Jumper v. Queen Mab Lumber Co.

106 S.E. 473, 115 S.C. 452, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 28
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 12, 1921
Docket10582
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 106 S.E. 473 (Jumper v. Queen Mab Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jumper v. Queen Mab Lumber Co., 106 S.E. 473, 115 S.C. 452, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 28 (S.C. 1921).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

Action at law for $4,960 damages on account of alleged breach by defendant of a written contract for the sale of land, dated October 17, 1917. The defendant admits the execution of the contract, but alleges that it' owned only the timber rights on the land; that prior t'o the formal execution of the contract, which was but the written evidence of their agreement, the plaintiff and the defendant had agreed upon a purchase and sale of the timber rights on the land at $5,000, the plaintiff being aware of the fact that the title to the land was.in another;-but that owing to the fact that at the same time another transaction between the parties involved a contract for the conveyance of the title to another tract, and the attorney who drew both sets of papers, not being fully advised by the parties, drew the contract in question in like form, the defendant alleges mutual mistake and asks for a reformation of the contract, and that when so reformed the plaintiff be required to comply.

The case was referred to a special referee simply to take the testimony and report same, and upon the testimony so reported, was tried before Judge Mauldin, a jury trial having been duly waived.

The Circuit Judge filed a decree, which will be reported, finding that “the alleged contract involved in this case was executed in mutual mistake, neither party intending that it should cover the fee, and that their minds have never met on .such a propostion; but, on the contrary, that the parties in *458 tended only to contract as to the timber and timber rights on the said tract of land,” and ordered the contract to be rescinded and the parties restored to their status quo.

The plaintiff appeals and relies upon these propositions:

(1) That there can be no relief from a mutual mistake in the absence of misrepresentation or concealment of fact.

(2) That there is no testimony to sustain the finding of fact of mutual mistake, for two reasons : (a) The burden was upon the defendant to maintain such plea, and the overwhelming weight of the evidence is opposed to such finding; (b) there was not sufficient evidence to show misrepresentation or concealment upon the plaintiff’s part.

(3) That rescisión of a contract should not be decreed in the absence of misrepresentation or concealment, where it appears that it was entered into by competent parties, at arm’s length, when they read or should'have read the same.

1 1. The appellant’s position that there can be no relief from a mutual mistake, unless there enter into the mistake an element of misrepresentation or concealment, cannot be sustained for this 'reason: A contract may be reformed or rescinded, as the justice of the case may require, upon the ground of mistake, under these circumstances : (1) Where the mistake is mutual and is in reference to the facts, or supposed facts, upon which the contract is based; (2) where the mistake is mutual and consists in the omission or insertion of sorqe material elemient affecting the subject-matter or the terms and stipulations of the contract, inconsistent with those of the parol agreement which necessarily preceded it; (3) where the mistake is not mutual, unilateral, and has been induced by the fraud, deceit, misrepresentation, concealment, or imposition in any form of the party opposed in interest to the reformation or rescission, without negligence on the part of the party claiming the right; (4) where the mistake is not mutual, but unilateral, and is .accompanied by very strong and extra *459 ordinary circumstances, showing imbecility- or something which would make it a great wrong to enforce the agreement, sustained by competent testimony of the clearest kind. Kennerty v. Etiwan Co., 21 S. C. 226, 53 Am. Rep. 669; Forrester v. Moon, 100 S. C. 157, 84 S. E. 532.

It thus appears that both the first and second conditions, instances of mutual mistake, are independent of the elements of misrepresentation and concealment.

2, 3 2. The appellant’s contentions' that there is no testimony to sustain the finding of fact by the Circuit Judge of a mutual mistake, and that the overwhelming weight of the testimony is against such finding, cannot be sustained. The demand of the defendant for affirmative relief, in the reformation of the contract, presents' an equitable issue. The findings of fact by the Circuit Judge will be sustained unless the appellant may show that they are against the preponderance of the evidence, the burden of which is upon him. He has not only failed to sustain this burden, but, after careful review of the testimony, we are entirely satisfied with the conclusions of the Circuit Judge. The defendant owned only the timber rights on the land, and we begin with the natural assumption that they would not intend to sell something they did not own. We are satisfied from the evidence that, when the defendant bought the timber rights in 1906, the plaintiff was informed of the limitations of their holding ; that in 1916 conditions had not changed; that in-March, 1917, the plaintiff and Earr, president of the defendant company, were in negotiation about the timber on both this tract and another, no reference being made to the fee-simple title to the land; that in May, 1917, Farr wrote to the plaintiff to know whether or not the deal was off “for the purchase of the Peeples and Courtney tracts of timber,” about which they had been negotiating in March, the Courtney tract being the one now in question; that in July, 1917, the plaintiff was at Parr’s office in *460 Columbia and opened negotiations for the purchase of the Mears tract which the' defendant owned in fee; he admits that Farr proposed that if he would buy the Courtney timber at $5,000 he would sell him the Mears tract for $35,0.00; that in October, 1917, they again met in Columbia to close both deals, for the Mears tract in fee, and for the timber rights in the Courtney tract, the plaintiff yielding comSmissions of 10 per cent., on the Courtney deal in order to secure the Mears tract.

We are satisfied that neither party had any other thought than that, so far as the Courtney tract was concerned, the one was selling and the other buying only what the plaintiff knew'the defendant possessed, the timber rights. After they met in Farr’s office in Columbia and agreed upon both deals, an attorney was called in to prepare the contracts. The papers relating to the Mears deal were given to the attorney arid the plat of the Courtney land. From a lack of information which should have been communicated to the attorney by either the plaintiff or Farr, or both, or from a misunderstanding of directions, the attorney prepared the two' contracts as if a sale of both tracts of land, and not the Mears tract and the timber rights of the Courtney tract, was intended. The contracts in that form were signed up) apparently not having been read over by either party. The $50 cash payment was made by the plaintiff, and each party received a copy of the contract. The remainder of the purchase price of the Courtney deal, $4,950, was due November 17th. On the 12th the defendant drew upon the plaintiff for this amount, payable on the 17th, attached a deed conveying the timber rights, and forwarded it through the banks for collection.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.E. 473, 115 S.C. 452, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jumper-v-queen-mab-lumber-co-sc-1921.