185 P. 778 | Utah | 1919
Plaintiff, as a real estate and personal property broker, brought this action against the defendants in tjie district court of Salt Lake county to recover commissions alleged to have become due for services rendered under a contract for the sale or exchange of a certain pool hall owned by the defendants in Salt Lake City. The contract sued upon provides:
‘‘Please sell or trade for me the following described property at the price and terms below mentioned: Portóla Pool Hall, No. 2 West Second South street, consisting of eleven tables, one card room. Rent, $150.00. Business averages about thirty dollars per day. Price $4,000.00; $2,000.00 down, balance to suit. If you secure a purchaser for me who is ready, able and willing to buy or trade for said property at the price and terms above mentioned, or on any other terms agreed to by me, I will pay you ten per cent, commission on the above amount or on any other amount for which I agree to sell or trade.”
It is alleged, in substance, in the complaint, that the plain
Defendants’ answer denied, generally, the allegations of the complaint. Trial was to the court without a jury. ' The findings made were in plaintiff’s favor, and judgment was entered against the defendants for the amount demanded in the complaint. Defendants appeal.
The errors assigned go to the admission and exclusion of certain testimony, that the court’s findings “were not within the issues made by the pleadings or litigated upon the trial of the action,” and also that—
“The evidence is insufficient to sustain the decision in the following particulars: (1) That it does not show that the plaintiff found and produced a purchaser willing, ready, and able to buy or trade for the defendant’s property; (2) that it does not show that the plaintiff found and produced a purchaser with whom the defendants entered into a binding and enforceable contract to sell or trade their property; (3) that it does not show that the plaintiff found and produced a purchaser to whom the defendants sold or traded and conveyed their property; (4) that it does not show that the plaintiff in any manner performed its contract of employment.”
The testimony shows beyond dispute that the listing contract sued upon was entered into between the parties, and that thereafter, on October 13, 1916, the plaintiff procured one Lawrence Call to enter into an agreement with defendants for an exchange of their pool hall for certain residence pron erty situated in Salt Lake City. Under the terms of the agreement entered into between the defendants and Call, it was provided, among other things not necessary to here men
The trial court, after making findings that the aforesaid contracts had been made by the defendants, and that under the listing contract the plaintiff had procured Call to make an exchange of property with the defendants upon a property valuation of $3,000, for the pool hall, the court further found, and the finding is supported by testimony, that on October 14, 1916. the day following the signing of their contract with Call, the defendants called at the office of the plaintiff and “requested the plaintiff to reduce the amount of the commission due to the plaintiff by the defendants for acting a§_ such broker from $300 to fifty dollars and said defendants at said time and place said to plaintiff that if the plaintiff would not so reduce its said commission the defendants would not carry out any terms of said contract by them to be performed as in said contract provided. The court finds that the plaintiff then and there refused to reduce the amount of its said commission, and that thereupon and at said timé and place the defendants refused to carry out their part of said written agreement and so notified the plaintiff; and the court finds that in the manner before stated the defendants repudiated said written contract and every part thereof.”
It is contended on the part of the defendants, to use their own expression, that “the contract in question is not, on its face, enforceable as to Call because it does not show that he was ready, able and willing to make the exchange,” and also that performance of the contract entered into between the defendants and Call rested upon, the contingency that a rental of the pool hall could be had by 'Call at $150 per month. Defendants further argue:
“The contingency here must have happened before performance*381 and is, consequently, in the nature of a condition precedent, the fulfillment of which, within the time fixed for the performance of the contract, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to plead and prove, in order to entitle it to recover in this action.”
On the other hand, it is contended by the plaintiff that the condition imposed by the terms of the contract of exchange, wherein it was provided the contract should become null and void and of no effect in the event the pool hall could not be-obtained for a monthly rental of $150, was a condition subsequent, and that therefore the plaintiff had earned its commission as soon as it procured Call to enter into a binding contract with the defendants; and further that the repudiation of the contract entered into by defendants with Call relieved the plaintiff from pleading or making any proof as to the ability of Call to procure the pool hall at a rental of $150 per month.
The authorities are practically agreed that there are no technical words to distinguish between “conditions precedent” and “conditions subsequent,” but that the distinction is a matter of construction, according to the intention of the parties as manifested by the contract. The terms are therefore variously defined according to the facts and circumstances and the questions involved in a particular case. As applying to contracts, in general they are defined as follows:
“Conditions precedent call for the performance of some act or the happening of some event after a contract is entered into and upon the performance or happening of which its obligations are made to depend.” 6 R. C. L. section 290.
“A condition subsequent in a contract is one which follows the performance of the contract' and operates to defeat or annul it upon the subsequent failure of either party to comply with the condition.” 6 R. C. L. section 291.
In the contract we have under consideration, the parties thereto agree to exchange property upon the terms fixed and for considerations stated. No conditions are imposed. The agreement to make the exchange is positive and certain. As we read and interpret the language employed, the exchange of property between the parties does not rest upon any future contingency or the happening of any future event whatever. The parties explicitly agree that, if the pool hall cannot be
The plaintiff was not therefore required to plead nor prove the ability of Call to procure the pool hall at a rental of $150'per month. If Call was unable to procure the
In 9 Cyc. at page 727, the rule of pleading' is tersely stated to be:
“Thus in an action on a contract which on its face refers to a contingency on the happening of which the defendant should be discharged from liability, the plaintiff need not aver that the contingency has not happened; but if the defendant relies on it as a defense he must allege and prove that it did not happen.”
The defendants by their answer failed to allege that the pool hall was not obtainable at a monthly rental of $150. Moreover, there is testimony in the record tending to ,show that the pool hall, as a matter of fact, could have been procured by Call at the stipulated rental. It will be borne in mind that the listing card received in evidence so represents.
Among the numerous cases cited in defendants’ brief, special stress is placed upon the following cases, which, in effect, hold that before an agent is entitled to recover commissions he must produce a buyer who shall be ready, willing, and able to make the purchase on absolutely the terms fixed by the
These eases, and the many others cited in defendants’ brief, correctly state the law as we understand it to be. Counsel, however, seem to lose sight of the fact that the rulings in the cases cited by them are predicated on conditions precedent and not upon conditions subsequent as heretofore pointed out. The cases therefore are distinguishable and have no application to the rule of law that must be applied in the case at bar.
Again, we are not inclined to look with much favor upon the attempt of the defendants to repudiate their contract with the plaintiff. Nor do we think that under the circumstances, as shown by the testimony in this case, any other self-respecting court would be. The testimony tends to show that after the plaintiff had made diligent effort to make an exchange of property and a binding agreement had been procured from Call to enable them to do so the defendants openly asserted that they would not keep their engagements with Call unless the plaintiff accepted a mere pittance for the services rendered. This the plaintiff declined to do, and, under the circumstances and for the reasons stated, we feel that the findings of the trial court were right and fully justified.
What has been said with regard to the failure of the defendants to plead as a defense the fact, if such were the fact, that the condition subsequent had not been performed, with respect to the matter of Call procuring the pool hall at the stipulated rental, we think also fully justified the trial court in excluding the testimony complained of as error.
The defendants, over the objection of plaintiff, offered to prove a fact that essentially should have been alleged in their answer if they expected to offer testimony to
Under the allegations of the complaint, and over the objection of defendants, testimony was introduced tending to show the refusal of the defendants to carry out
Finding no reversible error in the record, it is ordered that the judgment of the district court be affirmed, with costs.