The plaintiff in each of these cases seeks to recover money paid to the defendant corporation as part of the consideration for a deed of land which proved deficient in the quantity agreed to be conveyed. The first case is an action at law for money had and received. It was tried by the court without a jury. The plaintiff offered to prove, in substance, that he agreed in writing to buy and the defendant agreed to sell an estate on Summer Street, lying between land which it had previously sold to other parties and land of Thorndike, at twenty-seven dollars by the square foot; that the defendant caused the land to be surveyed, and the plaintiff, believing the survey to be correct, paid the price agreed for the number of square feet ascertained by it; that the deed to him purported to give with accuracy the length of all the lines with the contents of the lot, and bounded it on the northwest by Thorndike’s land; that the *5line on Summer Street was in fact shorter, and therefore the contents of the estate less than stated in the deed, and that the last named line should have been measured from the southeast face of a wall, which was the true boundary of Thorndike’s land, instead of the northwest face as claimed by the defendant.
The evidence thus offered shows that the quantity of land was made an essential element of the bargain, and was relied on to fix the price to be paid. There is nothing in the terms of the deal, such as the use of the words “ more or less,” or equivalent words, which has any tendency to show that the parties, at the time of the delivery of the deed, changed the terms of the original bargain, or agreed to take the land conveyed at the estimated instead of the actual quantity; on the contrary, the deed is entirely consistent with and carries out the original bargain.
It presents the case of a payment by the plaintiff under a mistake of a material fact; that is to say, of a fact without the existence of which there was no obligation upon the plaintiff to pay the full sum which was paid. For such a payment, an action for money had and received will lie.
It was ruled, at the request of the defendant, that the action could not be maintained, because it was an action to try the title to real estate. The law is indeed well settled that such title cannot be tried in an action for money had and received. But in this case the facts do not warrant the application of that rule. The question here is not one of title between these parties to the land conveyed, but of the subject matter described in the agreement and in the deed which followed it. The proposition of the plaintiff is that the land for which he paid is not included in the conveyance. An action on the covenants of title and warranty, if there are any, can afford him no redress; for the covenants in a deed extend only to the land conveyed. Spurr v. Benedict, 99 Mass. 463.
The defendant chose to hound the estate conveyed by it on the line of Thorndike’s land. By the terms of the deed, his line was made a monument which controls the distances given and the quantity of land stated. In Howe v. Bass, 2 Mass. 380, where land was conveyed bounding on a street for a distance named and on each side by lands of other persons, it was held that all the land between the lots named passed, although the *6distance was sixty-five feet on the street where the deed called foi only forty-five, and this because the lands referred to as monuments must govern the distances named. And when land is described in a deed as running a certain distance by measurement to land of the heirs of a person deceased, though without a visible boundary marking the line, such line is of itself a monument which will control the admeasurement, and fix the extent of the land conveyed. Flagg v. Thurston, 13 Pick. 145. See also Curtis v. Francis, 9 Cush. 427, 438; Gerrish v. Towne, 3 Gray, 82, 87.
The question in this case then is where the line called for by the deed is. But the evidence which fixes that location does not establish or defeat the title of Thorndike, who is not a party to the suit, although an inquiry into his title is involved. It does not establish or defeat any title of the defendant; it only ascertains the limits of land conveyed by it to the plaintiff" by a valid and unquestioned deed. The title of Thorndike is incidentally involved, but is not, accurately speaking, put in issue. The rule referred to does not prevent an action for money had and received in many cases which require an investigation of title. Thus the deposit made on an agreement to purchase real estate may be recovered back on proof that the title is bad. Sugden on Vendors, (14th ed.) 358. And the vendor cannot sue the vendee on the contract of purchase, unless he has shown or offered to show a good title, if bound so to do. 1 Chit. Con, (11th Am ed.q 424. Eames v. Savage, 14 Mass. 425. The right to recover in these cases depends on the title, and yet they are not cases in which the title is tried, within the meaning of the rule. The reasons upon which the rule is founded apply only when the parties to the suit claim the land by adverse titles. Thus in Codman v. Jenkins, 14 Mass. 93, it was held that a common count for rent would not lie in favor of a stranger who claimed title, or by one of two litigating parties; and in Bigelow v. Jones, 10 Pick. 161, that a party who was disseised could not maintain assumpsit to recover of a disseisor money received for trees sold by him; while in Miller v. Miller, 7 Pick. 133, a tenant in common was permitted to recover for trees sold by his co-tenant, on the ground that there was no, controversy about the title of the parties. Brigham v. Winchester, 6 Met 460.
*7Upon the evidence offered in this case, there was as much a mistake of fact as if the chain used to measure the lines had been found imperfect, or there had been a miscount when the money was paid over. This action is to recover the money only. To establish his right, the plaintiff needs no form of equitable relief; his remedy is perfect at law. The claim for damages is not to be confounded with that compensation which is awarded as incidental to other relief, in cases where a specific performance is decreed upon the application of either party to a contract for the sale of land, with an allowance to be made for deficiency in quantity.
The case of Tarbell v. Bowman, 103 Mass. 341, is not distinguishable in principle from the case at bar. There the lengtn of one of the lines was incorrectly given in the deed, and the area of the land was incorrectly computed. The defendant was decreed in equity, (no question of jurisdiction having been raised,) to repay to the purchaser the amount paid by mistake.
But the defendant relies on the case of Williams v. Hathaway, 19 Pick. 387, which was assumpsit to recover back money paid by the plaintiff on the purchase of land, on account of deficiency in quantity. That case was decided upon rules of evidence not applicable here. The court declared that it appeared by the deed itself that the plaintiff paid a certain sum of money for the whole of the land described and identified, and that it must be understood from the deed, either that it was in fact measured, or that the parties were content to estimate it at the quantity named in the deed. It was accordingly held that all prior stipulations were merged in the deed, which must be held to express the final and entire contract between the parties. It is elsewhere said, by good authority, that whenever it appears by definite boundaries, or by words of qualification as “ more or less,” or “by estimation,” or the like, that the statement of the quantity of acres in the deed is mere matter of description and not of the essence of the contract, the buyer takes the risk, if there be no element of fraud. 4 Kent Com. 467. Stebbins v. Eddy, 4 Mason, 414. In Williams v. Hathaway it appears that the land was estimated at fifteen acres, and was struck off to the plaintiff on that estimate for a price named by the acre. It does not appear that it was not surrounded by permanent and *8well marked natural or artificial boundaries, and all that the case decides is that where the deed declares, in express or equivalent words, that the quantity of land is estimated, it cannot be shown to contradict it that exact quantity was an essential element of the bargain. In other words, it may be shown by the terms >f the conveyance that the precise quantity previously contracted for was waived. It is familiar law that the consideration named in the deed may be shown by paroi evidence not to be correctly stated. In the case at bar, there is certainly nothing in the deed to vary the terms of the previous contract as to the price to be paid, and the consideration stated therein is not decisive.
The plaintiff’s remedy at law is adequate and complete, and the entry in the first case must be Exceptions sustained.
The other case is a bill in equity to recover the same money. No ground is stated for any relief peculiar to courts of equity. For the reasons above stated, the judgment is
Bill dismissed.