15 S.W.2d 118 | Tex. App. | 1929
In this suit appellant seeks to recover from appellee a real estate commission which he claims is due him by reason of his having exchanged a tract of land belonging to appellee for land owned by T. B. Stafford. Appellant sought to recover a 2 1/2 per cent. commission on the exchange value and 5 per cent. on the cash received by appellee for her land. Appellee, among other defenses, alleged that she had employed her son, Jim Tinsley, to sell or exchange her property, and had agreed with him to and had paid him $250 for selling said land to said Stafford, and denied specifically that appellant was her agent or that he had anything to do with the exchange, or that she had employed him in any way, and alleged that, by reason thereof, appellant was not entitled to recover.
The cause was tried to a jury, and, at the conclusion of the testimony, appellant requested a peremptory instruction, which was refused, and the cause submitted on two special issues. No other issues were requested. In answer to the issues submitted, the jury found that appellant was not the procuring cause of the exchange of lands, and that his services in procuring the exchange were of no value. Based on said findings of the jury, the trial court entered judgment denying appellant any relief.
Appellant excepted to the portion of appellee's answer which alleged she had paid to her son, Jim Tinsley, $250 as a real estate commission for his having as a real estate broker consummated the exchange of her property with Mr. Stafford, and objected when the testimony was offered in evidence by Mrs. Tinsley and her son, Jim Tinsley, to the effect that she had paid said $250 for said services, on the ground that said pleadings did not present any defense and the evidence offered in support thereof was irrelevant, immaterial, and highly prejudicial. The trial court overruled appellant's special exception, and overruled his objection to said testimony. Appellant by proper assignments and propositions presents the trial court's rulings with reference thereto as error. We sustain these assignments. Almost this identical question was involved in the case of Stephenson v. Jackson (Tex.Civ.App.)
The trial court by the first question asked the jury, in substance, whether appellant was the procuring cause of the exchange of the lands, and defined procuring cause in the following language: "By `procuring cause' is meant the efficient inducing and controlling cause from which proceeds continuous and unbroken negotiations from the acts of the agent to the final consummation of the sale."
Appellant objected to this definition because it was in the abstract and was inclined to confuse the jury and lead them to believe that, although the plaintiff may have actually procured the party with whom the defendant dealt directly and made the sale, he would not be the procuring cause of the sale. He further objected because it did not include the proposition of law that, even though the plaintiff was not present and did not participate in the final consummation of the sale, and though the sale was made upon different terms from those discussed between the parties, if the plaintiff procured the party with whom the defendant dealt directly, and if through his efforts he became the procuring cause and brought the parties together, he would still be the procuring cause of the exchange. In connection with said objection, appellant presented a definition embodying said contentions. The trial court overruled appellant's objections and refused to give the definition submitted. The facts in this case show without dispute that Mrs. Tinsley owned 206 acres of land in Hill county, which was incumbered with a $10,000 lien, which she was extremely anxious to exchange for property clear of debt; that Jim Tinsley, her son, had charge of her affairs to the extent that she never made any deal or transaction with reference to her property without consulting him; that she told him of her desire, and that a number of real estate men had talked with Jim Tinsley about the matter and had taken prospective purchasers out to see the land; that appellant, a real estate agent in Hillsboro, talked with Jim Tinsley about the matter, and he told appellant that there was no necessity of seeing his mother, that he had charge of the matter for her; that appellant told Jim Tinsley about Mr. Stafford, who owned a 205-acre tract in Hill county which was rough farming, land, clear of debt, and which he thought Stafford would trade with Mrs. Tinsley; that, growing out of this relationship, Jim Tinsley had appellant take his mother out to see the Stafford land, and then appellant took Stafford to see the Tinsley land, and carried back and forth various propositions over a period of several weeks; that during the negotiations appellant introduced the Tinsleys and Stafford and got them in touch with each other; that on a certain Saturday Mr. Stafford came into appellant's office and made a proposition of exchange and said he would he back the following Monday; that appellant communicated said fact to Jim Tinsley; that, instead of coming back Monday, Mr. Stafford, immediately after leaving appellant's office on said Saturday, went by the filling station where Jim Tinsley was working and took up direct negotiations with him and his mother and did not thereafter return to appellant's office; that a few days thereafter Jim Tinsley and Mr. Stafford went to the town of West and made a contract to exchange the respective tracts of land; that appellant knew nothing further about the transaction until a short time thereafter he saw where the deeds of exchange between said parties had been recorded, under the terms of which Stafford and Mrs. Tinsley had exchanged their lands, Mr. Stafford giving his clear of debt and assuming the $10,000 obligation against Mrs. Tinsley's land. The record shows that Jim Tinsley, in addition to running a gasoline filling station, had made some real estate sales and had engaged in other lines of business. The law seems to be well settled that, where a broker who has been employed by the owner, brings the owner of property and a purchaser together and a sale or exchange is actually made, though on different terms from those listed with the broker by the owner, he is entitled to his commission if as a matter of fact he produced the purchaser who did actually purchase the property from the owner. This principle of *120
law was clearly enunciated by the Supreme Court in the case of Goodwin v. Gunter,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause remanded.