Appellant, complainant in the chancery court, sold a tract of laud to appel
[1, 2] There is no suggestion of-fraud, and the law is clear and undisputed to the proposition that in such circumstances there can be no reformation by the courts. Betts v. Gunn, 31 Ala. 219; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. (3d Ed.) § 854. It is pointed out that appellant’s covenant, as written in the deed, was breached as soon as made, and that appellee’s knowledge of the' incumbrance did not impair his right to recover for the breach (Copeland v. McAdory, 100 Ala. 553, 13 South. 545), and it is argued that appellant, who was being advised by competent counsel, would not have entered into such a covenant. This branch of the argument goes only to the verisimilitude of appellee’s version of the transaction; but we do not see that the transaction, as it appears on the face of the deed and the undisputed facts, is any more strange or anomalous than any other of a kind with that shown in Copeland v. McAdory, supra. Cases of that kind are of frequent occurrence in the books. We feel by no means sure that the persons advising and managing the transaction on the part of appellant had the law of Copeland v. McAdory in view. But this seems clear enough: If they considered that law, and yet deliberately prepared and executed the deed for appellant, then, of course, it is bound. If, on the other hand, they did not consider that law, and by reason of momentary inadvertence failed in part to consider the full legal effect of the deed, then, in the circumstances, appellant can have no relief, for, considering again the evidence upon appellant’s application for rehearing, we have been confirmed in our opinion that there was no concurrence of intention or mutual understanding between the parties that the deed which was to be prepared as a memorial of the transaction in question should differ in any respect whatever from the deed that was actually executed. On the contrary, the par-lies were fully and precisely agreed as to that. The deed was prepared under the direction of appellant’s counsel, who was also one of its directors and its largest stockholder, was submitted to him for approval, was approved, and so was executed. Appellee, on its part, submitted the deed thus prepared and executed to its counsel for approval, and, after it had been approved, accepted it in the form in which it was tendered. There being no suggestion of fraud, there can, in any aspect of the case, be no relief on the ground of mistake. Manfredo v. Manfredo, 191 Ala. 822, 68 South. 157. No doubt there was a collateral parol agreement, as we have said, but we have had no satisfactory statement of any reason why either the terms or the legal effect of that agreement should affect the existence of the covenant as it was written or appellant’s liability under it.
[3] It remains only to say that appellants, the South Highland Company and its individual stockholders, against whom decree was rendered on the cross-bill, have appealed and severed in the assignment of errors, cannot be heard to complain that the decree against them was for less than the amount secured by the covenant. If that be a fact, but that is not all clear, and if that circumstance exhibits some inadvertence on the part
Our judgment is that the decree must he affirmed against all the appellants.
Affirmed.