Wood v. Wood

181 S.W.2d 481, 207 Ark. 518, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 696
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 26, 1944
Docket4-7399
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 181 S.W.2d 481 (Wood v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Wood, 181 S.W.2d 481, 207 Ark. 518, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 696 (Ark. 1944).

Opinions

Robins, J.

Appellant filed suit in the circuit court against appellees, who are his brothers and sisters, for a breach of covenant of warranty contained in a deed executed on February 14,1923, by all of the appellees, except LeRoy Wood and Edgar Wood, who éxecuted it at a later date. By the deed mentioned appellees conveyed to appellant one hundred and sixty acres in Clark county, Arkansas, inherited by appellees and appellant from their father, W. T. Wood, who died intestate in 1913, seized and possessed of the land in question, part of which was his homestead, and leaving surviving him his widow, Frances Josephine Wood, and eight children. The suit was transferred to equity by the circuit court on its own motion. No objection to the transfer has been raised. The cause was heard by the chancery court on the pleadings and upon-testimony taken in open court. The lower court rendered a decree, dismissing the complaint for want of equity, to reverse which decree- this appeal is prosecuted.

The evidence reflects that after the death of W. T. Wood two of his sons, appellant Albert Wood and appellee Andrew J. Wood, continued to live on the farm with their mother, and neither her dower nor her homestead was ever assigned.

Appellee, Andrew J. Wood, after the death of his father, bought the interests of several of his brothers and sisters in the land owned by their deceased father and received deeds from some of them, but these deeds were never recorded.

Appellant served as a soldier in the first World War, and then returned to the farm and continued farming operations with his brother, appellee Andrew J. Wood. Sometime in 1920, appellant bought the interest of Andrew J. Wood in the land. Appellee, Andrew J. Wood, moved away, and appellant remained on the land with his mother, Mrs. Frances Josephine Wood.

Appellant completed payment of the purchase money of the land in 1922, and in 1923 the deed herein involved was executed. In order to minimize the amount of recording fees the parties decided to destroy the .deeds previously made by some of the brothers and sisters to appellee, Andrew J. Wood, and have these brothers and sisters join with appellee, Andrew J. Wood, in the execution of the deed directly to appellant, Albert Wood. The widow, Frances Josephine Wood, did not sell appellant her interest in the land and did not sign the deed, which was on a printed form, and purported to convey the entire interest in the land, described according to government subdivisions with the usual covenant of warranty.

After he obtained the deed from his brothers and sisters, appellant married and brought his wife to live on the land. The widow continued to live on the land with appellant and his wife for a short time, but on account of family discord it became impossible for her to live there longer, and in the spring of 1925 she removed from her home and thereafter lived with other members of her family. Appellant, after his mother moved away, sold timber from the land and his mother then brought suit against appellant and the vendee of the timber for the value of the timber, and recovered judgment for a total of $1,388.59. Wood v. Wood, 203 Ark. 344, 157 S. W. 2d 36. Thereafter the instant suit was brought by appellant to recover from appellees the sum appellant was thus forced to pay his mother on account of this judgment, it being alleged by appellant that he had suffered damage in this amount as a result of the breach of covenant of warranty contained in the deed executed by appellees to him.

Appellant testified that he bought the entire interest in the land. The testimony of some of the appellees, however, was to the effect that the existence of their mother’s interest in the land was discusséd and recognized by all parties at the time the trade was made, and that appellant insisted that it was not necessary to wait until she died before the heirs conveyed their respective shares. One of them testified that while the deed was being signed the justice of the peace advised the parties that they could not beat their mother' out of her dower; that appellant understood this and talked about it frequently. Another appellee testified: “I wasn’t supposed to make a deed until after my mother died. All I ever sold was my interest.” Two of the heirs testified that they understood they were selling the entire interest.

To reverse the decree of the lower court, which in effect held that appellees in reality only sold and intended to convey to appellant their respective shares as heirs of their father in the land, appellant urges that parol evidence to vary the contents of the deed was not admissible. The rule that parol evidence is ordinarily not admissible to vary or contradict the terms of a written instrument is well established. But it is equally well settled that a court of equity may look through the form of the contract and ascertain what the real transaction was, and may correct a mutual mistake made in the drafting of the contract so as to make the contract reflect the real intention of the parties at the timé of the execution thereof. In doing this the court does not receive parol testimony to vary the contract, but to show what the contract really was and to permit the correction of mutual mistake made by the parties in committing the ‘contract to writing.

In the case of Clark v. Root, 50 Ark. 179, 6 S. W. 728, 8 S. W. 569, suit had been brought in the lower court for breach of covenant of warranty to the title of certain land, and this court sustained the contention of the defendant that in equity the deed should be reformed so as to show that the land, the title of which had failed, was not sold or intended to be Sold.

A somewhat similar situation was presented in the case of Harton v. Durham, 148 Ark. 655, 231 S. W. 193. There it appeared that Durham conveyed a certain tract to Hartón by warranty deed, the land being described according to government subdivisions. It developed that Durham’s deed to Hartón described a certain tract to which Durham had no title, and Hartón sued Durham for breach of warranty. Durham answered, moved to transfer to equity, and asked for reformation of his deed on the ground that by mutual mistake the tract referred to was included in his deed and that he did not sell or intend to convey and that Hartón did not purchase it. The chancery court reformed the deed and dismissed Hartón’s suit for damage. This court affirmed the chancery court’s decision.

Likewise, in the case of Tenenbaum v. Gerard B. Lambert Company, 140 Ark. 231, 215 S. W. 596, 8 A. L. R. 745, suit had been instituted by Tenenbaum for the nonperformance of a written contract for the sale of approximately fifty tons of scrap iron sold to him by the Gerard B. Lambert Company. The company had only delivered under this contract thirteen and one-half tons, and Tenenbaum sought damage for breach of the contract of sale. The case was transferred to chancery court and it was shown by the company that in reality it intended to sell only the scrap iron that it had on hand, which amounted to thirteen and one-half tons instead of fifty tons as stated in the contract. This contention was sustained by both courts, the contract was reformed in accordance with the contention of the company, and Tenenbaum’s claim for damage was denied.

In the case of Ingraham v. Baum, 136 Ark. 101, 206 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W.2d 481, 207 Ark. 518, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-wood-ark-1944.