Lane v. Neifert

215 N.W. 302, 240 Mich. 475, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 921
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1927
DocketDocket No. 116.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 215 N.W. 302 (Lane v. Neifert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Neifert, 215 N.W. 302, 240 Mich. 475, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 921 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Sharpe, C. J.

In a memorandum of agreement, entered into on May 5, 1924, the defendants agreed to sell to Frank D. Livernois a farm owned by them at a price therein agreed upon. Recognizing that the rights of Livernois had been transferred to plaintiff, defendants entered into a contract on November 10, 1924, to sell the property to him for $122,280, of which a payment of $1,000 was then made. Defendants furnished an abstract of title as agreed. Upon examination by plaintiff’s attorney, it was discovered that the lands were not correctly described in the contract. He prepared a deed and mortgage, describing the land as it appeared in the abstract. He tendered these, together with the $28,000, required to be then paid, to the defendants, but they refused to' execute them and stated that they would deed only the lands as described in the contract. Plaintiff thereupon filed the bill of complaint herein, praying for reformation of the contract and its specific performance. From a decree granting him such relief, defendants a-ppeal.

The defendants were not sworn, nor did they call any witnesses. The proof is clear that defendants intended to include in the contract the lands described in the abstract, which constituted a large farm on *477 which they lived, the 'boundaries of which had been pointed out to plaintiff. The errors in the descriptions occurred by defendants’ reading them to Livernois, who prepared the first memorandum, from his tax receipts, and the descriptions in plaintiff’s contract were taken from it.

The first description in the contract reads: “The E. 3/8 of E. % of S. W. % sect. 32, T. 4 and 5, S. R. IOi E. 60 acres, more or less.” In the abstract it reads: "The E. % 0f E. i/2 of S. W. % sect. 32, T. 4, S. R. 10 E.”

The next description in the purchase agreement reads: “S. E. part of the E. % of the N. E. % fractional section 32, T. 4 — 5, S. R. 10 E., 106 2/3 acres, more or less.” In the abstract it reads: “The south 1/3 and middle 1/3 of the south 1/2 of the north 1/2 of section 32, T. 4 S. R. 10 E., Brownstown.”

The description in the purchase agreement which reads: “The west % of N. E. % except 3 acres, sec. 5, T. 4 and 5, S. R. 10 east, 80 acres, more or less,” in the abstract reads: “The west % of the N. E. % of sec. 5, T. 5, south range 10 E., containing 78.26 acres of land.”

The description in the purchase agreement which reads: “Bounded on- north by Julius Neifert, south William Chase, on east Tony Meaten, west Julius Neifert, containing 58% acres of land, more or less,” in the abstract reads: “The west % of the N. ,E. % of S. E. % of section 32 and N. 1/3 of E. % of N. E. % of S. E. % of section 32 and lots 4, 5, 6 and 7 of partition of Josiah Chase estate, containing 57 2/3 acres of land.”

There are about 305 .acres in the farm as described in the abstract, which, at the stated price of $400 per acre, makes the purchase price of $122,280, as fixed in the contract. Defendants’ appeal is based on the claim that, as the contract is executory and the de *478 scriptions therein insufficient under the statute of frauds, it may not 'be reformed to make it sufficient thereunder and then specifically enforced, and that the furnishing of an abstract by them containing descriptions different from those in the contract does not satisfy such statute. The price was determined by the acreage, and it is apparent that the fractions indicating the parts of .the descriptions included therein are erroneous.

“While a statement of acreage does not prevail against a definite description, it may be a valuable aid to explain an. otherwise ambiguous description.” Davis v. Benedict, 122 Mich. 657, 659.

The contract upon its face bears evidence that the land sold was a farm occupied* by defendants. In the agreement with Livernois defendants reserved, the crops then growing on the farm-, and in the contract with* plaintiff they agreed to sow fall wheat on the land, for which they were to be paid the reasonable expense thereof. The mistakes were therefore not in the identity of the property, but in the descriptions of the parcels of which it was composed.

In 23 R. C. L. p.. 335, it is said:

“If the mistake of the parties in the conveying or leasing of property is in the identity of the property itself, reformation cannot be had, although the contract may be rescinded, for there has been no meeting of the minds of the parties. But where there is no mistake as to the identity of the property but merely a misdescription of it in the written agreement in relation to it or in the conveyance, reformation will be allowed.”

Counsel concede that, were this an executed contract, a court of equity would have the power to reform it. This court has many times upheld the power to reform a conveyance of land by correcting the description therein. Kimble v. Harrington, 91 Mich. 281; Judson v. Miller, 106 Mich. 140; Davis v. Bene *479 dict, supra; Schornfield v. Veenboer, 234 Mich. 147. But it is insisted that a court of equity will not reform an executory contract and decree specific performance of it; that by doing so it creates an agreement by parol, which is void under the statute, and, without part performance, cannot be enforced. Attention is called to section 11979, 3 Comp. Laws 1915, which provides for specific performance where there has been part performance. Reliance is placed upon the language of Mr. Justice Campbell in Climer v. Hovey, 15 Mich. 18, which sustains this contention. But it will be noted, as pointed out by the trial court, that, while Chief Justice Martin concurred in the result in that case, Justices Cooley and Christiancy expressed no opinion as to the power of the court to correct a mistake in such a contract and specifically enforce it. In Chambers v. Livermore, 15 Mich. 381, decided a few months later, Mr. Justice Cooley said that it is a “mooted question, whether a complainant can be allowed to show toy parol a mistake in a contract, with a view to having it reformed and then enforced,” while in Youell v. Allen, 18 Mich. 107, the court said the question “is one of no little difficulty, and upon which the authorities are irreconcilably at variance.” Climer v. Hovey, supra, was referred to without approval in Metropolitan Lumber Co. v. Lake Superior, etc., Iron Co., 101 Mich. 577, 582. • We are therefore of the opinion that the Climer Case cannot be said to support defendants’ claim.

In 23 R. C. L. p. 358, it is said:

“The party seeking relief by reformation may at the same time ask for other equitable relief. He may ask that a deed or a contract concerning land may foe reformed and then specifically enforced.”

In 34 Cyc. p. 927, the rule is thus stated:

“Where courts have full equity jurisdiction, the fact that a contract specified in the instrument to be re

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Bluebook (online)
215 N.W. 302, 240 Mich. 475, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-neifert-mich-1927.