Holt v. Holt
Before: McFarland
Synopsis
Reformation of Deed—Mistake—Pleading—Variance.—In an action to reform a conveyance which by mistake conveyed the whole of a certain lot instead of the undivided half thereof, as intended, where the complaint, though averring a mutual mistake of the grantor and grantee, also averred that the defendant knew at the time of accepting the deed that the plaintiff also supposed that the deed described and conveyed only the undivided half of the property, the last averment brought the case within section 3399 of the Civil Code and justified a reformation of the deed; and where the evidence showed and the court found that, at the time of the acceptance and record of the deed, the grantee knew that the deed conveyed the whole lot and that the grantor supposed that the deed conveyed only the undivided one-half of the lot, and that the language of the deed conveying the whole lot was a mistake, there is no substantial or material variance, which could mislead the defendant to his prejudice, between the complaint and the findings and proof.
Id.—Conveyance Provided for in Decree of Divorce—Rights of Parties to Decree Unaffected by Reformation.—Where the purpose of the action and the effect of the judgment was merely to reform a deed made from the defendant to the plaintiff, the effect of a decree of divorce between plaintiff and defendant regulating the rights of the parties in a homestead, and providing for a conveyance from the divorced husband to the divorced wife of an undivided half thereof, is not involved, and none of the rights of the parties under such decree of divorce are determined or affected, by the judgment reforming the deed; and, where the defendant in her answer claimed the whole of the property, she cannot complain of a judgment giving her an undivided half thereof.
McFARLAND, J. This action was brought to reform a deed executed by the plaintiff to the defendant, Frances M. Holt, Tyler being made a defendant as a subsequent mortgagee with no[68]tice. The court rendered judgment for plaintiff, and the defendants appeal from the judgment and from an order denying their motion for a new trial. . .
The findings of the court were warranted by the evidence. The plaintiff and the defendant, Frances, were at one time husband and wife, and had been divorced before the occurrences out. of which this litigation arises. The land involved here, designated as lot 7 of a certain tract, was separate property of the plaintiff, though defendant Frances had filed a homestead thereon, the plaintiff not joining therein. By the decree of divorce the lot was set apart to the defendant, Frances, “for a limited period, to wit, the term, of fifteen years,” but it contained the following provision: “Provided, that if the plaintiff will convey to. the defendant an undivided and unencumbered one-half interest in said homestead, then said term will be shortened to five months.” For the purpose of complying with this provision, the plaintiff executed a deed to the defendant, Frances, which was intended to be of an undivided half of said lot, but by mistake of the conveyancer in following a printed form the deed was made to convey the whole of said lot. When the deed was delivered to the defendant Frances by the plaintiff she was informed that it conveyed only an undivided one-half of the lot, in accordance with the provisions of the decree. The defendant Frances made some objection at first to receiving the deed; but a day or two afterward, upon learning that it conveyed the whole lot, she accepted it and put it upon record. She knew that the plaintiff supposed that the deed conveyed only the undivided one-half, and that the language in the deed purporting to convey the whole lot was a mistake. Shortly afterward the defendant, Tyler, took a mortgage from the defendant, Frances, upon the whole of said lot, the mortgage purporting to be security for five hundred dollars; but the court found, and we think upon sufficient evidence, that at the time of the execution of the mortgage Tyler knew all the facts, and the mistake.
The only point made by appellants which needs special notice is that there is a variance between the complaint and the findings, because, as contended by appellants, the complaint avers a “'mutual” mistake, while the findings are that the mistake was that of the plaintiff, and that the defendant^ Frances, knew of
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