136 P. 962 | Utah | 1913
The plaintiff seeks to recover compensation for commissions alleged to have been earned by him and his assignor's as agents in the sale of lands for the defendant. The defendant was engaged in selling lands in Sanpete County through agents who solicited and procured purchasers. The complaint is in four counts. The first for commissions alleged to have been earned by the plaintiff, and unpaid, amounting to $3152; the second for $1680, the third $169, and the fourth forty-two dollars, for commissions earned by other agents and unpaid. The defendant pleaded the general issue and payment. The case was tried to a jury, who rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff on the first count for $2770, the second $1323, the third seventy-nine dollars. The fourth was abandoned and not submitted. On the defendant’s motion for a new trial the court set the verdict aside as to the second count, but permitted it to stand as to the first and third. The defendant appeals. So the controversy on the appeal chiefly relates to the unpaid commissions claimed to have been earned by the plaintiff. Agency is not disputed.
The plaintiff contended that his right to commissions and the amount thereof were fixed and controlled by a written agreement between him and the defendant, the material parts of which are:
At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant requested the court to direct a verdict in its favor. The court refused the request. It withheld'the fourth count from the jury, and submitted the case to them on the first, second, and third. With the consent of counsel the court let the jury take the pleadings, and the bill of particulars which, on the defendant’s demand, had been furnished by the plaintiff, to ascertain and determine the issues. Then, after charging them that the burden of proof was on the plaintiff, and that “each cause of action is to be considered on its own merits whatever they may be from the evidence,” further instructed them:
“You are instructed that if you find from the evidence that the document marked ‘Exhibit 1’ dated November 1, 1909 (which was the written contract between the plaintiff and defendant referred to) constituted the only agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant company, then the claim of the plaintiff on the first cause of action as to commissions would be governed by that contract. But if you find from the evidence that such a contract was entered into and existed for a time, and was afterwards changed by mutual agreement for the mutual advantage of both parties then*541 whatever contract was finally in force when each particular transaction involved was carried on would determine tbe right of the plaintiff to a commission, if any, on that cause ■of action.”
Complaints are made of the ruling refusing to direct a verdict and of the instruction last referred to. The complaint as to the first is without merit. The evidence, even on the part of the defendant, shows that it, on account of commissions, was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $26.45. So for that, if for no other reason, was the court justified in refusing to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant; for the plaintiff, as to that amount, was entitled to a direction of a verdict in his favor.
2 “The terms of an oral contract must necessarily he .ascertained; from the testimony of the witnesses, and it is the duty of the court to instruct the jury as to the law applicable to the various phase» asising upon such testimony. But where the court presents to the jury a particular view of the facts, and this embodies the terms of a contract which are in themselves precise and explicit, the court should declare their legal effect, and it would be-error to leave this to be determined by the jury. In such a case-the rule is the same as if the contract were in writing.”
(Spraggins v. White, 108 N. C. 449, 13 S. E. 171.) The-proposition is elementary. We bad occasion to refer to it in the case of Manti Savings Bank v. Peterson, 30 Utah, 475, 86 Pac. 414, 116 Am. St. Rep. 862.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and- the cause remanded for a new trial. Costs to appellant.