168 Mo. App. 206 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
Respondents, real estate brokers, doing business as Dillard Brothers Realty .Company, sued appellants, who are husband and wife, for commission on a sale of real estate. Appellants filed a demurrer to the evidence which was overruled and judgment rendered against them. Their contention here is that, under the law and the undisputed facts, respondents had no case.
Plaintiffs’ petition says they were employed to procure a purchaser for, or m'ake a sale of, defendants’ farm, or any part thereof. The evidence, however, is that in selling only a part of said farm,'respondents were authorized and employed to sell only those parts indicated above. In other words, plaintiffs were employed to procure a purchaser for, or to make a sale
About the middle of July, 1910, one of respondents found a Mr. Emery Rutt and took him out to appellants ’ farm, introduced him to Mrs. Field and tried to sell him the west eighty. The agent claims that he tried to sell him the whole farm and that Rutt saw more than the aforesaid eighty. Rutt, however, says he went out there wanting only eighty acres, that he was shown only the west eighty and did not consider any more than eighty, or any other part of said farm. Mrs. Field says that when the agent introduced Rutt to her he said, “I have brought Mr. Rutt out for the purpose of buying this eighty acres.” Whatever may be the truth of this, the undisputed evidence is that the .negotiations had between Rutt and Mrs. Field and between Rutt and the agent were solely over the west eighty. Respondents admit that the price discussed' was solely on the west eighty or the whole farm, and not upon any seventy acres. Rutt objected to the poor and broken north forty and to the price of $165 per acre or $13,200 for the eighty. He and the agent left and on the way home Rutt told the agent that if he could get the eighty for $10,000 he might consider it. But these terms the agent was unable to procure. Rutt says the agent never said anything to him about it afterwards, but the latter claims that he mentioned the matter to him at different times but it was always in reference to the west eighty. He was unable to get anywhere with him, however, as Rutt would not even consider terms. The agent never took Rutt to the farm again, nor did he try to sell him any land other than the west eighty, nor was he requested by the appellants to sell any other particular part. In fact, attempts to sell to Rutt ceased on the part of plaintiffs.
Matters ran along thus from July, 1910, to June
It will be seen from the foregoing statement that, if respondents are entitled to commission, it is based
■ Judgment reversed.