51 So. 829 | Ala. | 1910
— Appellee sued appellant to recover compensation for commission, as a real estate agent, for making sale of a certain tract of land. The land belonged to a third party, a corporation. Appellant was a stockholder in the corporation, and was authorized by it, or by a majority of its stockholders, to sell the land.
The complaint consisted of the common counts — one for a breach of a special agreement by which the plaintiff should, for and on behalf of defendant, make a sale of the lands, and two for breach of a special agreement whereby the plaintiff was to find a purchaser for the land at the price of $16,000. The defendant pleaded the general issue, statute of frauds, and want of consideration. The pleas were to the complaint as a whole, and to each count thereof. Some of the pleas were therefore inapt to some of the counts, but it is unnecessary to notice that feature of the findings. It is sufficient to say that the evidence tended to support the verdict and the judgment rendered.
The plaintiff obtained a purchaser for the land at the price of $16,000, and the purchaser paid $500 of the purchase price, but finally declined to consummate the purchase, assigning as a reason that the land did not lie in a continuous body, but that 10 acres thereof was separated from the other 90 acres by a road or alley. Whether the land was so separated, or whether defendant or Bowman represented to plaintiff’s agent, or to the pur
The trial court, a.t the request of the defendant in writing, instructed the jury as follows:
“Unless plaintiff was working for Agee personally, • then the jury could not find for plaintiff, without regard to any other point in the case.”
“Even if Agee had an option on all the stock of the Birmingham Matinee Club, yet if the land belonged to the corporation, and not to Agee, and Agee was acting for the owner of the land, and not for himself, the jury would find for defendant, Agee.”
“Under the undisputed evidence in this case, if the jury believe it, the land in question belonged to the corporation, and not W. C. Agee.”
“The undisputed evidence in this case, if the jury believe it, shows that W. C. Agee was authorized by the Birmingham Matinee Club to sell the land, and if the the jury are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that Agee in fact was acting for said company, then the jury must find for defendant.”
The court refused the following charges, which were requested in writing by defendant:
“Unless Agee, or somebody authorized by him, represented to Messer that the land lay in a body, or ratified such representation, if such was made, the jury could not find for plaintiff, regardless of any other point in the case.”
“Agee is not responsible for the mistake of Bowman, if any, unless Bowman was his 'agent, or unless Agee, with knowledge of such mistake, if any, ratified it.”
The other charge, if given, might have tended to mislead the jury to believe that it was necessary to a recovery to show that Bowman was the agent of Agee, and that being the partner, and jointly interested with him in the sale, was not sufficient to render Agee liable for the acts of Bowman. While it is true, as contended by appellant, that this relation might be that of agency, yet the charge ivas calculated to mislead the jury unless explained, and for this reason, if for no other, it was properly refused.
The court did not. err in allowing the diagram or plat of the land in question to be introduced in evidence, or in allowing the witness Messer to testify that it was an exact copy of one furnished him by Mr. Bowman. The diagram introduced was the one furnished by Messer to. McCarty, the purchaser. Messer testified that the one made by Bowman was lost or misplaced, and could not be found, while neither the places, the details, nor the extent, of the, search (matters usually necessary as a predicate for the admission of secondary evidence) are shown. However, the inquiry as to loss of and search for the original document, to render secondary evidence admissible, is necessarily of a preliminary nature, addressed to the court in each particular case. While not solely, it is largely, a matter of discretion with the trial court, and the court’s ruling will not be reversed on-appeal, unless based upon an error of law, or upon evi
The loss or destruction of the original need not be proven beyond the possibility of mistake. It is enough if the testimony satisfies the court of the fact with reasonable certainty. The loss or destruction may be proven by circumstantial evidence. “The proof necessary to establish the loss of a writing, so as to let in secondary evidence of its contents, must depend upon the nature of the transaction to which it relates, its apparent value, and other circumstances. If suspicion hangs over the instrument, or that it is designedly withheld, a rigid inquiry should be made into the reasons of its nonproduction; but if there is no such suspicion, all that ought to be required is a reasonable diligence to obtain the original, in respect to which the courts extend great liberality.” — Juzan v. Toulmin, 9 Ala. 662 (9th headnote), 44 Am. Dec. 448.
The strictness of the proof also varies in accordance with the importance and-value of the document. If it be of little value, and there be no ground for suspicion that it- is designedly withheld, very strict proof is not required. Very slight evidence may suffice in such case. —Jones on Ev. § 215. Here the document was of no intrinsic value. There existed no apparent reason for withholding it. There was no dispute or doubt that the copy made was correct, and showed the land in exactly the shape and condition that all the parties thought it was in at the time of the transaction. So, if error intervened, it clearly appears that it was without injury.
Under the evidence in this case, it was for the jury to determine the relation of Bowman to the defendant in this transaction, and upon this relation depended the question whether or not his statements were binding upon the defendant or were admissible against him. We
We cannot know that, the court erred in declining to allow the evidence that McCarty, the purchaser, sued the Birmingham Matinee Club, and not the defendant, Agee, to recover the $500 paid by him. This act or suit by McCarty could not and should not bind the plaintiff, who was not shown to have had any knowledge of, to have advised,, or to have consented to, the action of McCarty.
It was likewise immaterial that defendant, acting for the Matinee Club, sold the land, shortly after the transaction in question, to another party, and at a less price than that for which plaintiff’s agent, Messer, had sold it to McCarty. This was not binding upon plaintiff.
It was competent to show that defendant, Agee, had an option to purchase the stock of the Matinee Club. This tended to show that he ivas acting for himself individually, and not as a mere agent for the corporation. This was one of the disputed issues. Moreover, evidence of this character had been admitted by both parties without objection.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.