193 Ky. 593 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Appellee Thomson commenced this action in the Hopkins circuit court against appellant Fowler to recover of the latter $690.89, alleged to be due Thomson, a real estate agent, as commissions for the sale of the farm of appellant 'Fowler to one Whitfield in 1919. The petition avers “that on the 21st day of February, 1919, he (Thomson) made and entered into an agreement and contract with the defendant (Fowler), whereby the defendant placed in the hands of the plaintiff for saLe, as a real estate agent, four hundred acres of land, and authorized the plaintiff to sell or procure a purchaser for the said .400 acres at not less than $80.00 per acre, and upon such terms as, might prove satisfactory to the defendant, and that for his services the defendant agreed and promised to pay him a reasonable compensation, which was then and there agreed to be a sum equal to 2% per cent of the total amount of the consideration for which any of the said land might be sold.” Following this the petition avers that the plaintiff Thomson found and presented a purchaser to Fowler, who bought 326% acres of the land at the price of $85.00 per acre, or a total of ‡27,752.50, but that defendant Fowler refused to pay plaintiff his commissions, although the same were demanded of him and are long past due.
It is the contention of appellant Fowler, against whom judgment was, entered in the lower court for $690.89 as commissions, that the contract declared upon is an express one, and not an implied contract, and that the plaintiff, having declared upon an express contract, was not entitled to prove an implied contract or to have a quantum meruit recovery on an implied contract in the absence of an amendment of the pleading so as to support such implied contract. The answer controverts the averments of the petition, and in a second paragraph,
The trial court, in instructing’ the jury, ignored the express contract declared on in the petition and told the jury that if it believed from the evidence that Thomson, a real estate agent, found a purchaser for the lands in question and brought Fowler and Whitfield together, and that Fowler sold a part of his lands to Whitfield, and that the services of Thomson were rendered to the defendant Fowler under such circumstances as were reásonably calculated to lead a prudent man to believe that the plaintiff expected compensation for such services, then the jury should find for the plaintiff Thomson, such a sum by way of compensation as the jury believed from the evidence would be a fair and reasonable compensation for making said sale, not exceeding $690.89 the amount claimed. The state of the pleadings considered, this instruction was erroneous.
The generally recognized rule in cases where the plaintiff declares upon an express contract is to hold him to the averments of his pleading, and to nonsuit him if he fails to prove the express contract alleged, but undertakes to rely upon an implied contract, and have a quantwn meruit recovery in the absence of an amended pleading conforming to the proof. Newton v. Field, 98 Ky. 186; Price v. Price, 101 Ky. 28; O’Kain v. Davis, 186 Ky. 184; Smith v. Robinson, 185 Ky. 76. The facts in the last above cited case are very similar to the ones under consideration, and there we held that the express contract upon which the plaintiff declared was not 'sustained by proof of an implied contract, and that there was such a variance between the averments of the petition and the evidence as to entitle the defendant, who was being sued for commissions by a broker, to a peremptory' instruction in his favor in the absence of an amended pleading showing an implied contract and right to a quantum meruit recovery. This, rule is too old and well
For the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed for proceeding's consistent with this, opinion.
Judgment reversed.