52 Ga. App. 265 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1935
1. “The broker’s commissions are earned when, during the agency, he finds a purchaser ready, able, and willing to buy, and who actually offers to buy on the terms stipulated by the owner.” Code 1933, § 4-213.
2. Where the plaintiff occupied the status of broker (as distinguished from a sales agent; see Humphries v. Smith, 5 Ga. App. 340, 63 S. E. 248), and as such procured a purchaser ready, able, and willing to buy on terms agreeable to the seller, the plaintiff would not, in the' absence of a contractual undertaking, become a guarantor either of the financial ability of the purchaser or of the subsequent performance by the purchaser of the offer to buy, especially where the seller has actually accepted the offer. Accordingly, the seller was not. entitled to a recoupment in the instant suit by a broker for commissions on three cars of peanuts actually delivered and accepted by the purchaser, because, on account of a drop in the market price of the commodity, the fourth car in the order was countermanded and refused.
3. Nor would the principle as applied to this ease be changed where the parties acted under a rule of the' association, of which they were mem
4. Moreover, under the evidence, the seller being bound by the testimony of its president, who actually handled the transaction for the corporation, managed its affairs, and was its sole witness at the trial, and this testimony, which was the only evidence to sustain the claim of a $450 loss from a depreciation in market value of the refused car of peanuts purchased by the seller, being most strongly construed against the defendant, where contradictory, vague, or ambiguous, and part of such testimony showing that no loss had been sustained, the plea of recoupment was not sustained by the evidence.
5. The court did not err in directing the verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the amount sued for.
Judgment affirmed.