Judges: WalKER
Filed Date: 4/1/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
This action was brought to recover $322.75, paid by the plaintiffs to the defendant under the following circumstances: Defendant prepared, signed, and delivered to the plaintiffs, on 11 February, 1911, a paper-writing, not registered, in which, for the consideration of (238) $322.75 paid to him by them, he agreed to "sell and convey" to them "the exclusive right and option to purchase on or before 1 December, 1911," a certain tract of land fully described in the instrument for the price of $1,783.88, to be paid in three equal installments, the first of which was to be paid on 1 December, 1911. McFadyen bound himself to the agreement in the sum of $2,000 to make a good title to the land, with covenants of seisin and warranty and for further assurance, and also against encumbrances, but only upon payment to him of the purchase money within the time aforesaid. The instrument is called in the premises or preamble an "indenture." Plaintiffs paid the $322.75, but failed to pay the first installment of the purchase money on 1 December, 1911, or otherwise to signify their acceptance of the offer to sell, and on 8 December, 1911, after plaintiff's default, the defendant sold and conveyed the land to a purchaser for value and without notice of the transaction between plaintiffs and defendant or of any right plaintiffs had in or to the land.
Plaintiffs contend that the agreement, as we will call it for convenience, is a contract to sell the land to them, and also introduced evidence tending strongly to show that it was so intended by the parties, and that the defendant had represented to them that it was a contract or a deed for the land, and that they would not lose the money paid to him, but it would be paid back to them if they were unable to pay the balance.
Defendant denied all these allegations, and introduced contradicting evidence, claiming and testifying that the instrument is an option, and was so intended by the parties, and that the whole matter was fully explained to the plaintiffs.
The court held that the paper-writing was a contract to convey, and time of payment was not, therefore, of the essence of the contract, and that by not paying on the day fixed, plaintiffs did not forfeit their right to a return of the money paid by them, and it being admitted that defendant had disabled himself to perform the contract, judgment was entered for the plaintiffs to the effect that they recover the sum of (239) $322.75 and costs. Defendant excepted and appealed.
After stating the case: If the instrument is an option, plaintiffs cannot recover, as they have not complied with it by accepting the offer and paying the first installment of the purchase money on the day named (Weaver v. Sides, 216 Pa. St., 301); but if it is a contract, they can recover, as defendant has conveyed the land to a person entitled to hold it against the plaintiffs, he being a bona fide purchaser for value and without notice. Sprinkle v. Wellborn,
The context of this paper-writing does not manifest an intention to give more than an option to buy, and the case, therefore, calls for evidence dehors the deed, if it is sought to establish a contract to sell or a bond for title. This necessarily requires the intervention of a jury to pass upon the disputed questions of fact.
The power to decree a reformation, upon the bare face of the (240) instrument, should be exercised sparingly and only in a clear case, as the authorities state. If this were not so, we would, of course, be in danger of making the agreement between the parties, instead of merely declaring what it is, as expressed in the instrument, or as plainly deducible therefrom.
There is ample evidence of the mistake in drawing the agreement and of the fraud, and this should be submitted to the jury, with proper instructions as to the law. Plaintiffs would also be entitled to recover if the payment was made under a false and fraudulent representation of the defendant, of which there is allegation and evidence.
This case does not impress us very favorably for the defendant. The written instrument is almost sufficient of itself to show a contract to sell the land, or a bond for title, as it is sometimes called, and not an option; *Page 228 but it is not sufficiently so to warrant us in declaring it to be such on its face, or as matter of law, as the court below decided.
The plaintiffs, it appears, are illiterate, and, if their testimony is true, they were misled by false representations of the defendant into the acceptance of a paper which they thought either conveyed them the land or secured the title to them by contract upon their paying the balance of the purchase money, and there is much in the nature, circumstances, and surroundings of the transaction to sustain their allegation. If defendant falsely led them to believe that he was giving them a contract, when in fact it was an option, and they were induced thereby to take it, in the belief that it was a contract, the fraud of the defendant and the mistake of the plaintiffs brought about or induced thereby will lead the court either to reform or to cancel the instrument, as the justice of the case may require. Wilson v. Land Co.,
It is immaterial which of the remedies is applied under the facts and circumstances of this case, as either will result in restoring the money paid by plaintiffs to them. Plaintiffs may recover if they establish their case by a preponderance of the evidence, provided they seek merely (241) to recover the money back as having been obtained from them by a false and fraudulent representation. Culbreth v. Hall,
The case may be tried in any one of two aspects: first, whether the parties mutually intended a contract instead of an option, and if so, whether the parties failed to express their real agreement by mutual mistake, or whether they so failed by the fraud of the defendant and the mistake of the plaintiffs induced thereby; or, second, whether the plaintiffs were induced to part with their money by the fraud and deceit of the defendant. 20 Cyc., p. 87; Bigelow on Fraud,
The court erred in holding, as matter of law, that the agreement is a contract to convey, and not an option.
New trial.
(242)