Judges: Scott
Filed Date: 10/15/1905
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The plaintiff, on June 1, 1905, sued defendant upon an oral pleading for money had arid received. The defendant, also orally, pleaded a general denial. Upon the trial it appeared that the money which plaintiff seeks to recover was the deposit of part of the purchase price, paid upon a written contract of sale, by defendant to plaintiff, of a house and lot.. The contract provided that the deed should be' delivered and the balance of the purchase price paid on July twenty-seventh. The plaintiff based her claim to recover upon the allegation that she had understood and believed that she was purchasing a house seventeen feet, six inches wide;- and that either the words “6 in.” had been stricken out of the description after she signed the contract, or, if stricken out before her signature, that her attention had not been called to the fact. The contract itself shows that the width of the house had originally been stated as seventeen feet, six inches, and that the words “ 6 in.” had been stricken out. The evidence was quite satisfactory that the alteration was made before the execution of the contract, but for the purposes of this action it makes no difference when the words were stricken out. In no event can the plaintiff recover. It is conceded that plaintiff signed the contract, that the money was paid under it, and that the time for completing the purchase had not arisen. If the words “ 6 in.” were in the contract when plaintiff signed it and were afterward stricken out without her consent, she would be entitled, on the law day, to a deed conveying a lot seventeen feet, six
Judgment reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed with the appropriate costs in the court below.
Bischoff and Fitzgerald, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed with costs in court below.