Moore v. Jeffords Et Ux.

12 S.E.2d 737, 195 S.C. 512, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 8, 1941
Docket15197
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 S.E.2d 737 (Moore v. Jeffords Et Ux.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Jeffords Et Ux., 12 S.E.2d 737, 195 S.C. 512, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 103 (S.C. 1941).

Opinion

Per curiam.

This is an action brought by the purchasers of certain tracts of timber for the purpose of obtaining a reformation of the timber deed so as to extend the time for cutting from the date specified in the deed, to wit, March 30, 1939, to November 21, 1939, and for incidental relief. The deed is dated November 22, 1937. The complaint alleges that the negotiations between the plaintiffs (respondents) and E. Ingram Jeffords, one of the defendants (appellants), the owner of the timber, were conducted through one, B. B. Sanders, who is described in the complaint as the agent of Jeffords. It is alleged that the proposition of the respondents, as conveyed by Sanders to Jeffords, was not acceptable. The price offered was rejected by Jeffords as too low, and the period of three years which the purchasers (respondents) desired to cut and remove the timber was longer than the owner was willing to allow. But it is alleged that as a result of considerable negotiations conducted through Sanders as agent, a price of $950.00 was verbally agreed upon, and that the period to be allowed for the cutting and removal of the timber was verbally fixed at two years.

It is then alleged that Sanders employed J. W. Mclnnis, Esq., an attorney of the Darlington bar, to prepare the deed, but that “when instructing the attorney as to the terms of the said timber deed (Sanders) erroneously calculated the time above mentioned, and instructed the attorney to designate March 30, 1939, as the expiration date, whereas the two-year period” would have expired November 21, 1939.

The timber deed was accordingly prepared to show the expiration of the date for cutting as March 30, 1939, and was duly executed. But, the complaint then alleges, “when the deed was presented to the plaintiffs (respondents), plain *514 tiffs were assured by the agent of the defendant, E. Ingram Jeffords, that the same was prepared in accordance with and in conformity to the oral agreement * * *.”

The complaint further set forth that Sanders held a mortgage upon the tracts of timber in question, and agreed to release the timber upon the payment to him, for credit on the mortgage debt, of the proceeds of sale of the timber.

The respondents cut some of the timber prior to March 30, 1939, and then discontinued the cutting thereof. On or about the last-mentioned date respondents again entered upon the premises to resume their cutting operations, and the appellant E. Ingram Jeffords thereupon notified them that the time for cutting had expired. It is alleged that such action on the part of Mr. Jeffords caused the respondents to discover for the first time the “error” existing in the timber deed under discussion.

The prayer of the complaint is, as far as material here:

“1. That the oral agreement of sale be established as alleged and it be established that the said agreement has in part been performed;
“2. That the written timber deed be reformed so as to conform with the terms of the oral terms of sale;
“3. That the defendants E. Ingram Jeffords and Elizabeth Sellers Jeffords be required to specifically perform their contract of sale as established and that the said defendants be restrained from molesting the plaintiffs, their agents, servants and employees in the cutting and removing of the said timber.”

Elizabeth Sellers Jeffords is the wife of her co-appellant, E. Ingram Jeffords, and was joined as a party to the cause because of her dower interest in the property.

The answers of the defendants (appellants) deny the alleged agency of Sanders, and the making of an oral agreement to allow two years within which to cut and remove the timber. They rely upon the timber deed as expressing the real and only agreement of the parties.

*515 The other allegations of the pleadings are not material in the view we take of the case.

The cause was heard before the Judge of Probate for Darlington County, acting as Master. He concluded “that there was a mutual mistake as to a material element of the contract, and that the written instrument does not conform in that particular to the agreement”. He held that the contract should be reformed. The Master’s report was approved by the Circuit Judge, who likewise held “that by mutual mistake of the parties the time in which the purchasers were to have to cut the timber was incorrectly stated in the written agreement” and that this mutuality of mistake warranted a decree to reform the deed, and to certain additional relief resulting from the lapse of time beyond November 21, 1939, occasioned by the litigation.

The Circuit Judge was undoubtedly correct in treating the complaint as one for the reformation of a deed on the ground of mutual mistake. No other ground for relief is attempted to be stated in the complaint. And we need deal only with such of the exceptions of the appellants as raise the question whether the evidence discloses grounds for relief in this sphere of equity jurisdiction.

There are no material conflicts in the testimony.

B. B. Sanders, described in the complaint as the agent of the appellant Jeffords, owner of the property, held a mortgage upon it. The mortgage was long past due, and the property had been turned over to Sanders for rental under an arrangement whereby he was crediting the proceeds of the rent of the property on the mortgage debt. He was pressing the mortgagor for payment, and undertook to find a purchaser for the timber for the purpose of enabling the mortgagor to satisfy the mortgage debt to that extent. In this respect he was performing the dual service of assisting the mortgagor in avoiding the consequences of foreclosure and providing a means of obtaining a substantial payment on his mortgage claim. Any agency status that he might have held arose out of these circumstances alone.

*516 Jeffords specifically denies that he ever appointed Sanders as his agent. He was under the impression that because of the default in the mortgage and the delivery of the possession of the property to Sanders, Sanders had a right to sell the timber, but he asserted the right to fix the price at which the timbed could be sold, and the period that was to be allowed to the purchasers within which to cut and remove the timber. Sanders recognized this right on the part of Jeffords.

The one of the respondents who handled the negotiations for the purchase testified that he had proposed to Sanders a period of three years within which to cut the timber. Sanders reported that Jeffords was willing to allow only one year, but that he compromised with Jeffords on a proposal that two years be allowed. The timber could have been cut in two or three months, and some of the timber was in fact cut within the contract period, but the cutting operations were suspended with the intention of resuming and completing them at a later date before November 21, 1939.

As the result of the negotiations between the parties conducted through Sanders, Mr. Mclnnis was employed to prepare the timber deed for both the purchasers and seller, and his compensation was paid partly by each. The instructions to Mr. Mclnnis as to the terms to be incorporated in the timber deed were given by Sanders.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 S.E.2d 737, 195 S.C. 512, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-jeffords-et-ux-sc-1941.