Haverstick v. Beaver

37 N.E.2d 650, 34 Ohio Law. Abs. 363, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 993
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1941
DocketNo 466
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 37 N.E.2d 650 (Haverstick v. Beaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haverstick v. Beaver, 37 N.E.2d 650, 34 Ohio Law. Abs. 363, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 993 (Ohio Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

OPINION

By GEIGER, PJ.

This matter is before this Court on appeal on questions of law and fact from a judgment rendered against the defendants-appellants, Charles I. Beaver, et al., in the Court of Common Pleas of Greene County, Ohio.

It is alleged in the petition that on the 22nd day of November, 1939, the plaintiff executed an option agreement with the defendant granting to him the right to purchase a certain tract of real estate owned by the plaintiff in Beaver Creek Township, Greene County, Ohio; that on the 1st of April, 1940, she executed a deed for the real estate described in said option; that it was the intention of the plaintiff as seller and the defendant as buyer that said plaintiff was to convey a tract of land owned by the plaintiff in Beaver Creek Township lying on the north side of the Dayton-Xenia Highway, which tract contains 73.97 acres for which the defendant agreed to pay $7100; that due to an error in the execution of said option agreement as well as in the execution of the deed, a small strip of land containing 4.49 acres lying on the south side of the highway was erroneously included. which was a mutual mistake and not intended to be included in the conveyance as made; that it was her belief that the 4.49 acres erroneously included in the conveyance to the defendant was conveyed to her daughter on June 15, 1939, prior to the negotiations with the defendant; that said 4.49 acres was a part of a tract of 95.09 acres conveyed to her by deed made in 1883; that she has demanded that said defendant correct the mistake but he refuses to do so; that the other parties defendant, claim to have a lien by virtue of a mortgage on the entire premises described. Plaintiff asks that the deed be sc reformed as to describe the premises correctly.

The defendant answers admitting the giving of the option and of the deed for the real estate described in the petition. He admits that it was the intention of the plaintiff as seller and the defendant as buyer that said plaintiff was to convey to the defendant a tract of land owned by the plaintiff; that a tract consisting of 4.49 acres lying on the south side of the highway was included in the metes and bounds described in the deed. Defendant says that the option states that there is to be conveyed 78.46 acres of land “all of which lies on che. north side of the Dayton-Xenia Highway”. That plaintiff assured defendant that the acreage was correct and that a survey was not necessary. Defendant says that he paid $7100 for 78.46 acres pursuant to the option and that he was conveyed [365]*365this amount and that 4.49 acres is situated on the south side of the pike and that defendant is willing to accept the property on the south side of the pike as a part of the 78.46 acres that was to be conveyed to him; that plaintiff has demanded a re-conveyance of the 4.49 acres, but has been unwilling to reimburse the defendant for the difference between the 78.46 acres which he bought and paid for and 73.56 acres; that he is willing to re-convey the said 4.49 acres to the plaintiff for the sum of $400.00. He prays that the petition be dismissed or that the defendant be reimbursed proportionately if said 4.49 acres are to be re-conveyed to plaintiff. The other defendants answer setting up the fact that they had loaned $6000 to Charles I. Beaver and wife upon a mortgage covering the entire acreage described m the option and deed.

For reply plaintiff denies that she assured defendant that there was in fact 78.46 acres on the north side of the highway or that she informed the defendant a survey was not necessary but that on the other hand the defendant stated that he did not want a survey made as he was buying all the land on the north side of the road for the purpose of a subdivision.

A motion being made by the defendant for separate finding of facts and conclusions of law, the court did so and embodied same in the entry.

The entry of December 18, 1940, was to the effect that it was the intention of the plaintiff to sell and that intention of the defendant to buy the land lying north of the highway and that the description in the deed as received ■by the defendant was a mistake on the part of the scrivener and that Beaver had full knowledge prior to the completion of the transaction that the tract of land on the north side did not contain 78.46 acres but did in fact contain 73.56 acres and that with this full knowledge he completed the transaction without notice to the plaintiff and that the plaintiff is entitled to have the deed corrected omitting the tract of 4.49 acres lying south of the Dayton Pike. The Court orders that the mortgage lien cover the tract on both sides of the highway; that the defendant convey the 4.49 acres to the administrator of the deceased plaintiff and that the order shall operate as such conveyance.

The evidence tends to show that Catherine Haverstick was an aged lady who transacted the business in reference to the real estate in controversy througn the agency of a son, Harry. In November, 1939, the defendant and the plaintiff’s son consulted with the attorney for the plaintiff in reference to the land in question at which time it was agreed that the defendant would pay the sum of $7100 as a flat price without reference to acreage. Plaintiff’s counsel thereupon prepared an option in which it was stated that there was 78.46 acres in the tract. On the same day a deed was prepared containing the identical description of the option. Both deed and option contained the statement, after reciting certain exceptions, “leaving in the conveyance to be made herein 78.46 acres of land all of which lies on the north side of the Dayton-Xenia Highway”. Upon survey it was found that the large tract “on the north side” of the highway actually contained 73.56 acres and that a small triangular piece on the south side, included within the metes and bounds, contained 4.49 acres.

A plat made by H. H. Warner, a surveyor, discloses how the acreage set up in the deed was arrived at. The description was based upon the original description of a conveyance by Nicholas Coy to Catherine Haverstick dated June 4, 1883 in which that tract is described as containing 95.09 acres more or less. From this original description, the deed in question, excepting a tract of land consisting of 2 13/100 acres conveyed by Catherine Haverstick on September 8, 1927 to Luther Horlacher and further excepting a tract consisting of 14 50/100 acres conveyed by Catherine Haverstick to Charlotte Koogler on June 15, 1939, was drawn. On April 1, 1940, Catherine Haverstick made the conveyance to Beaver in which, after describing the property originally conveyed to [366]*366Catherine Haverstick, together with the exceptions, it is stated, “leaving in the conveyance to be made herein 78.46 acres of land all of which lies on the north side of the- Dayton-Xenia, Highway”.

The plat discloses the "fact that the description includes a small tract of 42/100 acre which is designated on the plat as traded to Lucy Snyder, but which, from the testimony, appears to have been sold to other parties.

If the original tract contained 95.09 acres from which there were two exceptions, one of 2 13/100 acres and one of 14 50/100 acres the real remainder would be 78.46 acres as stated in the deed less the 42/100 acre conveyed to Snyder. The deed includes the Snyder tract which had formerly been conveyed leaving the total covered by the deed of 78.04 acres.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 N.E.2d 650, 34 Ohio Law. Abs. 363, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haverstick-v-beaver-ohioctapp-1941.