Ross v. Armstrong

25 Tex. 354
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1860
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Tex. 354 (Ross v. Armstrong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Armstrong, 25 Tex. 354 (Tex. 1860).

Opinion

Wheeler, G. J. —

The contract of the 6th of April,

1838, was not a contract for the sale of land. It contemplated the future acquisition of land, in which, when acquired, the parties should have .an equal joint interest. That interest would be more or less valuable, according to the quality and locality of the land which should be selected. The purchaser was intrusted with making the selection, and the parties were to participate equally in the benefits to be derived from it when made. If it proved injudicious, and loss were sustained, it would certainly be a very hard case that the entire loss should fall on the other partner, and the locator should take the whole that remained. ' That certainly was not what the parties intended.

The money consideration paid did not convert the contract into a sale of land, for no land had been secured. If it had been a contract for the sale of a half league of land [367]*367already located, it would have been a different case. The parties would have known about what they were contracting, and the purchaser would have acquired a right to a thing certain, which he would have been entitled to have conveyed to him for the price stipulated, however disadvantageous the contract might prove to the other party. But such is not the case. The purchaser contracted for one-half of what he might secure by means of the certificate, be that more or less. That was the intention of the contract. It would certainly be extremely inequitable to allow him, through a mistake of his own, though without fault on his part, to possess himself of the whole. Against the consequences of such a mistake, it would seem that equity ought to relieve. It was an adventure, in which the parties contributed, as they deemed, equally of their means, and were to share equally the profits. It is analogous to the case of a joint purchase, made by two persons, who advance and pay the purchase money in equal proportions, which, according to the common law, would create a joint tenantcy, but by our law, as the right of survivor-ship is abolished, would be deemed to create a trust, and if the purchase be made, and the title taken in the name of one of them, he becomes a trustee, and the other will be entitled to his share as a resulting trust. (2 Story’s Eq., § 1206.)

If the parties had contributed equal sums, to be invested in the purchase of land, and one of them, being intrusted with malting the purchase, had taken the title in his own name, or in their joint names, and a loss were sustained by the failure of the title to a part, it cannot be doubted that, on principles of equity, each must bear his proportion of the loss. In such a case, they might have their recourse against their vendor upon the covenants in the deed. But in the present there is no recourse against the government on account of the failure of title, and the purchaser had but an equitable title. It, therefore, differs from the ordinary [368]*368case of a partition of land between tenants in common. The division of the land, after it was acquired, by which the locator obtained the whole that was secured by the certificate, was made under an obvious mistake of fact; the consequence of which is, that the grantee of the certificate has lost all the benefit of it, and is remediless, unless the division be set aside, or the defendant be required- to yiake contribution. From the consequences of such, a mistake, equity, it would seéin, ought to relieve. It is a general rule in equity, that an act done, or contract made, under a mistake or ignorance of a material fact, is voidable, and relievable against in equity. Thus, if A buy an estate of B, to which the latter is supposed to have an unquestionable title, and it turn out upon due investigation of the facts, unknown at the time to both parties, that B has no title: as if there be a nearer heir than B, who was supposed to be dead, but is in fact" living: in such a case equity will relieve the purchaser and rescind the contract. (1 Story’s Eq., § 141.) So, if one person should sell a messuage to another, which was at the time swept away by a fiood, or destroyed by an earthquake, without any knowledge of the fact by either party, equity would relieve the purchaser. So, if a person should execute a release to another party, upon the supposition, founded in a mistake, that a certain debt or annuity had been discharged, although both parties were innocent, the release would be set aside on the ground of mistake.. (Id., § 142.) In such case the act or contract is void, as founded upon a mutual mistake of matter constituting its basis. The mistake or ignorance of fact is the subject of relief, when it constitutes a material ingredient in the contract or the motive, of the act done by the parties, and disappoints their intention by a mutual-error. (Id., et seq.) Such was the case in the making of the-division of the land in question. The plain-' tiff, by her deed, released to the defendant the title to half the league, under the mistaken belief that she had an inde[369]*369feasible title to the residue. The parties were alike ignorant of the existence of the superior title in a third party; the mistake was mutual, and did not arise from any want of care and diligence in the party who seeks to be relieved, and to have the act done in consequence of the ignorance and mistake set aside. But for the mistake, it is clear the deed would not have been executed. It has disappointed the intention of the parties by a mutual error, and has resulted in giving one of them an uneonscientious advantage, against which the other had not any means of providing; and it would seem that she is entitled to have the act done by her set aside, on the clear ground of mistake.

In the view we have taken, we have not considered the case strictly as that of a partition between tenants in common; but, viewing it in that light, what are the rights ot the plaintiff?

In Bustard’s case,' (4 Coke, 121,) it was adjudged, that in every exchange of lands there is implied both a condition of re-entry and a warranty; and, if one party is evicted from the land conveyed to him, he may either re-enter upon his own land or recover upon the warranty; but, in the latter case, the recompense should be confined to the land given in exchange; and that the same condition and warranty were implied in the case of a partition. In both of these species of assurance there was not only an implied warranty, but a condition, which, in case of eviction of either party, gave a right of re-entry upon the other portion. There was, however, this difference between the warranty and the condition. Where a coparcener took advantage of the condition, she defeated the partition as to the whole; but when she vouched by force of the warranty, the partition was not defeated in the whole, but she recovered recompense for the part that was lost. But this implied warranty and condition were, by the common law, confined to a partition made between coparceners, and for the reason, it is supposed, that the right of compulsory par[370]*370tition was given by the common law only to coparceners, and not to joint tenants, or tenants in common, to whom the right was first given by statute.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Tex. 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-armstrong-tex-1860.