Korrick v. Tuller

27 P.2d 529, 42 Ariz. 493, 1933 Ariz. LEXIS 159
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1933
DocketCivil No. 3302.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 27 P.2d 529 (Korrick v. Tuller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Korrick v. Tuller, 27 P.2d 529, 42 Ariz. 493, 1933 Ariz. LEXIS 159 (Ark. 1933).

Opinion

ROSS, C. J.

This suit was commenced by plaintiff, Tuller, against defendants, Korrick, to reform a deed for mutual mistake in the description of land conveyed. The court tried the case without a jury and gave judgment for plaintiff, and the defendants have appealed.

In 1895 the then owner of the S. E. % of section 29, township 2 south, range 3 east, divided the same into sixteen lots of ten acres each and called it Buena Vista tract, which was suburban to the city of Phoenix. The quarter-section was platted, showing location of lots and public highways or streets, and the plat was filed in the office of the county recorder of Maricopa county. Through mesne conveyances the plaintiff, Tuller, who resides in Los Angeles, became the owner of lots 1 and 8 of said subdivision, or twenty acres in compact form located as the E. % of the N. E. % of the S. E. % of said section. Its shape is that of a parallelogram; its length being 1,261.6 feet north and south and its width 631.2 feet east and west, if calculated according to the United States governmental survey lines, but, if calculated according to the plat of Buena Vista tract, the length and width *495 are reduced by tbe number of feet dedicated to tbe abutting streets.

Shortly before January 20, 1928, defendant Charles Korrick called on plaintiff at his office in Los Angeles for the purpose of trying to purchase a piece or parcel of said land as a site for a home he was then contemplating building. He wanted two and one-half acres and was willing to pay therefor $2,750 per acre. Plaintiff did not want to sell in parcels less than five acres, and asked $3,000 per acre. They separated with the understanding that future negotiations might be taken up in Phoenix. On January 20th, plaintiff wrote defendant that he was unable to come to Phoenix, but that Prank W. Shedd, his agent in Phoenix, was empowered to take up the matter with him and to go into an escrow agreement. On January 26th Shedd and Korrick came to an agreement under the terms of which Shedd, as the agent and trustee of plaintiff, agreed to sell and Korrick agreed to purchase two and one-half acres of said land at the rate of $2,750 per acre, and undertook to reduce their agreement to writing, such writing taking the form of an escrow agreement, and therein described the piece or parcel of land as follows: “S. % of S. % of S. E. of N. E. % of S. E. % °f Sec. 29, Tp. 2 N., R. 3 E. of G. & S. R. B. & M., also known as S. y2 of S. y% of Lot 8, Buena Vista Tract.” The Phoenix Title & Trust Company’s manager prepared and wrote the escrow agreement. Both Shedd and Korrick believed at the time of the execution of the escrow that the two descriptions therein covered the identical property. The description according to the' plat of Buena Vista tract is two and one-half acres bordering on Palm Avenue and Seventh Street, and the description by legal subdivision includes in the two and one-half acres such streets to their centers.

The survey made of the ground according to the plat of Buena Vista tract gave defendant 158 feet *496 frontage on Seventh Street. If it had been surveyed according to the governmental lines, it would have given him 22% feet less frontage on that street.

The land in question is a strip off the southerly part of lot 8, otherwise described as the southerly part of the E. % of the N. E. % of the S. E. % of said section 29, and is on the west side of Seventh Street, directly across from the Arizona Countrv Club.

On March 19, 1928, plaintiff himself wrote a deed conveying two and one-half acres to Korrick, and caused it to be executed and delivered by Shedd (to whom he had in the meantime deeded his twenty acres in trust), and was then paid for the land at the agreed price. This deed describes the premises as follows:

“The South half (S.%) of the South half (S. %) of Lot 8, Buena Vista Tract, according to the plat on record in the office of the County Becorder of said Maricopa County, in Book 2 of Maps, page 46; said parcel containing (including streets) 2% acres, more or less, subject to all encumbrances, conditions and restrictions of record.”

The court found that both' parties believed that the two descriptions of the land contained in the escrow agreement were of the identical piece or parcel of land; also that in their first proposals of sale and purchase they agreed that, if and when a deal should be made, the area sold should include as a part thereof the abutting streets to the center; also that plaintiff intended to sell and defendant Korrick intended to purchase the S. % of the S. % of the 'S. E. % of the N. E. % of the S. E. % of said section 29; also that error of description in deed occurred through a mutual mistake. The judgment was that the deed be reformed as prayed unless defendants should pay for the overplus at the rate of $2,750 per acre within fifteen days.

*497 This is an equitable proceeding. The parties, through carelessness, inadvertence or oversight, have made some mistakes, and not being able or willing to adjust them themselves, have come to the only-tribunal authorized and empowered to help them out of their difficulties. They have acted upon an agreement as though its terms were clear and explicit, and by reason thereof the status of both parties has been very much changed; the one has paid the price of the land as he understood it, and the other has made a conveyance. They cannot be placed in status quo. Under the circumstances, the law steps in and lends itself to a rectification of their errors as nearly as may be and in accordance with the rules of equity.

Judging from the record, the plaintiff is a lawyer of considerable learning and experience in realty transactions, but equity will not bar its doors against him for that. It is said that “Even Demosthenes sometimes nodded in his orations.” If a mistake is mutual and the court is satisfied thereof by clear and convincing proof, even so sacred an instrument as a deed, if founded upon sufficient consideration, will be reformed to carry out the intention of the parties thereto. Restatement of the Law of Contracts by American Law Institute, §§ 504, 506 and 509; 53 C. J. 941-945, §§59 and 60; 23 R. C. L. 327, §20; McMillon v. Town of Flagstaff, 18 Ariz. 536, 164 Pac. 318. Defendant Korrick admits that he thought the descriptions in the escrow covered the identical piece of land. The employment of the two descriptions left it uncertain which one of the parcels described therein the parties intended to be conveyed. The mistake was clearly mutual, and the escrow agreement might have been reformed at the instance of either party upon a showing that their minds met on the identity of the property to be conveyed.

On January 28th, two days after the parties had executed the escrow agreement, Korrick employed a *498 surveyor to survey the land and gave him the two descriptions of it as his guide for locating it. The surveyor notified Korrick that the descriptions were not of the same identical parcel of land, whereupon Korrick told him to make the survey by the one that would give him the larger area.

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Bluebook (online)
27 P.2d 529, 42 Ariz. 493, 1933 Ariz. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/korrick-v-tuller-ariz-1933.