Gough v. Williamson

50 A. 323, 62 N.J. Eq. 526, 17 Dickinson 526, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 16
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 2, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 A. 323 (Gough v. Williamson) 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
Gough v. Williamson, 50 A. 323, 62 N.J. Eq. 526, 17 Dickinson 526, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 16 (N.J. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

The special relief sought by the bill in this case is the reformation, on behalf of the purchaser, of a contract for the sale of a lot of land in Jersey City, and a specific performance of the contract as reformed. It is alleged by the purchaser that a mistake was made in the description of the property in the contract of sale, in relation to the width of the lot intended to be sold. The bill does not set out in hcec verba, or at length, the contract of sale claimed to have been made, but says that the contract described the lot in question as “the choice business corner property, known as No. 368 Grove street, southeast corner of First street, Jersey City,” but with what are called in the bill, the additional words of description, in another part of the contract, “the lot being 25 feet front on Grove street and 100 feet on First street.” The actual width of the lot owned by defendant on this corner is twenty-five feet five and three-quarter inches. Complainant, who owned the adjoining lot on Grove street, and who purchased, as he supposed, the whole lot to his line, claims that the lot intended to be sold was the lot twenty-[528]*528five feet five and three-quarter inches wide, and seeks to reform the contract by inserting this particular description, and then to have the contract as reformed specifically enforced. Defendant admits a contract to convey a lot twenty-five feet in width and denies any mistake on her part. On the hearing it appeared that the contract of sale, which was made at public auction, although signed by complainant, was not signed either by defendant or her agent, the auctioneer. Under the statute of frauds, therefore, the contract could not be enforced, but for the fact that the answer of the defendant makes admissions as to the contract and fails to set up the statute. The contract can, therefore, under the rule stated in Ashmore v. Evans, 3 Stock. 151 (Chancellor Williamson, 1856), be enforced against defendant, so far as the admissions of the answer extend; and the principal question for decision in the. case is as to the scope and effect of the admissions made in the answer, as to the contract made between complainant and defendant’s agent. The answer does not set out the written contract signed by complainant, and the admissions of the answer are admissions as to the terms and legal effect of the contract' and in reference to the description of the property are substantially as follows, viz., that defendant is the owner of lot on the southeast corner of Grove and First streets, Jersey City; that on May 8th, 1900, her agent, Montgomer3r, contracted to sell and convey a lot twenty-five feet on Grove street and one hundred feet oar First street to coanplainant; that the contract was for a lot of this size and that she refuses to convey a lot of different dimensions; that she deaiies that she intended to coaivey a lot of greater width than twenty-five feet, or supposed that was all the land owned by her, but she believed she owned twenty-six feet on Grove street by one hundred feet on First street, of which she instructed her agent to sell twenty-five feet by one hundred at auctioar sale. The further admission is, however, then made:

“that the advertisement of the sale so stated the dimensions of the property, and that she intended to sell to the highest purchaser so much of her property as was included in the description in the said advertisement and contract.”

[529]*529The advertisement and the contract made between complainant and defendant’s agent being thus expressly referred by the answer as describing the property intended to be conveyed, the advertisement and the contract thus referred to may be identified by parol evidence as the writings or papers referred to in the answer, and if from them, when so identified, the complete terms of the agreement appear, the statute of frauds is satisfied. Ridgeway v. Wharton, 6 H. L. Cas. 238, *257 (1857); Johnson v. Buck, 6 Vr. 338, 344 (Supreme Court, 1872).

The evidence at the hearing in reference to the description of the property shows that on June 39th, 1899, defendant, by a writing signed by her, appointed Montgomery her agent to sell and dispose of “my property situate on the southeast corner of Grove and First streets, Jersey City,” without any further or other description in the paper. After unsuccessful efforts to dispose of the property at private sale, Montgomery, after consultation with defendant, and after showing the proposed advertisement to defendant, advertised the property for sale, as follows:

“Valuable Grove street corner-property to be sold at auction.
“W: J. Montgomery, Auctioneer,
“Office, 58 Montgomery St.,
“Has received instructions' to sell, on Tuesday, May 8th, 1900, at 2 p. at., on the premises, the choice business corner-property lmown as No. 368’ Grove street, southeast corner of First street, Jersey City.
“Said property has a three-story frame building, with brick and stone basement thereon, containing fourteen (14) rooms, with improvements, all in good condition.
“The lot being 25 feet front on Grove and 100 feet on First street, near the business centre of Newark avenue, makes it a very desirable investment, and positively will be sold to the highest bidder.”

There were written conditions and terms of sale to which a copy of the advertisement was annexed. Complainant, who owned a lot on Grove street adjoining defendant’s lot, purchased the premises at public auction for $6,450, and signed at the foot of the conditions the following memorandum:

“I have bid off the property described above for the sum of six thousand four hundred and fifty dollars, subject to the above terms of sale, to all of which I hereby agree to comply.”

[530]*530Neither the defendant, nor her agent, the auctioneer, signed the advertisement or conditions of sale, but inasmuch as the answer substantially admits that a contract was made between complainant and Montgomery, as her agent, for the sale of the property described in the advertisement and contract, the identification of this written contract, which was the only one signed by complainant, as the contract admittedly made by complainant with defendant’s agent, is made out by evidence sufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds. And inasmuch as the answer refers to the advertisement of sale and contract as describing the property, the case does not come within the rule laid down in Johnson v. Buck, 6 Vr. 338 (Supreme Court, 1872), that where the unsigned paper is not referred to in the signed paper, they cannot be connected by parol evidence. Taking, then, the contract of sale to be evidenced by the advertisement, the conditions of sale to which it is attached, and the memorandum at the foot of the conditions, the property described as the subject-matter of sale, and intended to be sold, was “the property known as No. 368 Grove street, southeast corner of First street, Jersey City.” • The subsequent statement in the advertisement was a representation as to the size of the lot—twenty-five feet on Grove street by one hundred on First street, and was not intended as a description of the property, to cut down the lot to twenty-five feet frontage, if it was more than twenty-five feet, or to guarantee that frontage if it was less.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A. 323, 62 N.J. Eq. 526, 17 Dickinson 526, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gough-v-williamson-njch-1901.