Court Opinion

ID: 3443899
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 20:16:34.235425+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:45:38.088283
License: Public Domain

Affirming.
Appellees, Hieatt Brothers, real estate brokers, instituted this action against appellant, A. Bass, on a written contract to recover $680.00, commission, for effecting the sale of certain real estate owned by him. By answer appellant sought to have the contract sued on reformed upon the ground that by mutual mistake of the parties the contract made it to appear that he had granted to them the exclusive privilege of selling the property in question for a period of three months when the real contract between them was that appellees should have that privilege for only thirty days; and that the property in question had been sold by other real estate dealers after its expiration. The action was transferred to equity for a trial of the equitable issue so presented. The chancellor found and adjudged that appellant was not entitled to the reformation sought, and, that being appellant's sole defense, judgment for the full amount sued for was entered against him. The appeal is prosecuted from that judgment, and the sole question presented is whether or not the chancellor erred in adjudging that appellant was not entitled to the reformation of the contract sued on.
The contract which both parties signed granted to appellees "the exclusive right for three months from date hereof to sell" the property described, and further provided that, if it should be sold within three months after its expiration to any person with whom appellees had had negotiations, appellant would pay the commission. Below the place on the contract where the parties signed their names there was written with lead pencil the figures and words "thirty days," and the representative of appellees testified that he wrote them on it. The testimony on the question of reformation or no reformation centered largely around that endorsement. Appellant testified for himself and stated that it was placed on the written contract to evidence the fact that the exclusive right to sell the property in question was granted to appellee for a period or only thirty days. No other witness testified for him on the question. The representative of appellees who acted for them in this transaction stated that the endorsement was placed on the contract the next day after it was signed and pursuant to a subsequent agreement made between them by which appellees agreed that *Page 315 
if appellant desired to withdraw this property from them even before the expiration of the contract that he might do so upon giving thirty days' notice. Appellant produced no testimony tending to establish that by mutual mistake of the parties the contract which they signed granted to appellees the exclusive right for three months to sell this property. His testimony as to the endorsement "thirty days" placed the bottom of the contract by appellees and as to appellees' explanation at the time that the endorsement changed the terms of the contract, which in plain language granted the three months' exclusive privilege, so that by the addition of the endorsement the contract instead of granting ninety days was merely for thirty days, would tend to establish fraud upon the part of appellees in procuring the contract, and that three months' instead of thirty days' exclusive privilege was granted by the contract by the fraud of appellees. However, appellant did not by his answer and counterclaim herein rely upon fraud but merely upon the mutual mistake of the parties. Our reading of the testimony convinces us that that for appellees is much more reasonable as to how the endorsement "thirty days" came to be placed at the foot of the contract. Appellant is shown to be a business man and to have bought and sold a considerable amount of real estate in the last several years, and it is certainly more reasonable to believe that, if the parties had intended to change the terms of the written contract so as to reduce the term for which the exclusive privilege was granted from three months, as plainly written in the body of the contract, to thirty days, as appellant insists the contract was, that would have been done by striking the words "three months" from the body of the contract and substituting in lieu thereof the words "thirty days." Appellant alone testified for himself, and a single witness testified for appellees. Reason and common business sense support the testimony for appellees that the contract as signed by the parties was that made by them, and tend to discredit appellant's theory that by mutual mistake the contract granted the exclusive privilege for three months instead of thirty days, as he contends the contract was. The proof falls far short of being clear and convincing required by the rule to which we have uniformly adhered before a court of equity is authorized to reform a written contract. The testimony on the question does not establish *Page 316 
that the chancellor erred but rather establishes that he properly concluded that no case was made for appellant authorizing a reformation of the contract sued on.
The judgment, therefore, will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.