201 F. 329 | 6th Cir. | 1912
The general facts sufficiently appear in the opinion of this court upon the former review. 158 Fed. 49, 85 C. C. A. 379. Upon the second trial, the cause was submitted to the jury, which gave to plaintiff a verdict for his claimed 5 per cent, commission upon the purchase price of the entire 60,000 acres .purchased by the Cleveland-Cliffs Company. This company, the defendant below, complains of the trial and judgment upon four chief grounds: (1) That the undisputed evidence showed the final purchase to have been disconnected from plaintiff’s initial service, and hence a verdict for defendant should have been instructed; (2) that recovery was permitted upon a theory different from that pleaded by plaintiff and followed earlier in the case; (3) that Redfern, defendant’s agent, clearly had no authority to bind defendant by the contract upon which plaintiff relies, or that, at least, the question of authority was for the jury, and that it was error to charge that the authority did exist; and (4) that the verdict was erroneously permitted to include subject-matter not covered by the contract in suit.
1. Plaintiff’s services, claimed to pertain to this transaction, were rendered in October and November, 1900. The sale, on which he claims commission, was not agreed upon until April, 1903. It was plaintiff’s theory that the negotiations initiated by him resulted in the purchase; .it was defendant’s theory that such negotiations were terminated by the owner’s letter of May 20, 1901, quoted in the previous opinion, and that the dealings which did result in the sale cannot be carried further back than October, 1902, when one of defendant’s agents (not connected with Redfern or his department) suggested to Mr. Mather, defendant’s president, that it should purchase this tract —or perhaps July, 1902, when Gen. Alger, president of the Manistique Company, the owner, spoke to Mr. Mather on the subject.
In the former opinion, and apparently on the trial now under review, the necessary connection, between plaintiff’s offer in 1900 and the later negotiations, was found in Gen. Alger’s letter of December 23, 1902. The testimony on the second trial clearly shows that the “purchase of our 30,000 acres” which Mr. Millen “brings for consid
“The application, however, does not cover the railroad. Do you wish to further consider the purchase of the land and the road?”
It thus clearly goes back to some previous negotiations; but'in view of the present record, showing not only that the “purchase brought” by Mr. Millen was a proposition from others, but showing that Gen. Alger and Mr. Mather had been corresponding in October and November regarding the purchase of the land and the railroad, we cannot find, in this letter of itself or in the correspondence, any reaching back beyond the conversation between them in July, 1902, which conversation is, in this correspondence, expressly said to be its basis.
It does not follow that there is no connection between plaintiff’s offer and the ultimate sale, just because this letter does not of itself furnish the necessary link. It is plaintiff’s theory that he first, in October and November, brought this tract to defendant’s attention as being suitable for purchase by it; that it then negotiated with the owner until May, 1901, when the owner withdrew the tract from'sale, but with notice to defendant that the withdrawal was only temporary and the offer would be renewed; that defendant was so interested that, in preparation for the expected renewal, it made, during the summer of 1901, an extended examination of the lands (probably at large expense and covering long time); that, as the result of this examination, it determined, or became inclined, to buy the lands when the right time should come; that the delay was merely to allow the owner to get more anxious to sell, and each waited for the other; that Gen. Alger’s conversation in July, 1902, was what defendant was waiting for, and was, in fact, though not in form, a renewal of the suspended deal; and that Mr. Mather’s letter of October, 1902, formally opening the final negotiations, was not merely the result of Gen. Alger’s suggestion, but was a step in the development of defendant’s plan of purchase formed because of the examination which followed from plaintiff’s offer. This theory would entitle plaintiff to recover under such a contract as he claims, if he could convince the jury that it was the true theory rightfully to be inferred from all the facts; and a verdict accordingly would not have been without support. It follows that it was not error to deny defendant’s motion for an instructed verdict. However, this theory, the only one justifying a recovery, was not sharply brought to the court’s attention by plaintiff’s requests nor by the court distinctly put before the jury, and we find no exceptions presenting the matter in this light. Whether, under these circumstances, we ought to reverse on this account alone, we need not consider, as there is, elsewhere, sufficiently formal cause for reversal.
It will be noted that if the examination of the lands which, on this record, tends to make out the essential continuity, did in fact result, as defendant seems to claim, wholly from another source, operating like an intervening cause in the law of negligence, then this examination cannot serve as the necessary tie.
Nor can we imperatively apply the rule of reasonable time and say that more than a reasonable time elapsed. This subject-matter ordinarily bears on the connection between offer and sale, and serves to raise a presumption that the two were connected or were separate; but here there is no room for its application, Plaintiff must show a direct connection along the line we have indicated, or else must fail. A mere nearness in time woffld not alone prevail against otherwise undisputed evidence showing another origin for the sale; nor is there remoteness of time which of itself would defeat the claim. The issue is sharp and clear. Either the sale had its beginning in July, .1902, and plaintiff had nothing to do with it, or else it followed from plaintiff’s offer without any fatal interruption, and in the manner above indicated, and the conversation of July, 1902, had nothing to do with it, except to make an excuse for taking up again the deal temporarily laid aside. One or the other of these things is true. In either case, the question of reasonable time cuts no figure.
Coming to the next matter urged, we cannot find any insuperable obstacle to recovery in the fact that the descriptions of the hardwood lands and the purchase price, as finally fixed, were different from those specified by plaintiff’s offer. The hardwood lands specified and those purchased indicate a general identity of tract, and the modification of terms was not beyond the variations which the contract might contemplate.
2. Defendant complains that plaintiff declared, and until the last trial prosecuted his action, upon the theory of a broker’s commission for negotiating and consummating a sale; that confessedly He never
There is no warrant for extending plaintiff’s claim over lands not marked on the plat which he delivered to Redfern. No matter if plaintiff did say to Redfern that he was offering all the lands the Manistique Company had in those counties, in the same conversation he proffered the plat as a specific description of the lands about which he was talking, and it is clear that, if a contract had been then and there closed with no further details, defendant would not have been’ entitled to demand 30,000 acres not shown on the plat. If plaintiff’s general theory of fact is correct, then defendant, when about closing the purchase, was bound to remember that upon the lands covered by this bargain with plaintiff it must also pay him his commission. In such case, defendant’s officers would have been amply justified, even if they had before them plaintiff’s present version of everything which had occurred, in supposing that their bargain referred only to those lands which had been specified on the plat which was the definite materialization of the more general talk.
For the errors in the subject-matter, last mentioned, the judgment must be reversed, with’ costs, and a new trial ordered. We cannot be sure that the present record indicates with certainty the amount of excess thus erroneously embodied in the verdict so as to fix an amount to be remitted by which plaintiff could cure this error; but, if this amount could be ascertained, we would not be inclined to exercise our discretion in so avoiding another trial in a case where, as here, we think the trial which has been had was based upon a misconception of the main issue.