Neal v. Allison
This text of 1 Thompson 210 (Neal v. Allison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court:
This is a bill for tbe abatement of tbe price given for a tract of land, sold at public auction, on account of a deficiency in quantity.
Tbe defendant, James P. Allison as executor of bis father, proceeded to sell bis lands in Bedford county, under tbe directions of the will. After due notice by public advertisement the land was sold, November 25th, 1852, and tbe complainant became tbe purchaser, executed bis two notes at three and four years, and received a deed. It is very clearly proved that tbe sale was by tbe acre, and it was struck off to complainant as tbe highest and best bidder, at $18.80 per acre. A plat made upon a recent survey of tbe land was exhibited to the crowd and submitted to tbe inspection of the bidders, and all parties believed tbe estimated quantity to be correct.
Tbe defendants insist that tbe purchaser was to take tbe [211]*211land .at tbe quantity represented in tbe plat, and sucb is tbe proof of one witness — perhaps tbe auctioneer.
But tbe proof preponderates against that condition, any further than it might be implied from tbe exhibition of tbe plat, and tbe sale of tbe whole to tbe same purchaser.
Our conclusion as to tbe fact is, that tbe sale was not of tbe whole, but by tbe acre. Tbe amount for tbe consideration for which tbe notes were given was ascertained by calculating tbe number of acres represented by tbe plat, 1035, at $13.80 per acre, making $14,285. Tbe deed executed described tbe whole tract sold by metes-and bounds, according, to tbe survey, and it is distinctly proved, that there is a deficiency of sixty-eight acres, and some poles. Tbe Chancellor decreed an abatement of tbe consideration, which is not yet paid, of $1115.69, and tbe defendants appealed.
Is this decree sustained by tbe authorities ? In our latest case, Miller vs. Bently, 5 Sneed, 671, we held that where a sales of land is in gross, and not by tbe acre, and tbe boun daries are correctly given, without some stipulation as to quantity,or tbe existence of fraud, there can be no relief for a deficiency, unless it is so great as to create a presumption of fraud. This was in conformity .to tbe cases of Allison vs. Allison, 1 Yerg. 16, and Meek vs. Bearden, 5 Yerg. 566. But in that case we allowed an abatement because tbe sale was by the acre, although the deed afterwards made was in the form of a sale and conveyance in gross. Tbe case of Horn vs. Deaton, 2 Sneed 132, recognizes tbe same doctrine, although tbe case turned upon a different ground, and tbe question was upon-an excess, for which an additional compensation was demanded and allowed.
That was a partition among heirs, some of them being under disability.
[212]*212There was a distinction made in the books as to the right to an abatement for a deficiency, where the words “ more or less,” or “ by estimation” are used between actual conveyances, and agreement to convey. It is allowed in the latter case where it would not be in the former. Sugden on Vendors, 295.
But that is not the case in judgment now. — This is a case of sale by the acre. The deed is not in the record and we cannot tell what are its terms, nor is it material, as according to the case of Miller vs. Bently, before cited, this question must be determined by the by the contract of sale, and not the form of the deed.
In addition to our own cases already referred to, it is laid down by Sugden 294, sustained by a case in 2 Eq. Ca. Abr. 688, that “if an estate be sold at so much per acre, and there is a deficiency in the number conveyed, the purchaser will be entitled to a compensation, although the estate was estimated at that number by an old survey.
In this case the tract was estimated by an inaccurate recent survey, to contain 1035 acres, but it turns out that there is a deficiency of sixty-eight acres.
We think there can be no doubt that; the complainant is entitled to an abatement of the price to the extent of the value of this deficiency. There is no fraud, but mutual mistake, and the sale was by the acre, and not by the tract. The complainants notes were taken for more acres than he gets, and in equity and conscience he is entitled to relief.
The decree will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
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1 Thompson 210, 1 Shan. Cas. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neal-v-allison-tenn-1859.