Lewis v. Lewis

4 Or. 177
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 Or. 177 (Lewis v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Lewis, 4 Or. 177 (Or. 1871).

Opinion

By the Court,

Upton, J.:

The answer in this case does not specifically point out in what particular there is a mistake in the deed sought to be reformed, but describes by metes and bounds a tract fifty-four and one-half chains in length, north and south, as the tracts actually sold, and avers that by mistake the deed was so drawn as to include the premises in controversy. The record shows that the only controverted question of fact on the trial related to the locality of the stakes set up by the parties on the day of the execution of the deed, as monuments of the northwest and northeast corners of the parcel actually sold.

It is admitted that the parties, after having agreed upon the price per acre, and before determining the size or shape of the parcel, went on to the ground with a surveyor, and that they there agreed upon the particular parcel to be sold, measured its west side, and set up a stake to mark the northwest corner of the parcel selected; and that the north line of the parcel actually sold runs due east from the place of that stake. On the trial, the controverted question of fact was, whether that stake was in fact placed fifty-nine chains from the southwest corner of the land claim, as indicated by the figures noted in the deed, or whether the distance is erroneously noted in the deed, and the stake was in fact planted at a point fifty-four and one-half chains from the place of beginning: in other words, whether that stake was in fact placed at the northwest or at the southwest corner of the parcel described in the complaint and now in controversy.

The cause having been treated by both parties as one cognizable in equity, we have carefully examined the evi[179]*179deuce, and we do not find it clearly and satisfactorily proved that the place selected by the parties as the northwest corner of the parcel sold was not fifty-nine chains from the southwest corner of the land claim. The evidence, therefore, is not sufficient to present a cause for correcting a deed, according to the decisions 'made by this Court in Shively v. Welch (2 Ogn. 288), and in Newsom v. Greenwood, decided at the present term.

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Related

Watkins v. Childs
66 A. 805 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1907)
Albert v. Salem
65 P. 1068 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1901)
Weiss v. Oregon Iron & Steel Co.
11 P. 255 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1886)
Ramsey v. Loomis
6 Or. 367 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1877)
Raymond v. Coffey
5 Or. 132 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Or. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-lewis-or-1871.