173 Iowa 436 | Iowa | 1916
The defendant, Elise Beuthien, wife of her codefendant, M. Beuthien, owned certain property in the town of Durant, which she sold and conveyed to one Miller. The plaintiff sues both husband and wife to recover a commission upon such sale, alleging that he procured Miller to make the purchase, as he had been previously authorized to do by the defendant M. Beuthien. The defendants, separately answering, deny plaintiff’s agency in the matter of said sale, and deny his right to a commission thereon.
We are of the opinion that the exception is well taken, and that verdict should,have been directed in favor of said defendant. The record is wholly barren of evidence that plaintiff was ever employed by or for this defendant, or that she knew or understood that, in whatever he did with reference to the sale, plaintiff was acting or claiming to act as her representative. His conduct in her presence and his conversations with her or in her presence were not at all inconsistent with the theory that, in so far as he represented anybody in the transaction, it was the buyer, rather than the seller, and this is what she claims to have supposed. It is to be borne in mind that plaintiff has sued in this case upon an alleged express contract, and not upon a quantum meruit, and he must recover upon proof of the making of such express -contract and the performance of the agreed service, or not at all. Hunt v. Tuttle, 125 Iowa 676. Applying that rule to the record in this case, there should have been no recovery against Mrs. Beuthien.
In this respect, also, we think the objection must be sustained. None knows better than does this court the high character of the trial judge and his unimpeachable purpose to give all litigants a fair hearing and to do equal and exact justice to all, without respect to rank or station. But judges are human, and the weariness and vexations attendant upon a laborious term of court sometimes lead to departures from' that guarded poise and self-control which are wont to mark its conduct of trials; and under such circumstances, it is fatally easy to do irreparable injury to the cause of a litigant-without realizing it, and very certainly without intending it. We shall not burden this opinion with any extensive recitation of the record in detail at this point. It is enough to mention that the examination of the defendant M. Beuthien by his own counsel was very frequently interrupted by the court; and, on several occasions, the questioning by the court had the appearance of severe cross-examination; and that such examinations, in the aggregate, are sufficient to fill several
Further discussion is unnecessary. For the reasons given,