Thompson v. E. I. Dupont Co.

111 N.W. 302, 100 Minn. 367
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 22, 1907
DocketNos. 14,908—(139)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 111 N.W. 302 (Thompson v. E. I. Dupont Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. E. I. Dupont Co., 111 N.W. 302, 100 Minn. 367 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

JAGGARX), J.

(after stating the facts as above).

The first question concerns the legal correctness of the conclusion of the trial court that, while there were no fiduciary relations between the parties and while they were dealing with each other at arm’s length, still the defendants had such knowledge of the misapprehension of the wife as to her rights when she made the deed as would make it inequitable for defendants to retain the title obtained through the deed. Through the same error, in which the husband participated he was placed at a great disadvantage in making any attempted redemption from the execution sale, and could not proceed in safety to take such step. The question, however, is, not whether it would have been inequitable in a colloquial sense for the defendants to have taken the deed without formally advising the wife in person of her misapprehension, but whether the case comes within any recognized doctrine of equitable jurisprudence, liberally construed.

I. The plaintiffs are not entitled to equitable relief because of a mutual mistake, or mistake by one party and fraud by the other. In this case there was not a semblance of mistake on part of the grantees, the defendants. On the contrary, it affirmatively appears that they knew of the condition of the title, and for that' reason insisted upon a quitclaim deed from the wife.

The question, then, is whether the record shows a fraud on the part of the purchaser or of his attorney. We think it does not. The trial court itself recognized that this was an ordinary transaction in which the parties dealt at arms’ length. All that the defendants knew was the state of the record title. The plaintiffs had exactly the same means of knowledge, and other knowledge of the history of the purchase of the land, and the wife knew that the quitclaim was insisted upon. It would be unprecedented and unreasonable to hold the attorney for a purchaser to the exercise of higher diligence and greater astuteness to protect the interest of the vendor than the vendor’s own counsel. [371]*371The record, however, shows that the vendor’s counsel not only acted uberrima fide, but with entirely adequate and proper regard for his client’s interests throughout the whole litigation. We do not regard it as essential whether the real estate agent was the representative of the wife or representative of the purchaser. The fact, however, that the attorney for the defendants told that agent of what he had learned as to the title removes any possible suggestion of sharp dealing or of any intent to overreach. The attorney for.the purchaser had done everything that the law or good practice or good morals required him to have done in the premises.

2. The basis of plaintiffs’ argument in this connection is that, inasmuch as the mistake which they assume to have existed was known to’the vendees, but was by them concealed or not corrected, they are not innocent purchasers for a valuable consideration without notice of prior existing equities in favor of the vendors. The equitable doctrine which they invoke is this: “Among successive interests wholly equitable, and between an earlier equity and a subsequent legal estate, even when purchased for a v.aluable consideration, the one who acquires the subsequent estate or interest with notice of the earlier equity in favor of another person will hold his acquisition subject, and subordinate to such outstanding interest or right.” 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur. § 730. Here, however, the vendors did not conceal their knowledge and were not bound to correct a misapprehension of the existence of which they did not actually know. No equity existed to which their legal rights were to be subordinated.

3. There is more doubt whether the vendors’ case does not come within the rule that, while an instrument may not be reformed, it may be rescinded or canceled for the mistake of one party only. Mortimer v. Shortall, 2 Drury & War. 372; Hearne v. Marine Ins. Co., 20 Wall. 488, 491, 22 L. Ed. 395; Dulany v. Rogers, 50 Md. 524. A historical statement of the rule is that of Lord Thurlow in Calverley v. Williams, 1 Ves. Jr., 211: “No doubt, if one party thought he had purchased bona fide, and the other party thought he had not sold, that is a ground to set aside the contract, that neither party may be damaged, as it is impossible to say one shall be forced to give that price for part only which he intended to give for the whole, or that the other shall be obliged to sell the whole for what, he intended to be the price of part only. [372]*372Upon the other hand, if both understood the whole was to be conveyed, it must be conveyed; but again, if neither understood so, if the buyer did not imagine he was buying, any more than the seller imagined he was selling, this part, then his pretense to have the whole conveyed is as contrary to good faith upon his side as the refusal to sell would be in the other case. The question is, does it appear to have been the common purpose of both to have conveyed this part?” See 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 144. A briefer statement is to be found in Diman v. Providence, 5 R. I. 130, 137: “A court of equity has also power to rescind and cancel an agreement at the request of one party upon the ground that without negligence he entered into it through a mistake of facts material to the contract, when it can do so without injustice to the other party.” It may be seriously questioned whether the wife in this case was not negligent in not knowing what she conveyed. Moreover, she did intend to quitclaim her interest.

The case at bar is obviously different from deeds including more land than the vendor intended to convey, as in Plarris v. Pepperell, E. R. 5 Eq. 1; or from the absolute conveyance, for example, which in fact deprived the vendor from right to use water from a spring which she did not intend to part with, and of the existence of which the ven-dee did not know, as in Brown v. Lamphear, 35 Vt. 252. There is also a plain distinction between the present case and Benson v. Markoe, 37 Minn. 30, 33 N. W. 38, 5 Am. St. 816. There Benson gave a quitclaim deed, intending to convey to Markoe a part of the tract originally sold to the latter by the former,'but not, as Markoe represented, in fact conveyed by the original deed. Benson did not intend to release a mortgage which Markoe had given him to secure a part of the purchase price. The court limited the operation of the quitclaim deed to the conveyance of the premises intended. Here the wife intended to convey, as she did, whatever interest she had. Although a quitclaim deed was called for, she did not inquire, efficiently at least, concerning its occasion.

In point of fact, however, she conveyed no interest by the quitclaim deed. Whatever interest she had was in the sheriff’s certificate. She ■and her husband were parties to an action, in which both she and her husband appeared and in which was fully litigated what property her husband owned, in respect to a matter then before the court for de[373]*373termination, namely, the amount of alimony. The complaint alleged that both the plaintiff and defendant owned the land in question. The court found specifically that as a matter of fact the husband owned it. Judgment was entered^ accordingly. The vendees properly contend that that judgment cannot be collaterally attacked^ As against the vendees the judgment stands.

The second question is whether the parties, or either of them, can redeem. The supplemental complaint set forth that', pursuant to chapter. 326, p.

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.W. 302, 100 Minn. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-e-i-dupont-co-minn-1907.