91 Iowa 78 | Iowa | 1894
The eighth day of February, 1892, was Monday, and at that time the title to the land was in Lucinda Van Kleek. She had previously
Appellant’s contention as to the facts is that, on the Saturday before, Ed Yan Kleek and Thomas Flynn, as agents for the parties, had agreed that plaintiff should have all of Monday to accept or decline the offer of Ed for the sale of the land at seven hundred and fifty dollars, and that on Monday the offer was accepted, and the contract made. We need only say that the testimony is not such as to sustain appellant’s contention. It is in conflict, but the preponderance is with the defendants. There is scarcely a doubt that, when Thomas Flynn left Mrs. Yan Kleek’s house on the eighth of February to go and see Ed Yan Kleek, he knew that Mrs. Yan Kleek did not intend to sell the land to his mother; and up to that time there surely was no binding obligation, for nothing more is claimed than that Ed gave a verbal refusal of the land until Monday night.. Looking to the testimony for the authority of Ed to contract for the sale of the land, we find no such authority to be satisfactorily established. He was authorized “to find a buyer” for the land, in the sense that he could bring her a purchaser, but there is nothing to show that Mrs. Yan Kleek ever understood that Ed was to conclude a contract by fixing specific terms of sale, except some statements by Thomas Flynn as to what Mrs. Yan Kleek said on the morning of the