Lipham v. Shamblee

88 So. 569, 205 Ala. 498, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 514
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 14, 1921
Docket7 Div. 178.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 88 So. 569 (Lipham v. Shamblee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lipham v. Shamblee, 88 So. 569, 205 Ala. 498, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 514 (Ala. 1921).

Opinion

GARDNER, J.

Appellant, the daughter of one J. A. W. Shamblee, and the wife of J. T. Lipham, filed this bill against J. W. Shamblee, her brother, as an individual and as administrator of the estate of his father and thereby sought the reformation of certain deeds or written instruments, with incidental relief not necessary to here note. Relief was denied, and her bill dismissed; from which decree she prosecutes this appeal.

The bill discloses that on February 28, 1908, complainant’s husband, J. T. Lipham, was seized and possessed of 160 acres of land, particularly described therein, and that negotiations were entered into between the husband and J. A. W. SJiamblee, complainant’s father, whereby the latter, for a named consideration, was to acquire 140 acres of said tract of land, and it was agreed that J. T. Lipham was to deed to said Shamblee the 140 acres for a consideration of $200, and the further agreement that the deed was not to go on record, and the grantee was to hold *499 the lands during his life, and at his death the same should go to his daughter, the complainant. That ■ on said date, in pursuance of said agreement, deeds were drafted by one H. L>. Landers, a notary public, and by him attested, whereby J. T. Lipham and complainant, his wife, conveyed to J. A. W. Shamblee the entire 160 acres; and on the same day said Shamblee reconveyed to J. T. Lipham 20 acres of said land. The bill further alleges that on this date J. A. AY. Shamblee also signed a certain contract or agreement, which.is made Exhibit D, in the following language:

“The State of Alabama, Randolph County.
“This contract made and entered into on this the 2Sth day of February 1908, by J. A. W. Shamblee who has this day obtained a deed to 140 acres of land known as the land deeded by Ester Bass to J. T. Lipham, from J. T. Lipham and J. V. Lipham, said deed is not to go on record and said land is to go back to my daughter .T. Y. Lipham at my death together with all the rights and possession of said land.
“J. A. AY. Shamblee.
“AVitness: H. B. Landers, Notary Public.”

Copies of the deeds executed and delivered were made exhibits to the bill. It is further averred that, at the time of the drafting and execution of these deeds and instruments in writing, it was the intention of the parties to express the agreement mentioned, but that, by a mistake or inadvertence of the parties, or through the unskillfulness of the draftsman, the agreement which was intended was not therein correctly expressed.

There was no demurrer to the bill, but answer was filed denying the material averments, and it was particularly denied thgtt J. A. AY. Shamblee ever executed the written agreement marked Exhibit B, set out above. Though no demurrer was interposed to the bill, yet it cannot escape attention that it is most uncertain ás to what particular instrument is sought to be reformed, nor is the right of complainant to maintain the suit at all questioned; but we pass these matters without further notice.

[1] In the exercise of this jurisdiction, it is well understood that the court proceeds with utmost caution, as it involves the invasion of a salutary rule of evidence, and thqt, to authorize the reformation of a contract which has been reduced to writing, and signed, the proof must be clear, exact, and satisfactory, to the effect that the writing does not express the intention of the parties, and, further, what, in fact, the parties had intended the writing should contain. If the proof is uncertain in any material respect, it will be held insufficient.

[2] The proof shows that H. B. Landers, who is now deceased, was an attorney, although with a very limited practice, and that he was procured by the parties to draft the deeds. If we accept the theory of complainant, and concede, for the purposes of the question here under consideration, that at the time the execution of the deed J. A. AY. Shamblee also executed the contract referred to as Exhibit B, yet we are persuaded, as to the deeds in question, the complainant has failed' to bring herself within the rule as to reformation of written instruments. The testimony for the complainant, viewed in its most favorable light to her, indicates very strongly that the papers were drawn and executed as the parties understood and desired. There is nothing in the proof tending to show that the parties intended to embrace in the deed from J. T. Lipham to J. A. AY. Shamblee, or in the deed from the latter to the former, anything other than was contained therein; but that, in fact, any other agreement than that which appears on the face of these deeds was to be left to a sep^ arate instrument, which in no manner was to form a part of these conveyances.

[3, 4] If such agreement was omitted from the deeds upon the theory that the parties were content to rest their rights thereon independently of the deed, and in this they should subsequently be disappointed, this would have been merely a mistake of law, and not of fact; and, as said by this court in Clark v. Hart, 57 Ala. 390, “against a simple mistake of law, no court will grant relief.”

The case of Larkins v. Biddle, 21 Ala. 252, cited by counsel .for appellant, does not come within this principle, and is easily distinguishable from the instant case. The only authority in the court is to reform the contract so as to express that which the parties agreed upon, and not to make a new contract for the parties.' An analogous situation was presented in the comparatively recent case of Holland Blow Stave Co. v. Barclay, 193 Ala. 200, 69 South. 118, wherein the court made use of the following quotation from Clark v. Hart, supra, which is here pertinent:

“The difficulty lies in determining, sometimes, whether the alleged mistake, -sought to be corrected, fails within the rule. Chancery does not add terms to the contract which the parties did not intend to embody in the writing. It is only when stipulations which the parties intended to express have been left out by mistake, or omitted through fraud, that the reforming powers of the chancery court can be called into exercise. If there be other contemporaneous agreements or terms, not put in the writing, and not intended to be inserted therein, this is no mistake of fact, and furnishes no ground for equitable interposition. It is simply a mistake of law in supposing that such oral stipulations may be proved and considered in construing the writing. To allow reformation, under such circumstances, would be to create for the parties a written contract, which they intentionally left in confidence, and did not intend to express in the writing. In other words, it would enable chancery to relieve parties of all the dis *500 abilities which result from that very salutary rule of evidence which forbids that oral proof shall be received to add to, vary, or contradict the terms of a written contract.”

[5] Therefore, if the bill seeks a reformation of either of the deeds in question, so as to have the contract agreement, Exhibit D, included therein, under the proof here disclosed it falls within the foregoing principle, and complainant must fail.

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Bluebook (online)
88 So. 569, 205 Ala. 498, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lipham-v-shamblee-ala-1921.