Mills v. . Kampfe

94 N.E. 1072, 202 N.Y. 46, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 991
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 94 N.E. 1072 (Mills v. . Kampfe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mills v. . Kampfe, 94 N.E. 1072, 202 N.Y. 46, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 991 (N.Y. 1911).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

Appellant’s assignor made a written contract for the purchase at $47,500 of a tract of land from *48 the defendants other than the executrix Kampfe, who represents one Kichard Kampfe, who was one of the vendors. Thereafter said contract was assigned to the appellant, who executed the same and received a deed of the premises. She brought this action claiming that she and her assignor were led by representations of the vendors to believe that said tract contained 264 65-100 acres, whereas it contained a little less than 231 acres, and she sought to have the contract reformed and to recover for the deficiency in acreage at the average price per acre on the basis of the greater quantity. The trial judge found that the contract was made, and assigned to and carried out by the appellant, on and under the mutually mistaken belief by all of the parties that the tract contained 250 acres, whereas it only contained a little more than 233 acres, and he gave judgment to appellant for this deficiency, at an average price paid per acre on the basis of 250 acres. This judgment having been reversed as a matter of law, we have been presented with the resulting questions whether the findings of fact supported the conclusions of law and judgment and whether the evidence sustained the findings. These questions are almost entirely debated in connection with three findings.

In addition to other findings with reference tó formal matters involved in the execution and assignment of the contract, the execution of the deed, payment of the purchase price, and the actual amount of land conveyed, about which there seems to have been no dispute, there was a finding of considerable importance also based on undisputed evidence that the property consisted of unimproved farm land and woodland.

The court then found that during all of the negotiations preceding and at the time of the execution of the contract for the purchase and prior to and at the time of tho assignment of said contract to appellant, all the parties to said contract and assignment believed that the said parcel of land contained about 250 acres, and the *49 negotiations and agreements were had and executed on both sides upon the basis of such common belief and understanding; ” also that ££ all the parties were mutually mistaken in the belief that the piece or parcel of land contained about 250 acres, and said agreement and deeds were founded upon such mutual mistake.”

The first inquiry in logical order is whether the evidence sustained these findings. I think it did. It is true that the defendants’ evidence tended to negative them and that plaintiff’s complaint alleged and her evidence by itself tended to establish an understanding of upwards of 2G4 acres instead of 250 acres as found by the court. But considering all of the evidence on both sides as of course the court had a right to do instead of Accepting absolutely and fully that of either side, it was justified in finding that the understanding on both sides was that there was an acreage of 250 acres with the possibility of a larger amount. This finding is in conformity with and is supported by the written contract which the parties made and which after giving the boundaries described the tract as £C containing about 250 acres of land, be the same more or less; and containing within said bounds 264 65-100 acres according to a survey made by Jarvis,” etc.

The remaining question is whether the findings, and especially the crucial ones which have been quoted from, entitled plaintiff to judgment. I think they did within the authority of Paine v. Upton (87 N. Y. 327), which case counsel for appellant with attractive frankness freely admits he has used as his model and guide in this litigation.

That case came to this court on findings alone on an appeal from an order and judgment of the General Term reversing a judgment of the trial court dismissing the complaint. The important ones of these findings were to the effect that the parties negotiated for the purchase of a farm; that at the outset of the negotiations inquiry was made concerning the price per acre, but finally a written *50 contract was made for the sale at a gross sum of a farm “ containing about two hundred and twenty acres of land be the same more or less; ” that subsequently it was found to contain only 208 and a fraction acres; that “all the parties believed, during the negotiation for the sale of the farm, and at the time of executing the contract and deed, and until about nine months after the making of the deed, that the farm did in fact contain two hundred and twenty acres of land, and upward, and that such negotiation and agreement were had and executed on both sides, upon the basis of such common belief and understanding;” that “all the parties were mutually mistaken in the belief that it (the farm) contained at least two hundred and twenty acres or upwards, and said agreement and deed were founded upon such mutual mistake.”

Under these circumstances it was held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover for the deficiency in quantity at the average price paid per acre on the basis of the quantity supposed to have been purchased. Chief Judge Andrews, writing for the court, said: “It is to be observed, that the facts affirmatively show a mutual mistake of the parties, in respect to the quantity of land, which commenced with the commencement of the negotiation for the sale of the farm, and pervaded the whole dealing from that time, until the transaction was consummated. * * * This mistake, moreover, was as to an essential and material element of the contract. In the absence of any finding of special facts and circumstances, the natural presumption is, that in a sale of agricultural land, the element of quantity enters into the transaction, and affects the consideration agreed to be paid. But in this case it is plain, that the representation of quantity, was deemed material by the parties. The sale was perhaps not technically, a sale by the acre. But the starting point of the negotiation was an inquiry by the purchaser, as to the quantity of land in the farm, and the gross sum *51 originally asked was fixed by the sellers, by reckoning the land at §150 an acre. * * * The price finally agreed upon was also fixed upon the supposition that the farm contained at least two hundred and twenty acres. This is a necessary inference from the finding, that the parties acted upon the assumption that the farm contained that number of acres, and that the contract was made and executed upon this basis.” (p. 331.)

The learned judge cited with approval from Hill v. Buckley (17 Ves. 394), where it is said: “Where a misrepresentation is made as to the quantity, though innocently, I apprehend the right of the purchaser to be, to have what the vendor can give; with an abatement out of the purchase money for so much as the quantity falls short of the representation. That is the rule generally; as, though the land is neither bought nor sold professedly by the acre, the presumption is, that in fixing the price, regard was had on both sides, to the quantity which both suppose the estate to consist of.”

The only difference between the features of the Paine

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.E. 1072, 202 N.Y. 46, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-kampfe-ny-1911.