v.
Jessie A. Tyler
Plaintiff bought a tract of land of the defendant in January, 1902, the deed to which was executed February 28th following. It recited a consideration of $5,000 and described the land as situated in Mills county, being “ the east half of the northeast quarter and part of the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter, described as follows, to-wit: Commencing at the southeast corner of the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter, and running thence north forty-nine rods; then south eighty-six degrees west, sixty-nine rods, to the middle of Mosquito creek; thence down the middle of said creek to the south line of the northeast quarter of section one; thence east on said line to the place of beginning — all being in the northeast quarter of sec [*286] tion one, township seventy-three, range forty-four, in said county, containing one hundred acres, more or less.” In March, 1901, plaintiff caused the land to be surveyed, when it appeared that there were but ninety-three and fifty-one one hundredths acres in the tract. In this suit recovery for the amount paid for this shortage is demanded. The answer Avas a general denial, and hy Avay of cross-petition the defendant averred that a secret sale had been negotiated by plaintiff while acting as defendant’s agent to find a purchaser, which fact he had concealed from his principal, and asked that he account for the profits acquired.
This cross-petition is without support in the evidence. Plaintiff had bargained for the land in January, and on February 10th had paid $500 on the purchase price. Not until the next day had he ever met Graaffs, to whom he disposed of the property at a substantial advance. ' He had ceased to he defendant’s agent at that time, and had the right to dispose of the property to whomsoever he pleased at such profit 'as he might legitimately obtain, and was under no obligation to account therefor to defendant. The assumption that the sale to Graaffs was before the payment to defendant is without support in the evidence.
But, where the discrepancy between actual quantity and that estimated is very great, the doctrine seems to prevail that a court of chancery will relieve on the ground of mistake. Nelson v. Matthews, 2 Hen. & M. (Va.) 164 (3 Am. Dec. 620) ; Harrison v. Talbott, 2 Dana (Ky.) 258. This is on the theory that the difference is relatively so great as in itself, in connection with other recitals in the deed, to import the probability of a mistake having been made by the parties. Hill v. Buckley, 17 Ves. Jr. 394; Harrell v. Hill, 19 Ark. 102 (68 Am. Dec. 212) ; Couse v. Boyles, 4 N. J. Eq. 212 (38 Am. Dec. 514); Paine v. Upton, 87 N. Y. 327 (41 Am. Rep. 371) ; Smith v. Fly, 24 Tex. 345 (76 Am. Dec. 109) ; Pratt v. Bowman, 37 W. Va. 715 (17 S. E. 210); Bigham v. Madison, 103 Tenn. 358, 52 S. W. 1074 (47 L. R. A. 267), and cases collected. The risk taken is of a reasonable excess or deficiency only. Hosleton v. Dickinson, 51 Iowa, 244.
Sales in gross or hy boundary are divisible into three subclasses: (1) Those strictly by the tract, without reference to negotiation or estimated quantity of acres; (2) those [*289] in -wbicb tbe quantity may be referred to in tbe contract, but tbis is only by way of description, and under sucb circumstances or in sucb manner as to show that tbe parties intended to risk all contingency as to quantity, however mucb tbe discrepancy might be; and (3) those in wbicb it is reasonably probable, from tbe price stated, in connection with tbe value and tbe extent of tbe discrepancy, or from extraneous circumstances, such as locality, value, price, time, and tbe conduct and conversation of tbe parties, that they did not intend to risk more than tbe usual rate of excess or deficiency, or than sucb as might reasonably be calculated on within tbe range of ordinary contingency. It is manifest that contracts within tbe first two subdivisions, in tbe absence of any proof of fraud, will not be interfered with by a court of equity, for tbe evident reason that tbe parties have intended to hazard tbe quantity regardless of tbe extent of any possible discrepancy. But under tbe third subdivision any unreasonable surplus or deficiency' will entitle tbe injufed party to equitable relief, unless in some way be has waived or forfeited tbis right to demand tbe same. Tbe discrepancy in this case is not sufficient to bring it within tbis subdivision. The shortage was six and forty-nine one hundredths acres in one hundred, and we have discovered no case declaring tbis so unreasonable as to justify relief. In Yearley v. Morris, 9 (Ky.) Law 703 (6 S. W. 433), a description of 282-acres fell short twenty acres, and tbe deficit was held insufficient, in the absence of proof that tbe sale was by the acre. While tbe words do not extend to a variation of one-half of tbe tract, as held in Lee v. Hester, 20 6a. 588, or "one-quarter, as decided in Smith v. Fly, 24 Tex. 345 (76 Am. Dec. 109), or to one-fifth, as declared in Gentry v. Hamilton, 38 N. C. 376, yet in a case like tbis it cannot well be said that tbe proportion may be greatly lowered below that in the last case, in view of tbe nature of the description, without impinging on what the parties may be assumed to have intended. It will be ob [*290] served that one of the boundaries is the middle of “ Mosquito creek.” This may be assumed to have a sinuous course, as is usual with streams of like magnitude, and two of the boundary lines extend to the middle of that stream, with their length not designated. In view of the uncertainties involved in these boundaries, and the fact the deed was copied from that conveying the land to defendant, we are not inclined to say that the deficiency alone is such as to warrant the inference of mistake or fraud in the execution of the deed.
The evidence, however, was such as to warrant the conclusion that, though a sale by the acre was not expressed in the deed, such was the understanding of the parties. The plaintiff was a member of a firm engaged in the land business, to whom the defendant’s husband wrote January 3, 1901, stating that, if a purchaser were found before February 15th following at $50 per acre, a commission of 3 percent. would be paid, and that there were 100 acres in the farm. Thereafter some correspondence was had in which plaintiff offered $45 per acre. Later a conversation took place through the telephone, in which defendant’s husband advised plaintiff that he could not take less than the price named in the letter, but would allow him the sanie commission as though he had induced another to .buy, and they agreed upon $4,850 as the price, and the offer was accepted, in pursuance of which the deed was executed. Tyler admitted he told Rathke over the telephone that there were one hundred acres, and the latter bought it for that. Both supposed the acreage to be as represented, but were mutually mistaken. Precisely such a case was made out as brings it within the second subdivision of the first class mentioned, and under the rules laid down justify'relief by a court of equity. The deficiency was substantial, not slight, and much greater than could have been contemplated as likely to arise from the incidental differences due to different measurements and instruments employed.
[*291]
The record sustains the decree, and it is affirmed.