Ohlander v. Dexter

97 Ala. 476
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 97 Ala. 476 (Ohlander v. Dexter) 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
Ohlander v. Dexter, 97 Ala. 476 (Ala. 1892).

Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

— -A certain voluntary association of individuals, desiring to purchase a house and lot of land situated on the north-west corner of Dexter Avenue and Bainbridge Street in the city of Montgomery, entered into negotiation with Ohlander to procure from him a relinquishment of a five year lease of the premises- held by him, and which stood in the way of getting present possession under a deed of conveyance from the owner of the fee.

The negotiation with Ohlander resulted in the execution of the following written instruments introduced in evidence as exhibits “A” and “B.”

Exhibit “A.”

Montgomery, Ala., August 27th, 1887.

I have received from Mr. A. Ohlander a relinquishment to his lease with L. Lawall for consideration of One Hundred and Fifty Dollars to be paid him in ten days, and use of the premises until Nov. 1, 1887, free of rent.

(Signed) B. P. Dexter.

Exhibit “B.”

In consideration of One Hundred and Fifty Dollars to be paid to me within the next ten days and to allow me to con[478]*478tinue tlie use of the store-house north-west corner Dexter Avenue ancl Bainbridge Street for use of storing furniture until Nov. 1st next free of rent, I agree to relinquish and give up all my right and claim to above mentioned storehouse that I have by virtue of a five years lease from Mr. Lawall.

Montgy, Ala., Aug. 27th, 1887.

(Signed) Aug. Ohlander.

On the 31st day of October,. 1887, Ohlander moved out and surrendered the possession of the storehouse, and shortly afterwards sued Dexter in a court of law for the one hundred and fifty dollars. This suit resulted in a judgment for Ohlander, and on appeal to the Supreme Court the judgment was affirmed. Dexter then filed the present bill in the Chancery Court asking to be relieved from the judgment of the law court.

The averments of the bill, substantially are, that “orator in writing, (exhibit A,) by inadvertence and mistake employed language, the legal effect and operation of which is materially and essentially different from what was intended both by orator and the said Ohlander, the said Ohlander and orator being unlearned in the law, and neither of then knowing that the language used in said receipt was susceptible of the interpretation placed upon it by the courts, and in giving said receipt, orator intended simply to give the said Ohlander a paper writing showing that orator had received from him the said paper writing signed by the said Ohlander and the words “for consideration of one hundred and fifty dollars to be paid by him in ten days and use of the premises until November 1st, 1887, free of rent,” used in said receipt was intended by orator as referring to and descriptive of the paper writing signed by the said Ohlander, and the said Ohlander accepted said receipt with the same intention and understanding as that which influenced orator in making and delivering the same,” &c. The prayer of the bill is that the “writing or receipt hereinabove described may be reformed under the direction and decree of the court; or if mistaken in this relief, that it be delivered up and can-celled by the court, and for a perpetual injunction,” See. The answer of the defendant denies all the material averments of the bill and “avers positively that he intended to receive from complainant his written obligation to pay defendant one hundred and fifty dollars for the transfer and relinquishment of his lease contract and without which he . would not have signed and placed in the hands of the com[479]*479plainant his relinquishment of his whole interest in said lease contract, that defendant believed at the time that such was the construction placed by complainant upon the character and purpose of said writings contemporaneously executed by and between complainant,” &c.

Upon proof at the final hearing the Chancery Court held that plaintiff was entitled to relief, that it was tinnecessary to reform the writings as the same purpose could be effected by- an injunction, and decreed a perpetual injunction against the enforcement of the judgment.

Equity will not interfere to grant relief, when the agreement made is tliat intended tobe made, but the parties were mistaken as to its legal effect, but if the parties undertake to draw up a particular agreement and by the use of inapt words, another and different agreement is executed ujdou clear and satisfactory proof of the terms of the agreement intended to be made, and of the mistake, equity will reform the instrument so as to make it conform to the intended agreement. — Larkins v. Bidell, 21 Ala. 253. Conceding for the present that the averments of the bill, bring complainant’s case within the rule which entitles him to relief upon proper proof, we will examine the evidence under the rules of law applicable, when parties seek to reform a written instrument.

It is not pretended there was any fraud or undue influence practiced by Ohlander. The complainant himself draughted the instrument in his own language, and without suggestion as to the terms to be employed in executing the instrument.

The courts are unanimous in holding that to entitle the plaintiff to relief in such cases the proof must be clear, exact and satisfactory.— Guilmartin v. Urquhart, 82 Ala. 570, or as expressed in Trapp & Hill v. Moore, 21 Ala. 697, “if through mistake, a written agreement contains substantially more or less than the parties to it intended, or, from ignorance or want of skill in the draftsman, the object and intention of the parties as contemplated by the agreement is not expressed in the written instrument by reason of the use of inapt expressions upon clear and satisfactory proof of such mistake, equity will interfere and reform the agreement, so as to make it conformable to the true intent of the con-' tracting parties.” The effect of the averment of the bill is that it was not the intention to create an obligation to pay money but merely to give a receipt, acknowledging that the maker had received from Ohlander a writing in which Ohlander obligated himself to transfer his interest in the projoerty held by him by virtue of his five years lease from , L.' Lawall. The two instruments, exhibits A and B, 'wefe [480]*480executed contemporaneous!}1', and should be considered together in weighing the evidence. Independent of parol proof the obligation imports an absolute promise by complainant to pay a certain sum within a given time, and the consideration for which was the relinquishment by Ohlander to Dexter of his leasehold interest in thp property. The subject of contract, being the sale and purchase of an interest in lands of a term exceeding one year the statute of frauds necessitated that there be a note or memorandum in writing, subscribed by the party to be charged. Exhibit B, subscribed by Ohlander was an absolute agreement to relinquish his leasehold interest for an expressed consideration, without condition; and fully complied with the statute of frauds. The obligation was certainly binding on him, and in the absence of fraud, mistake or undue influence parol proof would not be admissible to add to or vary the legal effect of his obligation. Unless Dexter by the instrument signed by him, became legally bound to pay the consideration agreed upon, the writings would present a strictly unilateral contract, binding upon Ohlander alone, and without any consideration to support it.

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Bluebook (online)
97 Ala. 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohlander-v-dexter-ala-1892.