88 Ga. 321 | Ga. | 1891
The defendant claimed to be the owner of a certain lot in the' city of Atlanta, and the plaintiffs, who were real estate brokers doing business under the name of the Atlanta Real Estate Exchange, undertook to find a purchaser for the lot. After some preliminary negotiation, a contract was drawn up in two parts as follows: “I will offer the place at $11,250 net until 10 May, 1890,” signed hy the defendant; “We accept the above at $11,250 net upon condition that sale is perfected,” signed by one of the plaintiffs as manager. It was understood that the plaintiffs should get as compensation for their services whatever excess above the stated price they might secure at the hands of the purchaser. Under this agreement the plaintiffs found a purchaser at $12,000 on May 8th. They agreed with this purchaser to sell the lot for part cash and part deferred payments, although they had no instructions from defendant outside of those expressed in the written agreement. The purchaser paid the plaintiffs $10 to bind the bargain. The defendant’s title papers were put m the plaintiffs’ hands and by them turned over to the purchaser for an examination of the title. This examination was not concluded until May 13th, after the time limited in the contract had expired. But the defendant waived this, for he continued negotiations after May 10th and on the afternoon of May 14th granted an extension of the time until eleven o’clock of the following morning, giving
“Pear Sir : Mr. P. C. Bacon [the purchaser] has just been in our office and requests me to say that Mr. Howell (his atty.) will have papers ready by 1 o’clock to-day, so you can come up at that hour and arrange for transfer and get your money.”
He went at 2:30 of that afternoon, and still no money was given or tendered him. Then it was that, at their urgent solicitation, he gave the party until 11 o’clock of the next morning to pay the money. Mr. Turner assured him that all the parties would be notified, his man and all interested, to close the matter up and make transfer. Possibly the plaintiffs were hampered all along by their unauthorized agreement to give time to the purchaser on some payments, and in order to secure him this promised benefit, delayed the matter till the defendant withdrew his proposition. But if this was not the case and the purchaser was ready, as he states in his testimony he would be, to pay the balance of the twelve thousand dollars, in excess of the $10.00 already paid to the broker, his attorney having examined and approved the title, the plaintiffs could have insisted on his producing the money, and then been in a position to insist on the defendant making a title to the purchaser. The defendant might have been able to take
It follows from what has been said that the verdict was contrary to law and contrary to evidence, and the court erred in not granting a new trial on the general grounds of the motion.
As to commissions, likewise, the plaintiff declared, not for the value of his services, but on the contract for the compensation contemplated by the contracting parties, that compensation being the excess which the plaintiffs could obtain from the purchaser procured by them
The request in the 3d ground, touching attorney’s fees, would take this part of the case entirely away from the jury, to whom the questions of bad faith, stubborn litigiousness, etc., peculiarly belong. Code, §2942. There was no error in declining such a request.
An exception to the whole charge, if any considerable part of the same be correct, is too general. Much of this charge being unexceptionable, the fourth ground of the amended motion was properly overruled. Collins v. Spence, 84 Ga. 503; Whelan v. R. R. Co., Id. 506; Thomas v. The State, Id. 613 ; Flemister v. The State, 81 Ga. 768; Small v. Williams, 87 Ga. 681.