 517, 3 T.B. Mon. 517, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 97 (Ky. Ct. App. 1826).

Opinions

Judge Mills

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Paul Durrett, the appellant, purchased of Joseph Simpson aiot of ground in Mountsterlirig, with sundry buildings situated thereon, used as a tavern cal led the hotel, at the price of seven thousand dollars, and for part of the price thereof, paid him another house and lot at the price of two thousand six hundred dollars. The contract was made and reduced to writing on the 7th o! March, 1817, in the form of articles of agreement. Besides the $2600 for the house and lot aforesaid, Durrett paid $500 in hand, and was to assign him a note on John Pugh & Co. for the sum of $715, and to deliver up Simpson’s own notes for $165; and was further to pay $1000 on the 13th January, 1819, $1000 on the. 13th January, 1820, and $!000 more, the last payment, on the first January, 1821. The estate was then held by Thomas L, Patterson, under a lease from Simpson, which did not expire till the 13th January, 1819, on which day Hmpson stipulated to give the full possession of it, and was to convey at any time, so soon as the boundaries were ascertained

Durrett paid all the payments due before the 13th. of January, 1819, when possession was to be delivered, and shortly after that day filed this bill, praying a rescission of the contract, and a restoration of the payments made, relying on sundry grounds stated in his hill, all of which are either untrue or untenable, and need not be noticed, except the following:

First: That the boundary was ascertained, but it left out a part of the stable which was attached to the premises and named in the articles, as sold; it being situated, in part, on an adjoining lot, and divided by the true line.

Second: That Thomas L. Patterson, the tenant of Simpson, during tenaney,. and after-the purchase [518]*518of Durrett, had so wasted, injured, and dilapidated the hom-e, that it would take a large sum to repair it; and Simpson, on that day, could not surrender the possession, in the order in which, he was bound todo it, according to tbe tenor of his contraed.

Stafoment o the bill as (o the wati-r, works. Tender of V-onveyannc, y>f possession, ami of money, and each refused. i'impson answers, obtains judgment at law; Durrett enjoins; Simpson dies, and the suit is revived by oonfent.

Thirdly: That Simpson owned a spring near three hundred yards from the hotel, from which he hád formerly made a conduit, or line of pipes under ground, which conducted water in abundance, into the yard T the hotel, where the water was- discharged in abundance for necessary purposes, all which were in existence at the date of the purchase;- and in the articles of agreement, Simpson had covenanted, in the following words — “That the privilege of the water-works, as they now are, shall remain, and the benefit thereof remain to said Durrett forever, so far as respects the right to f lie spring, and the privilege of the conveyance of the water as it novo is.” That Simpson, after the dale of the contract, liad branched lines of pipes from the main conduit, and sold the benefit of tlye- water to others, thereby robbing the premises sold of its supply. That the line passed, through grounds not held by him, and from the owners thereof, he had no conveyance or. grant, authorising him to continue the use of the pipes, and liad disabled himself', and curtailed that privilege on his own grounds, and, threfore, could not convey the privilege of the water-works as they were at the date oftho contract; and that the supply of water was of great value to the estate sold.

That on the day that possession was to be delivered, he tendered glOOO specie, then due, and Simpson, by his agent, tendered a deed of conveyance, which he, Durrett, refused to accept, because the dower of Simpson’s wife was not relinquished — because the deed did not include the stable’ — because the estate was then much injured by Simpson’s tenants, and because the conveyance tendered did not pass and secure the privilege of the water works as they existed at the date- of the contract, and could, not. at that time do so. That Simpson tendered the possession which he refused to receive.

The defendant, Simpson, answered, contesting or denying all these grounds of equity. He afterwards. [519]*519sued at Jaw to recover the purchase money, and Recovered judgments, which Durrett enjoined by an amended bill. During the progress of the cause, Simpson departed this life, and t.hc cause was revived by consent, against his administrator and heirs.

Decree of the circuit court refusing a rescission, but giving compensation for the ground not embraced by vendor’s conveyance Want of title to an unimportant part ofthe ground, a subject of compensation, not ground for rescissionr

On a final hearing the court below decided against all the grounds of equity set up in the bill, except that which charged that the stable did not all stand on the premises sold, which the court held not to be sufficient to vacate the contract, but only to entitle the complainant to compensation. This compensation was ascertained by a jury, and the court credited it on the judgments at law, and dissolved the injunction for the residue, with damages, and dismissed the bill, directing each party to bear their own costs. From this decree Durrett appealed, and its merits are now before us.

The court below did right in sustaining the claim for the lot sold not including the stable. For it is evident fRom the proof, that the stable, which is expressly mentioned as included in the sale, and which was supposed to be on one boundary line, is projected over the line about five feet four inches. On whose ground it is extended, does not certainly appear. Perhaps by the plat it is on the street or public square; but certain it is, on ground not belonging to Simpson. This would subject Durrett to a 1’einoval or loss of the stable, am) of course to some expense. But as ibis was evidently a mere mistake of the parties, and might have arisen between different surveyors; and as the stable is one of logs and of some age, and no objection to its being remoled, is shewn, and the expense of removal is proven to be about one hundred dollars, assuming, this as the only ground of equity sustained, we should not be disposed to disturb the decree of the court below on this point. Had this mistake been known at the time, it might have occasioned a provision in the contract to meet the inconvenience; but it is not probable that it would have prevented the contract altogether, or essentially altered any of its features; and such mistakes are frequently held in equity to be a subject of compensation, rattier than a ground of rescission of a contract, to which they bear but a [520]*520very small proportion in value. But. such mistakes when not alone, but are joined to other tenable grounds in a question of rescission of contracts, may become additional reason for rescission. We shall, therefore, examine the remaining grounds relied on here, and see whether they be or be not tenable to any extent, before we determine that this mistake shall have no greater weight in the decision of the controversy.

In a contract toconvey and deliver possession, nt a future day, the purchaser bears ordinary detorioary, not the waste of vendor’s tenants. Evidence of the vva'te .committed -and suffered by Simpson mid bis ton-' ants.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ky. 517, 3 T.B. Mon. 517, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durrett-v-simpsons-representatives-kyctapp-1826.