Mid-State Homes, Inc. v. Anderton

283 So. 2d 426, 291 Ala. 536, 1973 Ala. LEXIS 1144
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 27, 1973
DocketSC 106
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 283 So. 2d 426 (Mid-State Homes, Inc. v. Anderton) 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
Mid-State Homes, Inc. v. Anderton, 283 So. 2d 426, 291 Ala. 536, 1973 Ala. LEXIS 1144 (Ala. 1973).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal from a final decree of the Circuit Court of Jackson County wherein the trial court refused to reform the description in certain instruments as sought by the complainants below and denied the prayer of complainants’ amended bill that authority be granted them to remove a house from a parcel of land owned by two of the respondents.

On December 18, 1961, J. W. Anderton and Minnie B. Anderton conveyed to their daughter Mary Lou Cloud and her husband Charles, a parcel of land containing one-half acre, more or less, for the purpose of building a house thereon. On April 14, 1962, the Andertons executed a second deed to the Clouds for the purpose of changing the description in the first deed. The two deeds describe the same parcel of land although different descriptive terms are used in them.

Shortly after the Clouds received their deeds, they had a house constructed without having a survey made of the parcel of land described in the deeds to them from the Andertons. That house, which will sometimes be referred to as the first house, was not constructed entirely on the land described in the afore-mentioned deeds, but apparently the Clouds were not aware of this fact until long after the first house was built.

*538 In January of 1968, Jim Walter Corporation, hereinafter sometimes referred to as Jim Walter, was engaged in the business of constructing shell homes on land owned by others. The Clouds, after talking with Jim Walter’s agent-salesman Jimmy Garner, entered into a building contract with Jim Walter and executed a mortgage to that corporation. The building contract and the mortgage were both executed on January 30, 1968. The property description used in both instruments was the same as that used in the first deed from the Andertons to the Clouds, that is, the deed of December 18, 1961. Garner, who wrote the description into those instruments, used the deed of December 18, 1961, which was delivered to him by the Clouds.

On April 8, 1968, the Clouds executed another mortgage to Jim Walter “FOR THE PURPOSE OF CORRECTING THE AMOUNT OF MORTGAGE, AMOUNT OF PAYMENTS AND LAST INSTALLMENT DATE” of the mortgage executed on January 30, 1968. The description used was the same as that used in the mortgage of January 30, 1968, and in the deed of December 18, 1961.

When the two mortgages were introduced in evidence, they each contained the description used in the second deed from the Andertons to the Clouds which description had been typed and placed over the original description by the use of Scotch tape. The record is silent as to who made these additions to the mortgages or when they were made. But the additions or changes do not bear on the questions presented on this appeal because, as indicated previously, the same parcel of land is described by each of the two descriptions.

The mortgage under date of January 30, 1968, was assigned by Jim Walter to Mid-State Homes, Inc. on February 15, 1968, and the mortgage of April 8, 1968, was assigned by Jim Walter to Mid-State on April 25, 1968.

The exact time when the Jim Walter home was constructed does not clearly appear from the record, but it was apparently completed by April 15, 1968.

The Clouds’ first home was moved, and they moved into the Jim Walter home at a time not shown with certainty — probably in the spring of 1968. The Clouds made payments on the Jim Walter home until May of 1969 when they stopped because they entertained the view that the house was not built on their land and was not constructed in accordance with the terms of their contract with Jim Walter.

In October, 1969, Mid-State as assignee of the mortgage of April 8, 1968, foreclosed that mortgage; and, at the foreclosure sale, became the purchaser of the property described therein.

After the foreclosure, Mid-State and the Clouds had surveys made of the land described in that mortgage, which surveys show that the Jim Walter home was not built on the land described in the mortgage. It had been constructed on land owned by Mr. and Mrs. Anderton, who as shown above were the parents of Mrs. Cloud.

Thereafter Mid-State and Jim Walter instituted this litigation against the Andertons and the Clouds for the purpose of reforming the description in the deed from the Andertons to the Clouds under date of April 14, 1962, and the description in the mortgage of January 30, 1968, so that those instruments would describe the parcel of land upon which the Jim Walter home was constructed.

In the stating part of their bill, the complainants averred that the descriptions set forth in the two instruments last referred to above were incorporated in those instruments “through the mutual mistake of fact of each of the parties to said instruments, and that it was the mutual intent and purpose of each of the parties to said instruments to incorporate therein, as the prop *539 erty to be conveyed, transferred, assigned, or sold, a parcel of real estate, the true description of which is as follows: * * * ”

The Andertons answered by denying the averments of the bill to the effect that the description in the two instruments was incorporated therein through mutual mistake and by alleging: “Your respondents aver that the complainant constructed a house on their property through a mistake on the complainant’s part and not a mistake on the part of the respondents, and that the respondents make no claim to this house, but say that the complainants are not entitled to the property upon which the house is located, and have no claim to said property.” (Emphasis Supplied)

Thereafter complainants filed an amendment to their bill wherein after taking note of the fact that the Andertons in their answer stated that they made no claim to the house averred:

“Complainants further respectfully pray that they, or either of them, be allowed to remove the dwelling house heretofore constructed by the Jim Walter Corporation upon the real estate owned by the respondents, J. W. Anderton and Minnie B. Anderton from such real estate, and complainants further, in pursuant (sic) of their offer to do equity heretofore made, specifically offer to accomplish such removal without any cost or expense to such respondents, and specifically agree to indemnify said respondents from any damage to such real estate which may accrue from the removal thereof.”

The Clouds then filed their answer wherein they admitted that the Jim Walter home was not built on their property but denied the averments of the bill, as amended, to the effect that the deeds from the Andertons to them did not correctly describe the property which was intended to be conveyed.

The Andertons amended their answer by deleting therefrom the language which we quoted from their answer and by substituting in lieu thereof the following:

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Bluebook (online)
283 So. 2d 426, 291 Ala. 536, 1973 Ala. LEXIS 1144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-state-homes-inc-v-anderton-ala-1973.