The plaintiff below, .defendants in error here, copartners, doing business as the Lockhart Land & Loan Company, brought this action against M. B. Burke, defendant below, plaintiff in error here, to recover a commission alleged to have been earned as agents in producing a purchaser for certain farm land owned by the defendant Burke. It is undisputed that by letter dated April 23, 1919, the defendant listed his farm with the plaintiffs for sale at the price of $115 per acre net to him, on -terms calling for a cash payment down, and three deferred-payments of varying amounts, running over three years, the balance above that to he secured by a mortgage running ten years, and providing, further, that the purchaser should assume a mortgage then on the land. On May 27th following', the Lockharts wrote the defendant, stating that they had made a contract for the sale of his land at the net price of $115 per acre, the terms of payment, however, varying from those prescribed by the defendant, and saying nothing about the assumption of the then existing mortgage. Upon receipt of this letter the defendant Burke wired, taking his farm off the market, and stating that he would meet plaintiff at Watertown on the Monday or Tuesday following. The parties met in accordance
ft is clear that the only authority the plaintiffs had to act in the premises was the letter of the defendant referred to, and that, up to the time of the telegram rescinding the agency, the plaintiffs had not produced a purchaser ready, willing, and able to buy on the terms set forth in the defendant’s letter of April 23d. The lower court seemed to have been of this opinion, but allowed the case to go to the jury, because the plaintiffs claimed that, although the terms of the proposed sale submitted by them varied from those prescribed by the defendant, yet that was not the reason given by the defendant for his refusal to consummate the deal when the parties met in Watertown. The court instructed the jury that, if the defendant refused to carry out the sale because the terms were different from those prescribed by him, and so stated to the plaintiffs, they should find for the defendant; but that, if they should find from the evidence the defendant refused to carry out the sale, without basing his refusal upon that fact, to wit, that the terms were different from those prescribed hy him, and did not so state to the plaintiffs, then he could not rely upon that as a defense, and the verdict in that event should be for the plaintiffs. No exception was taken to the charge. The defendant, however, at the close of the testimony, moved and requested the court to direct the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant, on the ground that the plaintiffs had wholly failed to prove a cause of action. This motion.was denied, and proper exception taken.
The judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the case remanded.