Gebhardt v. Ibele

12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 33, 22 Ohio Dec. 526, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 68
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 33 (Gebhardt v. Ibele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gebhardt v. Ibele, 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 33, 22 Ohio Dec. 526, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 68 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Neff, J.

The ease of E. W. Gebhardt v. Herman Ibele is an action brought by the plaintiff to recover a balance of $1,022.50 claimed to be due to the plaintiff on a certain contract for the doing of the carpenter work for the erection of a terrace for the defendant. The action also seeks foreclosure of a mechanic’s-lien, and the proce*eds of the foreclosure to be applied to the payment of the balance claimed to be due.

In addition to this, it is sought by the plaintiff to have the court reform the contract, so as to eliminate from the plaintiff’s contract certain matters contained in the specifications, which are referred to as allowances to the owner.

The contract between the parties is in writing, and provides that, in consideration of the payment of $4,070, the plaintiff [34]*34shall'do and perform certain work and furnish materials according to plans and specifications theretofore drawn. The specifications, under the title of “Trimmings: (Hardware)” contain this provision:

“The carpenter, contractor to allow the owner the following allowance for the selection of the items mentioned:
“No. 1. Allow $200 for mantels.
“No. 2. Allow $190 for gas and electric fixtures.
“No. 3. Allow $110 for finish hardware.
“No. 4. Allow $475 for furnaces.
“No. 5. Allow $190 for decorating.”

The clause of'the contract as to which reformation is sought is as follows:

“The carpenter’s contract to include all lumber and finish, also labor and rough hardware, and doors, windows, weights and pulleys. The owner to furnish finish hardware and the carpenter-to put same on.
“The outside walls are not to be furred as specified.
‘ ‘ Sidewalks and gravel or slate roofing is not included in this contract.”

The amended petition has been mislaid; at all events I am not able to find it among the files; but as near as I am able to remember the exact language, it is to this effect, in respect to the reformation of the contract, that the contract be so reformed as to eliminate from the obligation of the contractor any obligation to do and .perform the several matters referred to in the- specifications as allowances; the practical difference being this: the plaintiff contends that he is to be entitled, having performed his contract, to the full amount named in the contract, to-wit, $4,-070; the owner’s contention being, that from that should be allowed approximately $1,050, and that therefore there is nothing due to the plaintiff, he having been paid in full. If the allowances are not included in the contract, and if the owner is not entitled to these allowances, then there would be a balance , of somewhat more than a thousand dollars.

As. I understand the defendant, there is no substantial contention but that the mechanic’s lien conforms, in its execution, time of its execution, and filing, to the statute. There is no infirmity; • [35]*35perhaps, in that that would invalidate it. As I understand, there is practically no contention between the. parties along this line; and if there is, the understanding was that the issue of reformation should be tried out first, and then if there were further matters to be determined, they shduld be reserved for future consideration.

The doctrine in equity is, that where there is a mutual mistake of fact between the parties to a written obligation, and -if, because of such mutual mistake, the contract fails to express the • exact intention of the parties, a court of equity may reform the contract so as to make it express the intention of the parties to the contract.

The contention of the plaintiff, briefly stated, in this respect, is this: that it was the intent and purpose of the scrivener of the contract, when he wrote it, and the purpose of the parties when they executed it, that it should exclude from its operation matters referred to in the specifications as allowances. On the other hand, the .contention of the defendant is, that it was expressly understood that these allowances were to be made to the owner, and that the contract of plaintiff did include allowances, and that there is no balance due.

Briefly stated, this may be said to be the contention of the parties.

The first subject-matter of interest is, whether this is such a mistake as would be competent for a court of equity to reform or correct'by reformation of the contract.

I think that the ease cited in the 11 Ohio, on page 480, the case of Lewis Evans v. the Administrator and Heirs at Law of James Strode, is exactly in point in the decision of this question. The syllabus is as follows (I shall read only that, which is perfectly clear):

“Where an instrument, by a mistake of the parties as to the legal effect of the terms used, fails to carry out their intention, relief m^y be afforded in equity.
“A mistake in law may be corrected in equity.”

So that I think the subject-matter is such that, if the facts would warrant such a course, the court might properly reform the instrument.

[36]*36The next subject, so far as the law in the case is concerned, that is of interest, is as to the weight of the evidence as to the necessary quantum of proof to warrant the court in thus reforming the contract, and upon this subject the Supreme Court, in 27 O. S., page 84, in the case of David H. Potter v. Ellen S. Potter, Executrix of Cassander E. Potter, Deceased, has stated the law, the syllabus reading as follows:

“Clear and convincing proof is required to warrant the reformation of a written instrument on the ground of mistake; and when it clearly appears that this rule has been disregarded in reforming the instrument, and the finding of the court can be sustained only on the supposition that it regarded the law as requiring .nothing more than a mere preponderance of evidence to warrant a finding sustaining the alleged mistake, a reviewing court, on error, may reverse the judgment based on such finding.”

In the opinion, on page 85, Day, J., says:

“When the reformation of a written instrument is sought on the ground of mistake, the presumption is so strongly in favor of the instrument, that the alleged mistake must be clearly made out by proofs entirely satisfactory, and nothing short of a clear and convincing state of facts, showing the mistake, will warrant the court to interfere with and reform’ the instrument. This principle rests upon the soundest reason and upon undisputed authority, and if not adhered to by the courts, or, when plainly disregarded, is not enforced by reviewing courts, the security and safety reposed in deliberately written instruments will be frittered away, and they will be left to all the uncertainty incident to the imperfect and slippery memory of witnesses.”

This is no doubt the law in Ohio, and evidently in other jurisdictions. This is a doctrine that arises out of the very necessities of the case.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 33, 22 Ohio Dec. 526, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gebhardt-v-ibele-ohctcomplcuyaho-1911.