30 Ind. App. 357 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1903
This was an action by appellee, a real estate agent, to recover a commission for the sale of real estate. His contract with appellant was as follows: “Eocliester, Indiana, July 27, 1899. The undersigned hereby places in the hands of Peter Biddinger, real estate agent, for sale, the following described lands: The south half of the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section sixteen; also ninety-five acres off of the south side of the northeast quarter of section twenty-one, all in township
It is averred in appellee’s complaint that appellant was the owner of real estate heretofore described at the time of the execution of the contract; that he is still the owner of the same; that on the 10th day of February, 1900, appellee found a purchaser for said real estate in the person of one George Clinger, who was ready, able, and willing to purchase said real estate, and pay therefor the sum of $65 per acre, and to pay $2,000 cash, and was able and willing to arrange to pay the balance of the purchase money on terms satisfactory to appellant; that appellant then and there notified appellee that he refused to sell said real estate. The three paragraphs of complaint are based upon the same facts. Appellant’s answer was a general denial. The trial was by a jury. There was a verdict for appellee in the sum of $225.21. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and judgment was entered for the amount of the verdict.
The only question presented by this appeal is upon the assignment of error that the trial court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial. Counsel for appellant argue under this assignment that there is no evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury upon the material question in the case. If there is any evidence in the record to prove that
A brief resume of the evidence shows that appellant priced his land to the prospective purchaser produced by appellee at $75 per acre; that nothing was said about any other price until after the terms of the payment had been agreed upon, when the prospective purchaser informed appellant that he would take the land at $65 per acre on those terms. His offer was refused by appellant, who left the room, and the meeting came to an end. This covers the whole scope of the evidence, and every inference properly deducible from it. There is no evidence to show that the minds of the contracting parties met upon any terms or conditions, as applied to the deferred payments, upon a basis of $65 per acre. “Assent necessarily implies a meeting of the minds of all contracting parties, a coming together upon the common ground of a mutual understanding of facts and of subject-matter. Until all understand alike, there can be no assent, and, therefore, no contract.” 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), 113. The evidence does not show such a condition existing in the mind of the appellant in this case as amounts to assenting to the proposed terms of the deferred payments, which, under the conditions of the contract, must be made to his satisfaction. The motion for a new trial ought to have been sustained.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to the tidal court to sustain the motion for a new trial.