Delap v. Taber
Delap v. Taber
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
This action was brought to recover back the consideration on a sale of land by the defendant to
We think the judgment must be reversed for errors in instructing and refusing to instruct the jury. And though the reasons for the reversal might be based upon some portions of the general charge, they may perhaps be presented more plainly upon the refusal to give the second instruction, asked by the plaintiff, which was as follows: “ That if they find upon the testimony, that the defendant for the purpose of effecting; a trade with the plaintiff, represented to the plaintiff that the N. E. sec. 23, &e., was of a particular quality, had a stream of water running across it, timber on it, &c., and that the plaintiff relied on such representations in making the trade, that the defendant cannot defeat the plaintiff’s right to recover the consideration paid and interest thereon from delivery of the deed,
The real question in controversy was, whether the minds of the parties had reference to a specific piece of land, or whether they had reference to the quarter section which the defendant owned in Iowa, whatever it might be. There can be no doubt that their minds might fix upon the specific price of land without having seen it. Thus if the defendant, led into a mistake by the error in the certificate, really believed that he owned the land in section 23, and had a friend examine it, and give a description of its quality, and he communicated that to the
But if none of this is true, if the defendant told the plaintiff that he owned a quarter section in Iowa, and the plaintiff contracted for that, whatever it might be, without any representation as to its quality, then the real subject of the contract was the land actually owned by the defendant; and if by a mistake in the certificate they described it as in a wrong section, such a mistake might undoubtedly be rectified. In that case, it would have been a mistake in the instrument, in mis-describing the real subject matter of the contract. Butin the other, no such mistake would occur. The deed would truly describe the identical land to which the mind of the parties had reference. And the only mistake would be in their mutual belief that the vendor had title. Such a mistake cannot be cured by offering to substitute some other property, which the purchaser never contracted for. This distinction seems to have been really the one which was in the mind of the judge below, in his general charge. But he was mistaken in the refusal already noticed, and in telling the jury, as he did substantially, that although they might find that the parties contracted with reference to the land in section 23, according to the actual description given of its kind or quality, still the plaintiff could not recover if they should believe that he would have been just as willing to have made the same contract for the land in section 25.
The judgment is reversed with costs, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.