Contract of agency for sale of real estate. Damages for breach. Appellee Rickel sued appellant Albany Land Company for damages for the breach of a written contract which was in these words: “This agreement made and entered into this 11th day of January, 1895, by and between the Albany Land Company of Delaware county, Indiana, and Wyllis D. Rickel and Thomas H. Sprott of Auburn, Indiana, doing business under the firm name and style of Rickel & Sprott, witnesseth, that the said Rickel & Sprott are to have charge of the real estate and personal property belonging to the Albany Land Company at the town of Albany, Delaware county, Indiana, and to sell and dispose of the same at such prices as the said Rickel & Sprott may deem to be to the best advantage of the said land company, and to locate factories upon the land of the said land company, upon such terms as may hereafter be agreed to by and between the parties locating the factories and the said land company. Said land company is to pay said Rickel & Sprott for their services in locating said factories, for taking charge and managing the affairs of said company, a commission of ten per cent, upon the sales of all lots and other real estate made by said Rickel & Sprott. The land company agrees to set aside 150 of their said lots which said Rickel & Sprott are to sell to persons residing in said town of Albany with an agreement with the purchasers of said lots that the money paid by them for said lots shall be used as bonuses to parties locating factories upon the lands of said company in said town of Albany, said land company agrees to set aside 100 lots to be sold to persons residing in various towns in the State of Indiana, at such prices as the said Rickel & Sprott may deem expedient for the purpose' of advertising said town and inducing other persons to purchase lots of said company. It is further agreed and understood that the said Rickel & Sprott shall have the exclusive sale of said real estate herein mentioned. In witness whereof, wo have hereunto set our hands and
The complaint, which was founded on the contract, in substance, alleged: That prior to the making of the contract the plaintiff and one Sprott were partners as real estate agents and brokers, residing and doing a large and profitable business in the town of Auburn, Indiana, in the firm name of Rickel & Sprott. Appellant Albany Land Company was a corporation owning about one thousand lots in the town of Albany, Indiana, which latter town had about one thousand inhabitants, was located in the gas field, and an eligible and favorable place for the location of manufacturing concerns; that the company, desiring to locate factories at Albany, and thereby create a- demand and market for its lots, solicited the plaintiff’s firm, which had much experience and skill in the location of manufacturing plants, to enter into said contract; that after entering into the contract the .plaintiff, for his firm of Rickel & Sprott, gave up his and their business at Auburn, and went to Albany, a distance of ninety miles, and at once entered upon a performance of said contract on the part of Rickel & Sprott, and did, at his firm’s expense, in many newspapers, and by printed circulars distributed through the mails, advertise the advantages of Albany as a good and economical place for factories and for investments in. town lots, and did visit many places in this and in other states, and personally solicited the location of factories and the purchase of lots, and did succeed in locating factories on the company’s said lots, and in selling a large mimber of the lots; that on March 13, 1896, with the full knowledge and acquiescence of the company, Sprott, for a valuable consideration, assigned to the plaintiff all his interest in the business under said contract; that after said assignment the plaintiff continued to perform the conditions of the contract, with the full knowledge and acquiescence of the company, and did
The appellant’s demurrer to the complaint was overruled. The case was put at issue and submitted to a jury. Verdict and judgment for appellee, over a motion for a new trial, for $1,500.
Three alleged errors are assigned: (1) The overruling of the demurrer to the complaint; (2) the overruling of appellant’s motion for judgment on the answers to interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict; (3) the overruling of the motion for a new trial.
1. It is merely suggested, not argued, that the complaint is bad because the foundation contract is invalid for want of consideration, for want of mutuality, and for want of a definite term of existence. The complaint is clearly good against either and all of these alleged infirmities.
2. The jury returned with their general verdict answers to 535 interrogatories, which interrogatories and answers occupy 115 typewritten pages of the record. Four hundred forty-six of these interrogatories were requested by counsel for appellant, but no attempt has been made in their brief to summarize, or state in narrative form, the facts disclosed by the answers. They have contented them
It has been uniformly held by this court that special facts found by the jury in answer to interrogatories propounded to them will not prevail against the general verdict, unless such special facts, when considered of themselves, and after indulging all reasonable presumptions against them, are found inherently so repugnant and inconsistent with the general verdict, supported by all reasonable intendments, that they can not be reconciled therewith, and one or the other is necessarily erroneous. The reason for the rule as stated in City of South Bend v. Turner, 156 Ind. 418, 54 L. R. A. 396, 83 Am. St. 200, is “that the jury is required to pronounce upon all the issuable facts proved in the case, while the court in testing the force of isolated facts disclosed by answers to interrogatories does not know and can not know, what other facts touching the same matters were rightfully before the jury to justify their Verdict.” Therefore any fact that might have been properly proved under the issues must be considered as proved, in determinihg the legal force of the special findings as against the general verdict.
It is first contended that the contract sued on shows that the employment of Rickel & Sprott counted on the joint
The finding that Sprott assigned his interest in the contract to Rickel is not in conflict with the general verdict. If it be assumed that the assignment effected a dissolution of the partnership, and that a dissolution operated ipso facto as a revocation of the agency, which may be said to be the general rule, still it was alleged in the complaint, and provable under the issues, that the assignment was made with the knowledge and consent of-the company, and we must assume that it was so proved. And a knowing assent to the assignment was equivalent to an agreement to substiute the assignee for the assignor.
But it is insisted by appellant that the findings show that the company gave no consent to the assignment, and the following interrogatory and answer are relied upon: “Did the Albany Land Company ever consent to the assignment by .Sprott of his interest in the contract between the firm of Rickel & Sprott and said Albany Land Company to said Rickel? A. Evidence not conclusive.” This answer amounts to nothing, because it, does not pretend to state what the fact was, as shown by a preponderance of the evidence. The answer that the evidence was not conclusive implies that there was evidence upon that point, but which did not reach that degree of cogency and force that may be termed conclusive. What the weight of the evidence showed is not stated, and the incident must, therefore, be treated as if the interrogatory had been left wholly unanswered. But conceding appellant’s contention that the language is equivalent to a negative answer, still the general verdict must stand. Other findings show that after the assignment Rickel proceeded with the business of the
3. Over appellant’s objection the cause was submitted to a jury impaneled from the bystanders. This action of the court is claimed to be erroneous. The record shows that the cause was put at issue at the September term, 1900, and during that term set for trial before a jury, requested by appellee, on the 28th day of January, 1901, the same being a day in the next succeeding term. The members of the regular panel drawn for the January term had been summoned to appear on January 30, and were not in attendance upon the court when said cause was called for trial on the 28th. Appellant demanded the regular panel, and objected to a special jury. The court entered an order reciting the absence of the regular panel, and that the business of the court required the calling of a special jury from the bystanders; whereupon a special jury was called; and appellant having exhausted his peremptory challenges, and challenged all persons for cause who were legally disqualified, over his objection, the trial proceeded.
, “In all civil cases the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.” So says the state Constitution, article f, §20.
These statutes apply to both criminal and civil eases. §528 Burns 1901. It is clearly implied from these enactments that the provision for the impaneling of the jury from the regular panel is directory only, to be obeyed as far as a proper dispatch of business before the court will allow, but if for any cause the regular panel is not available, and, in the sound discretion’ of the presiding judge, the business of. the court requires the impaneling of a special jury for a particular case, it may be properly done. So it has been, held that when a case is called, and the regular panel is out considering their verdict in another case, the court may order a special jury from the bystanders. Evarts v. State, 48 Ind. 422; Myers v. Moore, 3 Ind. App. 226, 229. And when the regular panel has failed to agree, and become thereby disqualified in the case, a special jury may be ordered and a retrial had at the same term, over the objection of the defendant. Pierce v. State, 67 Ind. 354. Where the proper, officers have failed or refused to draw and impanel a jury, “or where, for any other cause whatever, no traverse jury shall be present at any term of the court, it shall be lawful, and is hereby made the duty of the circuit court, if the business thereof require
It was manifestly the legislative intent to give the court, in controlling and expediting its business, a large discretion in determining when the calling of a special jury is required, and it is only when it clearly appears that a party has been unnecessarily deprived of a trial before the regular panel that the action of the court will be reviewed.' Gillett, Crim. Law, §827.
The record here shows that the case was at a previous term set for trial on January 28, before a jury requested by appellee, and that the regular panel was summoned to appear on January 30. Why the jury was not summoned to appear until two days after the beginning of jury trials does not appear — whether by the fault or inadvertence of the court or the officers, or whether by agreement of the litigants. However it was brought about, it may well be assumed that the trial calendar was full of other cases, that the witnesses were in attendance, and that a postponement would delay and disarrange the other business of the court. We must, therefore, presume that the court had justifiable cause for ordering the special jury. Appellant cites Wilson v. State, 42 Ind. 224, in support of its position; but it is apparent that since the decision of that case this court has broken away from the narrow limits there laid down, and that case can no longer be regarded as an authority.
We find no error in the record. Judgment affirmed.