M'Mahon v. Spangler

4 Rand. 51
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1826
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Rand. 51 (M'Mahon v. Spangler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M'Mahon v. Spangler, 4 Rand. 51 (Va. 1826).

Opinion

January 31.

JUDGE CARR.

The defendant Spangler and his sister, the wife of Key, were each entitled to an undivided moiety of a tract of land descended to them from their father. Spangler was desirous to sell his share, and offered it to different persons. At length he made a contract with the plaintiff M’Mahon, which is in writing, signed and sealed by the parties, and dated the 15th of July, 1819. This contract expresses that Spangler had sold to M’Mahon, “all his right, title, interest and claim, in and to a certain tract or parcel of land, in the county of Rocking-ham, on the North river, adjoining Major Robert Grattan, containing by estimation 300 acres, and which formerly belonged to Frederick Spangler, deceased, (a division of which, is hereafter to be made, and it is understood, that when the division is made, [34]*34the improvements are to be on that part of the land hereby intended to be secured to the said M’Mahon,) together with all *the appurtenances, &c. for and in consideration of the sum of $2600, to be paid, $700 in hand, $100 by the 19th instant, $400 on the 1st of May, 1820, $300 in a gig and harness worth that amount, by the 1st of October, 1820, $550 by the 1st of October, 1822, and $550 by the 1st of October, 1824;” Spangler to make a deed, after the division should be confirmed by 'the Court of Chancery. In execution of this contract, the plaintiff gave his bon3s, and has paid the $700, (which was a payment in hand,) the $100 and the $300. A division was made by the commissioners, and Spangler having gotten the part which had the improvements, delivered it over to the plaintiff who still holds possession of it. Upon the division, the commissioners found that the whole tract contained only 269 acres; and of this, they considered 119 acres, with the improvements, an equal share. Spangler removed to the State of Ohio, without executing a deed to M’Mahon for the land. He assigned the $400 bond to the defendant Clayton, who sued on it, and recovered judgment. It is to injoin this judgment that the bill is filed.

The grounds of injunction are two: 1st. That there was a mistake made by the scrivener in drawing the agreement, the real contract being, that Spangler sold to M’Mahon, not his interest in the land for $2600, but that he sold him 150 acres of land, with the improvements, at $17% per acre, making the sum of $2600. 2d. That even if the contract be rightly expressed, the whole tract was estimated by both parties at 300 acres, and being found 31 acres deficient, the plaintiff is entitled to a deduction for the deficiency, which ought to come out of the bond first due after the discovery: Spangler answered, denying directly and positively, that there was the slightest error in the written contract; or that he sold by the acre; but that he sold his moiety, whatever it might be, for the gross sum of $2600: that he had given Key a full power to make a deed, and supposed it had been done: that he would make one with all convenient speed.

*On a motion to dissolve, the chancellor considered that the written contract must stand, there being no sufficient evidence of mistake; and ordered, that on Spangler’s executing and tendering to the plaintiff, or filing among the papers in the cause, a deed with a general warranty for the 119 acres of land, the injunction be dissolved. The appeal is from this order.

The first objection taken to the order was, that however the case might be upon the merits, the chancellor ought not to have dissolved the injunction, upon the tendering a deed to the plaintiff, or filing it with the papers, because this did not give he plaintiff that security and safety on the subject of title, which he was entitled to; that 'neither the parties, nor the clerk, were judges of the sufficiency of the deed; and that the Chancellor should have refused the motion to dissolve, with lease to renew, when a deed should be filed, and submitted to him for inspection.

I think this objection rather specious than solid. It will be remarked, that there was never any difficulty between the parties, on the subject of title. Though the injunction was'dissolved, yet the cause remained in Court. When the deed should be executed, if the defendant tendered it to the plaintiff, he would of course consult his counsel, and unless he thought it a sufficient deed, would reject it. If he did, the defendant would ei-her make another, according to the requisition of counsel, or he would file the deed he had made, with the clerk, and demand the order of dissolution from him. Suppose the clerk to grant it, and the execution to issue, M’Mahon might instantly apply to the Chancellor by petition, submitting to him the deed, and making his objections; and whether it should be in or out of Term, the Chancellor would examine the deed, and stop the execution at once, if he found it insufficient. Thus, no mischief could result to the plaintiff, and I do not think this objection can be sustained.

We come now to the merits, and first, as to the alleged mistake in the agreement. For the authorities on the ^subject generally, of admitting parol evidence in a case of this kind, I refer to Ratcliffe v. Allison, 3 Rand. 537, not long since decided. The general rule is, that parol evidence cannot be admitted to contradict, explain, or alter, a written agreement; but, may be received to prove fraud, surprise or mistake in the execution of it. But the books all tell us, that in this latter case, the evidence must be strong and clear. The solemn acts of the parties, under their hands and seals, are not to be blown away by loose and. vague conversations. In the case before us, the bill asserts that the scrivener, having first written the heads of the agreement correctly, made the mistake complained of, in the copy; and that this was not perceived, until after the contract was executed. The answer is positive and direct,'in contradicting this. The plaintiff, then, must make it out by satisfactory evidence. out-weighing the answer. To increase the difficulty of the plaintiff’s task, there are some circumstances strongly corroborating the answer. The first of this is, that the bill itself shows, that there was never any claim made by Spangler, to more than an undivided moiety of a tract supposed to contain 300 acres; and that he wished to sell only his part, never expressing any intention of selling any part of the portion which would fall to Key. Another, and a very important circumstance, as it seems to me, is, that the contract as stated by the bill, is so widely different from that expressed in the agreement executed, that it is difficult to conceive how the one could be mistaken for the other. Observe; the bill states, that Spangler sold the plaintiff 150 acres of land, with the improvements, at $17 1-3 per acre; the contract says, that he sold him his right, title, interest and claim, in and to the land, for $2600: The one a sale by the acre of a specified number of acres; .the other, a sale in gross of his interest. M’Mahon does not say, that he did not read over the contract, that he was intoxicated, or in any other way deprived of [35]*35the use of his reason, for the time. And can we easily imagine, how a man who had made an important “contract for 150 acres of land, at so much the acre, and had caused this contract to be reduced to writing, should read it over, or have it read to him, and not discover that it was set down as a purchase in gross of an indefinite quantity of land?

Ivet us see now what is the evidence to convict the scrivener of mistake.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Rand. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mmahon-v-spangler-va-1826.