Percifield v. Rosa

220 P.2d 546, 122 Colo. 167, 1950 Colo. LEXIS 234
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 1, 1950
Docket16448
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 220 P.2d 546 (Percifield v. Rosa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Percifield v. Rosa, 220 P.2d 546, 122 Colo. 167, 1950 Colo. LEXIS 234 (Colo. 1950).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Alter

delivered the opinion of the court.

Raymond Percifield brought an action against Joe Rosa and Eva Rosa, and C. L. Taggert, public trustee of Rio Blanco county, for the purpose of obtaining a judicial construction of a certain deed and determining the amount of set-off allegedly due him by reason of a failure of consideration and for an injunction to prevent foreclosure. Trial was had to the court, and at its conclusion, judgment was entered in favor of defendants, to review which plaintiff has sued out a writ of error. The parties will be herein designated as plaintiff and defendants as they appeared in the trial court, or by name.

It is alleged in the complaint that on September 29, 1947, plaintiff and defendant Joe Rosa entered into a contract for the sale and purchase of certain described lands in Rangely, Rio Blanco county, Colorado. Thereafter and on October 1, 1947, Joe Rosa made, executed and delivered to plaintiff a warranty deed “covering the same lands.” It is further alleged that plaintiff made, executed and delivered a deed of trust to the public trustee of Rio Blanco county for the purpose of securing the unpaid balance of the purchase price and that defendant Joe Rosa is seeking a foreclosure of said deed of trust through the public trustee. It is further alleged that under said deed Joe Rosa conveyed the property in fee simple, but that it now develops that he was not the owner of the oil and gas rights “in, on, to or under said real estate” which oil and gas rights are of the reasonable value of $40,000, and that the consideration for the conveyance of said property failed to the extent of said sum. Further it is alleged that Eva Rosa claimed *169 some right in and to the premises described in said deed and that she should be made a party defendant.

Attached to the complaint is Exhibit A, entitled “Earnest Money Contract,” in which certain property is described, and in which provision is made for the payment of the purchase price by cash and note secured by deed of trust; also provision for possession, and a further provision that if plaintiff is not able to secure a license from the town of Rangely for the sale of liquor by the drink on or before September 30, 1947, the earnest money in the sum of $5,000 is to be returned, and the “Earnest Money Contract” is' to become null and void. There also is a provision in the contract with reference to a lis pendens of record against the property, and the title is to be transferred subject to said' lis pendens.

Attached to the complaint is a statutory form of a warranty deed marked Exhibit B, which reads:

“Know All Men by These Presents, that Joe Rosa of the County of Rio Blanco, and State of Colorado, for the consideration of TEN (and other good and valuable consideration) Dollars, in hand paid, hereby sell and convey to Raymond Percifield of the County of Rio Blanco, and State of Colorado, the following real property, situate in the County of Rio Blanco and State of Colorado, to-wit: Lots numbered 8 and 9 and the easterly 2 feet of Lot numbered 10, Block 3, Coltharp’s Sub-divided Lots in Rangely, Rio Blanco County, Colorado, a plat of which has been heretofore filed in the office of the County Clerk and Recorder of Rio Blanco on October 22, 1945, which said plat covers a portion of the N % SE % of Section 2, Township 1 North, Range 102 West, of the 6th P. M. (I.R.S. in sum of $44.00 affixed to original Warranty Deed) with all its appurtenances, and warrant the title to the same, subject to one-third of the general and special taxes of the year 1947, payable in 1948 and oil and gas reservations and leases of record.
*170 “Signed and delivered this 1st day of October, A.D. 1947.
In the presence of........................ Joe Rosa (Seal)”
(Duly acknowledged)

The complaint was filed July 25, 1949, and on the following day the court entered an order granting a temporary injunction in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, restraining defendant and said public trustee from proceeding with the foreclosure proceedings, provided the plaintiff should give an injunction bond in the sum of $5,000 with sufficient sureties, to be approved by the clerk of the court within two weeks from the date thereof. The writ of injunction was issued August 8, 1949.

Joe Rosa filed an answer and counterclaim. For a first defense he alleged, “That the complaint fails to state a claim against the defendants or any of them upon which relief can be granted.”; for a second defense it is alleged that the description of the property in the “Earnest Money Contract” is “erroneous,” and this because the scrivener failed to reserve and except therefrom the oil and gas rights; admits the execution of the deed as alleged by plaintiff; admits the execution of the promissory note secured by a deed of trust; admits that defendant Joe Rosa did not own the oil and gas rights in, on, to or under the real estate described in the “Earnest Money Contract” or deed; generally denies all other allegations of the complaint. The answer also contains a third and fourth defense which are unimportant in our consideration of the case and are, therefore, not summarized.

Defendant Joe Rosa, for a counterclaim, alleged that in the preparation of the “Earnest Money Contract” a mistake was made by the scrivener in that he omitted to except from the real estate therein described the rights to gas and oil lying in and under the same; that this occurred by reason of mutual mistake and did not *171 express the intention of the parties thereto; further that in the deed executed and delivered pursuant to the “Earnest Money Contract” and if the oil and gas rights are not excepted from the conveyance, he asks that the deed be reformed so as to accurately express the intention of the parties at the time the same was made, executed and delivered. Plaintiff filed an answer to the counterclaim alleging insufficiency of the facts and denies that the oil and gas rights were not included in said “Earnest Money Contract” as well as the said deed.

Briefly summarizing the evidence of plaintiff, we find that the property described in the deed is generally known as the Ace High Club, at which plaintiff first met defendant Joe Rosa. He signed the “Earnest Money Contract,” the note and deed of trust, and received the deed conveying the property to him, agreeing to pay the sum of $70,000 therefor; that there is a balance of approximately $20,500 now due on the same. Plaintiff further testified that he had been a night club operator for approximately seven years, and at the time of the trial was the owner of one such club in Nevada. He also testified that he did not come to Rangely for the purpose of purchasing oil land, but that a night club was the only thing in which he was interested. Prior to discussing the purchase of the Ace High Club, he visited the premises before talking to Joe Rosa about its purchase, and made his own personal investigation, resulting in an offer of purchase, and at the time nothing was said about any oil rights.

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Bluebook (online)
220 P.2d 546, 122 Colo. 167, 1950 Colo. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/percifield-v-rosa-colo-1950.