Philpott v. Elliott

4 Md. Ch. 273
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 Md. Ch. 273 (Philpott v. Elliott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philpott v. Elliott, 4 Md. Ch. 273 (Md. Ct. App. 1851).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

Whatever doubts may have been entertained as to the state of the law prior to the case of Moale vs. Buchanan et al, 11 G. & J., 314, there certainly can be no doubt now that it is competent to a party in a court of equity to offer parol evidence of a mistake in an agreement in writing relating to lands, to have it rectified, and then specifically executed as rectified.

Cases establishing a contrary doctrine may readily be found, hut these were repudiated by Chancellor Kent, who permitted the parol proof to be offered establishing the mistake, reformed the agreement according to the proof and specificallly executed it as reformed, and the principle thus settled, was approved and affirmed by the Court of Appeals in the case referred to.

The hill in this case asks for the application of this principle. It alleges, that on the 19th of September, 1849, a lease was executed by the defendant to the plaintiff, of a lot of ground in the city of Baltimore, upon the terms therein mentioned, in [274]*274which an error very prejudicial to the interests of the complainant was committed, and the object of the bill is to have this error rectified, and a new lease executed conforming to the real intention of the parties.

The imputed error consists in the second line of the lot, as described in the lease, according to which it is made to run from the termination of the first line on Baltimore street, “northerly seventy-five feet, running at right angles with Baltimore street,” when, according to the statement of the bill and the pretension of the complainant it should have run “northerly in the direction of the most northerly angle of the entire of said lot, seventy-five feet.”

A glance at the plat among the proceedings, will show how very material this supposed mistake is, for if the line in the lease is the true one, and the parties are to hold according to that line as laid down, the complainant will not only lose a considerable portion of the area of the lot claimed by him, but he will also be deprived of a part of the ground upon which his house stands, and on the other hand, if the line insisted upon by the complainant is the true one, the defendant will lose a portion of his houses back and front.

The defendant, though he maintains in his answer, that the portion of the lot which he agreed to lease to the complainant is accurately and correctly described in the lease, does not contend for the location thereof as made by the surveyor, but insists upon a line which shall conform with the improvements made by the parties upon their respective lots, and which is indicated by a fence as located upon the plat, and contends that such is the true and legal location of the lease according to the adjudged cases.

As there is no absolute necessity for it, I do not propose to decide this question, which belongs more properly to a court of law, and could only be authoritatively decided there in an action of trespass or ejectment. I deem it sufficient here to say, that a reasonable doubt may be entertained in regard to the true construction of the lease, and that it is not certainly so free from ambiguity as to render the interposition of this court [275]*275wholly unnecessary in the form in which its aid is invoked, and that if a proper ground is laid, it is its duty to interfere to prevent future litigation.

But, though this court has unquestionably the power to grant the relief prayed by the bill, provided a clear case of mistake is made out, it is indispensably necessary the alleged error be demonstrated in the clearest and most unequivocal manner, for if there be a reasonable doubt upon the subject, the court must withhold its aid.

The necessity of furnishing proofs to the entire satisfaction of the court before it will act in cases of this description, is shown by the case of Hall & Gill vs. Clagett, 2 Md. Ch. Decisions, 153, and the authorities there referred to. And it is not only necessary that strong evidence be produced that a mistake was committed, and that the agreement signed by the parties, does not conform to their intentions, but the stipulation proposed to be introduced, or the correction proposed to be made must be established by equally conclusive proof. Before the agreement will be reformed, and executed as reformed, the court must be perfectly satisfied what the real intention of the parties was, or otherwise it will not interfere.

Upon looking at the plat, in this case, there is great difficulty in believing that the defendant, with a full knowledge of the consequences to himself, could have agreed to the lino claimed by the bill, and there is evidence that he, upon some occasions, protested in the strongest terms against that line. There is, however, evidence the other way, and in my opinion, as between the lines described in the lease and the line claimed by the claimant as the true litfe, the preponderance of the proof is in favor of the latter, as there cannot be the slightest doubt of the perfect and entire respectability and credibility of the witnesses who have testified upon the subject.

But still looking to the whole evidence, and seeing how seriously the rights of the defendant would be prejudiced by establishing that as the true line, I cannot bring myself to think, that the defendant, with a full understanding of its effect, gave his consent to it.

[276]*276Supposing, however, that the agreement, founded upon the extreme improbability of the thing, was less strong than it certainly is, there are reasons of great weight why the court should not rectify the contract as claimed in' this respect, and decree its specifie execution as corrected. The evidence shows, that the defendant is a carpenter, and that he has erected a house on the lot claimed by him, and that he has also built a house on the complainant’s lot, and further, that the complainant was frequently at the house when it was in a course of construction, that he knew the dividing line between his lot and that of the defendant was run so as to conform to the improvements on both lots, and that he expressed no dissatisfaction. And it is admitted in the record, the complainant has been in possession of his house since September, 1849, and is still in possession.

And the proof further shows, that the parties run a dividing line between them, and put up a fence upon that line, which fence is laid down upon the plats, and steers entirely clear of the improvements on both lots. That such a line was run and fence erected, there can be no doubt, and that the buildings and improvements of the parties have been in conformity with it. And it is apparent, that if the complainant is successful in his present application, to the full extent of his claim as asserted by the bill, he will not only get rid of this line, but will take from the defendant a part of the ground upon which his house stands, which he stood by and saw him erect, as some of the witnesses say, without objection or complaint. This circumstance, as it seems to me, is fatal to the prayer of this bill to the full extent to which it goes, it being established upon authority, that the specific execution of contracts in equity is not a matter of absolute right, but of sound discretion in the court, and that unless the court is satisfied that the appeal to it for this extraordinary assistance is fair, just and reasonable in every respect, it will abstain from interfering. This was the principle maintained by this court in the case of Waters vs. Howard, 1 Md. Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Md. Ch. 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philpott-v-elliott-mdch-1851.