174 Mo. App. 215 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is a suit by a real estate agent for his commissions. The finding and judgment were for defendants, and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
Defendants owned 120. acres of land which they desired to sell, and plaintiff was engaged in blocking parcels of mineral land together and selling it for mining purposes to those engaged in such business. It appears that defendants employed plaintiff by a written contract to sell their lands to one Gorge J. Cole, who was engaged in the mining business in St. Francois county. By the terms of the contract of employment, defendants agreed to pay plaintiff five per cent on the purchase price, which, according to an option executed concurrently therewith, was to be sixty dollars per acre. The written contract by which plaintiff was employed is as follows:
' “We, the undersigned, hereby agree to pay Charles Cole the sum of five per cent of the purchase price of our land this day optioned to George J. Cole, on condition that the sale is made to the said Cole. (Signed) John Crump, Martha Crump.”
On the same day and concurrently with the execution of this writing, defendants executed an option
Plaintiff interested George J. Cole, the proposed purchaser, in the land and the evidence tends to prove that he persuaded him to purchase the same but not immediately. Before the same was consummated, the option expired and defendants executed a new one to George J. Cole, whereby they agreed to convey the lands to him any time within one year after its date for the price and on the terms thereinbefore mentioned. The time limit prescribed in the second option was permitted to expire without the sale being finally concluded, but four months after its expiration, George J. Cole purchased the land from defendants at the price of sixty-five dollars per acre.
The evidence tends to prove that the negotiations were pending from the time plaintiff interested Cole under the first option until the conveyance was finally executed by defendants to the Irondale Lead Company, which corporation,it appears,was organized by George J.- Cole to tahe the title to such land. While the evidence is abundant, and, indeed, not denied, that plaintiff interested George J. Cole in the land, who agreed to take itj it does not appear that he personally negotiated the subsequent, that is, the extension of the original, option thereon between defendants and George J. Cole, or personally participated in closing the deal when the conveyance of land was finally made to the' Irondale Lead Company. The second option, that is,, the extension of the first, and the subsequent purchase of the land after its expiration, appear to have been negotiated with defendants by George J. Cole, to suit his own convenience but in furtherance
Though the employment contract above copied contemplates that plaintiff should have five per cent commission on the purchase price for selling the land to George J. Cole, it does not in terms require or stipulate that such commissions are to be paid only in ease the sale is made -under the option taken concurrent therewith and within the period prescribed in
It should' be said here, however, that plaintiff claims five per cent on sixty dollars per acre only— that is, the price stipulated in the original option— and lays no claim to a commission on the additional five dollars per acre received through defendant’s own efforts. Therefore, his right to recover commissions on such additional purchase money is not involved in the case now under consideration here. It is entirely clear that the question as to whether or not plaintiff was the procuring cause of the sale was for the jury, and this is true though the sale was finally concluded after the time limit of the second option had expired and at an increased price over that first demanded.
Throughout the trial, considerable stress was laid upon the fact that the sale was finally consummated by conveying the property to the Irondale Lead Company, and it was urged that such was not a sale to George J. Cole within the terms of the employment and the option. But it is clear the question was one for the jury. The mere fact that the deed is executed to a third party by the owners of the property is wholly immaterial on the right of the agent to recover his commissions on account of the sale, provided it appears that such was the manner the parties chose in effectuating the sale which the agent initiated under his employment. [See Goodson v. Embleton, 106 Mo. App. 77, 80 S. W. 22.] But the jury should be re
It appears that George J. Cole organized the Irondale Lead Company shortly before the deed from defendants to it was executed. The capital stock of this corporation is one million dollars, divided into 10,000 shares. George- J. Cole is one of its directors and the president of the company. ITe owned all of the preferred stock — that is, 2000 shares — and 7996 shares of the common stock. In other words, he owned all of the stock of the company save four shares of the common stock which were held by four other persons who together with him constituted the board of directors. From these facts and others in evidence, it was certainly competent for the jury to find that the sale made to the Irondale Lead Company, of which George J. Cole was president, was tantamount, under the terms of plaintiff’s employment, to a sale to George J. Cole in person.
For plaintiff, the court instructed that a recovery might be had though it did not appear defendants were under a legal obligation as by an option contract to convey the land at the time the conveyance was executed, provided the land was conveyed to George J. Cole or a corporation at his instance in consummation of a sale originally initiated by plaintiff under his employment.. The theory of this instruction is sound and in accord with what is said above, but defendants ’ instruction No. 1 appears to be in conflict with it when considered in view of the facts, or, at least, highly misleading. By defendants ’ instruction the jury were told that before plaintiff could recover they must find from the evidence that defendants’ land was sold “and transferred to the said Irondale Lead Company, in pursuance of and under the renewal option from defendants to George J. Cole, and unless you so