Weller v. Perry
Weller v. Perry
Opinion of the Court
Opinion oe the Court by
It is very clear that the appellant intended and thought he had conveyed the 147 acres of land to his daughter Catherine Perry, wife of the appellee, he instructed the draftsman to draw the deed to his daughter so they would have the land and right to control it but that through the hurry and inadvertance this deed was made to the husband.
The father being old, infirm and indisposed desired to divide his lands among his children and had it partitioned by actual
The recognition of the husband during his wife’s life that the deed was erroneously made to him instead of his wife through mistake fortifies the evidence of the draftsman that such was his instruction -and 'intention beside the intrinsic probabilities strongly indicate the same thing.
As the wife lived only about a year after the making of the deed no fatal presumption arises from a delay to bring this suit until a short time after her death inasmuch as the donor did not know of the mistake until just before, or about the time of her decease, and even if he had sooner discovered it his ill health would explain this short delay. It is well settled a» heretofore decided in various cases by this and other courts that deéds as well as other written agreements may be reformed for fraud or mistake and the mistake clearly appearing in this case the deed should be reformed.
Wherefore, the judgment dismissing the petition is reversed with directions for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.