75 Ind. App. 90 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1921
Appellee filed a complaint alleging that appellant and appellee on March 12, 1918, entered into a written contract whereby appellant appointed appellee as his agent for a period of eight months to find and procure a purchaser for a certain farm owned by appellant; that appellee proceeded to advertise said farm for sale and to find a purchaser for the same; that before the expiration of the contract he found a purchaser who was ready and willing to purchase said farm for $16,000; that he notified appellant that he had found such purchaser, but that appellant refused to convey said farm to said purchaser or to pay appellee the commission due him. Said contract was made a part of the complaint, and by its terms appellant agreed to pay appellee as commission all he should receive over and above $15,000, to assist in securing said commission, and to pay the same out of the first money received. It also provided that when the property therein described was sold, traded,' contracted, or offered to be accepted through appellee, verbally or in writing, at the price given, the commission should be due and payable out of the first money received.
The cause was tried by the court and resulted in a judgment in favor of appellee for $1,000, from which appellant appeals, and assigns as error the action of the court (1) in overruling his demurrer to the complaint; (2) in overruling his motion for a new trial.
Passing the first assignment for the present, we proceed to a consideration of the action of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial. The specifications in this motion are that the court erred (1) in admitting in evidence the written agreement between appellant and appellee; (2) in permitting the appellee to testify that under the said agreement he was entitled to a commission of $1,000; (3) and that the decision is not sustained by sufficient evidence.
. “If said property is sold or contracted during the life of this agreement, then the above-named owner agrees to pay said (agent) Wm. E. Ogle the sum of $......all over $15,000 commission.”
The contráct now under consideration did not necessarily fix the selling price, although it did fix the minimum price for which appellant would sell, and provided that appellee should receive as his commission all the farm sold for over and above $15,000. The contract fixed the amount of commission or compensation which should be paid to appellee, in the event he found a purchaser for such real estate, with sufficient certainty. It is true that parol evidence was necessary in order to show the amount which the purchaser was to pay for the farm. This, however, did not vary the terms of the contract. There was no error in admitting the contract in evidence.
Appellee testified in behalf of himself that he had procured a purchaser for $16,000, on terms that were satisfactory to appellant; that appellant, after being informed of -such fact, went to town to see if he could reserve his wheat crop; that an appointment was made for appellant and the purchaser to meet at appellee’s office the following Saturday for the purpose of drawing
The contract fixing the amount of commission to be all over $15,000 having been introduced in evidence, and there being evidence that appellee had procured a purchaser at $16,000, it was a mere matter of calculation to determine that the amount of commission due appellee was $1,000. • Under, such circumstances, the error, if any, in permitting the witness to answer the question was harmless.
The purchaser under that contract would have the right, upon the payment of the purchase price, to a deed of conveyance and to immediate possession- and, in so far as appellee is concerned, appellant had no right to dictate any different terms. As between appellant and appellee, appellant had no right to refuse to sell the farm because the purchaser would not pay for the wheat crop, or would not postpone the transfer of title and possession until the fall of the next year after the wheat crop had been harvested.
There is evidence that the purchaser procured by appellee was ready, able and willing to buy the farm, that appellant entered into negotiations with him and that the sale would have been made, had not appellant demanded and insisted on terms and reservations not contained in his contract with appellee. * There is ample evidence to sustain the decision of the court. There was no error in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.