Manning v. Carter
Manning v. Carter
Opinion of the Court
This is the second appeal in this cause, the first (Manning v. Carter) being reported in 192 Ala. 307, 68 South. 909.
The rule of abatement of the punchase price for land, where the vendor has represented that the tract embraced a certain acreage, and there is a deficiency, and such representation as to acreage was a material inducement to the purchase, was discussed on the former appeal in this case and in Terry v. Rich, 197 Ala. 486, 73 South. 76.
If the vendor fraudulently represented the given tract to include other land, land not owned by him, the measure of damages, the result of the misrepresentations as to the area sold, would be the difference between the value of the land actually sold and the value of the lands represented or purported to be sold.
One cannot read this testimony without being impressed that Manning was induced to think he was purchasing, and that he intended to purchase, in the tract pointed out and represented to him by appellee to contain 253 acres, that identical tract of land and number of acres, and not a greatly less acreage, and that this represented acreage was an essential and controlling inducement to the consummation of the purchase by appellant. On the point under discussion this court, in Hodges v. Denny, 86 Ala. 226, 228, 229, 5 South. 492, 494, said:
“ * * * It has been repeatedly affirmed that when land is described in a bond or -deed by well-defined boundaries, such as by its designation according to the government survey, or by natural or artificial metes and bounds, or courses and distances, open to observation, and not subject to mistake, a statement of quantity following the description is regarded as a part of the description, and not of the essence of the contract. By such sale, both parties take upon themselves the risk as to quantity. The purchaser is entitled to all the land included in the tract specifically described, though greater than the quantity stated, and the vendor is not liable if there be a deficiency. In such case, in the absence of fraud, or gross and palpable mistake, or an omission to truly express the contract, parol proof, varying- or contradicting the terms of the conveyance, is inadmissible, even in equity. * * *' A different rule governs when it is apparent from the conveyance that the land is not described by definite and certain boundaries, which furnish the standard of quantity; and the representation of the number of acres is an essential ingredient of the contract, regulating the aggregate sum to be paid. In such case, if there be a material and substantial variance, equity will place the parties in the'same relative condition in which they would have stood had the real quantity been known at the time of the bargain.”
In the instant case the deed, by well-defined boundaries designated by government surveys, described 440 acres, less certain lands embraced in an excepted description that only a surveyor could well understand, and also less that land described as “all east of Mulberry creek of the south east fourth of the south east fourth, also all north of the. Clanton road of the north east fourth of the south east fourth of section 4, township 21, range 13 east,” and contained the further statement that the lands conveyed comprised “253 acres more or less, situated in Chilton county, Alabama.” In the warranty clause there was this statement:
That the grantors were seized “in fee simple of said premises; * * * that we have a good right to sell and convey the same as aforesaid.”
It is not disputed that the grantor listed the lands in controversy with his agent, for sale, as comprising 253 acres, describing them specifically as follows:
“178 acres comparatively' level; 78 rolling; * * * 89 in cultivation;” “54 acres pasture; * * * 110 acres woodland”
—nor that said agent sold the same on such representation and description; nor that the vendor several times represented to appellant this number of acres as being contained in the tract sold or sought to be sold.
The decree of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
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