52 Mo. 278 | Mo. | 1873
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought before a Justiee of the Peace to recover the amount of an account filed for commissions for the sale of a house and lot on McLure Avenue. A trial was had before a Justice, where the defendant recovered a judgment.
The plaintiff appealed to the St. Louis Circuit Court, where on a trial anew, he recovered judgment for $75; from this judgment defendant appealed to General Term, where the judgment rendered at the Special Term was affirmed, and the defendant appealed to this court.
The facts shown by the record are, that plaintiff is a real estate agent, and that as such the defendant employed him to make sale for him of a house and lot at the price of six thousand dollars. There is some conflict in the evidence in reference to the exact terms of the contract, but the evidence tends most strongly to show that plaintiff undertook to sell the house and lot for 2 1-2 per cent, on the price, and that the plaintiff was to also write the deed without further charge, and that nothing was to be charged unless plaintiff made a sale. The evidence further shows, that the plaintiff did effect a sale of the property, which was satisfactory to the defend-
To the giving of this instruction the defendant objected and excepted.
After the rendition of the verdict by the jury, the defen d-.ant filed his motion to set aside the verdict and grant him a new trial, setting forth as grounds of his motion, that improper evidence had been admitted, that improper instructions had been given, that proper instructions had been refused, and that the verdict was against the law and the evidence.
This motion being overruled, the defendant again excepted.
The court then rendered a final judgment against the defendant for the amount of the verdict, from which an appeal was taken to the General Term of said court, where the judgment of Special Term was affirmed, and from which the defendant appealed to this court.
The first point made by the defendant in the argument in this court as a ground for reversing the judgment in this case is, that the court permitted witness Mason to testify on the trial that defendant had no title to the land charged to have been sold to Mason by the plaintiff'. It is contended that the want of title could only be proved by the production of title papers, so that the court as a matter of law could say whether there was title or not. It is very true, that the title to land is usually to be proved by the title papers, and that experts would not be permitted to testify as to the legal effect of a deed, but that was not done in this case. The witness testifies, that it was found that defendant had no title to the lot; he does not state this as an expert, but as a fact, and it might be that the very reason why he had no title was, because he ■ had no title papers to produce. It was however, stated in this case, that the only title that defendant had, was by virtue of the purchase of a title of his' brother to the lot under a deed of trust given by his brother in his lifetime, and who had before the purchase died, and that defendant was his administra
The instructions given in this case were proper, and fairly placed the case before the jury.
The plaintiff had undertaken to sell defendant’s lot for a commissionhe negotiated a sale, which was satisfactory to the defendant. The defendant must of necessity malee the deed and convey the lot. This he failed to do. The plaintiff had done all that could be done by him, and if the contract and sale were defeated by the fault of the defendant, the plaintiff having done everything on his part that he could do is entitled to his pay. This case comes exactly within the principle of the case of Bailey vs. Chapman, 41 Mo.,536 : see also, 21 Barb., 145.
There were a number of other instructions asked for by the defendant, which were refused, some of which were perhaps abstractly proper, but the principles contained in them were either covered by the instructions given, or not sustained by the evidence, or not applicable ‘to the evidence in the case.
. And the case having been fairly presented by the instructions given, no further notice will be taken of the instructions refused.
the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.