129 Mo. App. 443 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This suit was brought by plaintiff, a real estate agent, against his principal to recover a commission alleged to have been earned in the sale of a mine in Jasper county. A jury was waived, findings of fact were filed, and judgment entered in favor of plaintiff, from which defendant appealed.
It is alleged in the petition that defendant, an Illinois corporation, was the owner of a mining lease and was engaged in operating a mine on the leased premises; that through its managing agents, Bruce Sims and Charles A. Sims, it employed plaintiff in February, 1906, to “find or procure a purchaser or purchasers who would buy the property aforesaid,” at the price of $35,000, and agreed to pay plaintiff a commission of ten per cent for the perforcnance of such service. That plaintiff “procured a purchaser for said mine who was willing, ready and able to buy the same for himself and associates,” introduced him to defendant’s said managing agents who “knew and were informed that the said purchaser and his associates were procured by the plaintiff and that the said purchaser was willing, ready and able to buy said property for himself and associates on the terms authorized by the defendant, and submitted by the plaintiff to said prospective purchaser;” that defendant sold the mine to the purchaser thus procured by plaintiff for $31,500, and was paid the full amount of said purchase price, but “undertook to transfer said property indirectly to said purchaser through one J. E. Aldrich and to have the purchase price paid indirectly from said customer to the said defendant and that the transfer and the payment of the money was made indirectly as aforesaid.” The prayer is for judgment in the sum of $3,150. The answer contains a general denial and a special defense in which.it is admitted that
In the reply, plaintiff “denies that J. E. Aldrich ever paid any money of his own for or purchased said property,” and alleges that “said Aldrich was used as' a go-between by defendant and plaintiff’s customer in the transfer of said property to said customer, and after plaintiff’s customer had taken charge of and was in possession of said property and that the money was furnished by plaintiff’s customer to said Aldrich to pay the defendant therefor. . . . And that said Aldrich paid no money or consideration therefor, and the same was closed in said manner with full knowledge of the defendant and its agents with the intention of depriving plaintiff of his commissions and was closed in an indirect manner for the purpose of evading payment thereof.”
Special findings of facts made by the court are as follows: “That in February, 1906, the defendant was the owner of a mining lease ... in Jasper county, Missouri, and that on said date, by and through its agents, authorized the plaintiff to sell said property at the price of $35,000, and agreed that if plaintiff could sell said property or find a purchaser therefor, to pay to plaintiff a commission of ten per cent on said $35,-
The court refused to give a declaration of law in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. Defendant argues that it should have been, given, first, for the reason that the evidence is entirely barren of facts or circumstances on which to predicate the conclusion entertained by the court that Allen and Aldrich had procured the .con
The evidence clearly demonstrates that the first of these positions is untenable. We recognize in the facts adduced a plain case of double dealing thinly disguised on the part of vendor and vendee to deprive the agent of the former of the reward justly earned by him under his contract'of employment and, in our opinion, the only error committed by the learned trial judge appears in the finding that neither defendant nor its agents knew “that Aldrich was interested with Allen in the purchase of said property prior to or at the time of making of the contract with said Aldrich for the sale of said property.”
The real facts of the transaction thus may be stated: Plaintiff interested Allen in the property, introduced him to defendant’s managers and conducted negotiations with him. It was known by all that Allen was what is termed a promoter and that it was his purpose to associate himself with persons of means who would furnish the money required to purchase the property. He induced some persons who lived in an eastern state to go into the deal’ and to provide the necessary funds. He then went to Aldrich with whom he appears to have been intimately acquainted and they concocted a scheme for Aldrich to buy the property direct from defendant for $81,500 and then to sell it to Allen and his associates for $40,000. This subterfuge would enable them not only to save for themselves $3,500, which plaintiff should .receive as commission, but also to defraud Allen’s associates out of $5,000 on the specious pretext that Aldrich had outstripped them in a race for the property and had raised the price. We think Charles and Bruce Sims were cognizant of the fact that Allen and Aldrich were united in interest and, relying on their reservation of
What we have just said is in response to the argument that the facts found are unsupported by evidence in essential particulars and is not to be understood as indicating a purpose on our part to set aside or disregard any of the findings. We shall treat them as Ave would the verdict of a jury and in our consideration of defendant’s second proposition, regard as proved, the fact found by the court that defendant had no knowledge that Aldrich was interested with Allen at the time it conveyed the property.
Preliminary to a discussion of the question of whether or not the facts found by the court disclose a cause of action, we are called on to decide a question of practice. It appears that defendant requested the court to make certain special findings, among them the following:
“The court sitting as a jury declares that it finds and believes from the evidence in this case that Joseph E. Aldrich purchased defendant’s property described in plaintiff’s petition before he had knowledge that F. P. Allen Avanted to purchase the same and that the plaintiff did not find or procure-Joseph E. Aldrich as a purchaser of said property.”
The court marked that request “given,” but when,
Defendant objected and still objects to the alteration on the ground that the error, if one were committed, was judicial and not clerical and that, as the functions of the. judge in his capacity as a trier of fact ended with, the filing of his findings of fact, he had no power to set aside or alter any of them thereafter. The conclusion drawn from this premise is that the alteration must be disre: garded and the facts embodied in the request treated as though settled by verdict in favor of defendant. Our attention has not been called to any authority directly in point. Counsel for defendant rely mainly on the case of Shipp v. Snyder, 121 Mo. 155, where in speaking of the functions and duties of a trial judge who performs the duties of a jury, the Supreme Court say: “In such case the court acts in a dual capacity — as a jury, he weighs the evidence and renders a verdict upon the facts; as a judge he declares the law upon the facts as found. A verdict may be either general or special. A general verdict pronounces generally upon the issues in favor of one party or the other. A special verdict finds the facts only, leaving the judgment to the court. [R. S. 1899, section 2160.] The court, in this case, sitting as a jury, was under no obligations to make a special finding of the facts, but, as was his privilege, he did so. The facts as found by him are responsive to the issues upon which a judgment could have been rendered, and his functions as a jury then ceased. [Spalding v. Mayhall, 27 Mo. 377; Cochran v. Moss, 10 Mo. 416.] And it became his duty, as a court, to render judgment on the
The closing sentence of the quotation is against the contention of counsel for defendant in the intimation that the trial judge, after special findings are filed, may set them aside for any valid reason. This does not mean that an error discovered in the court’s verdict may be corrected only by the granting of a new trial. What reason, except it be of the most technical character could be given for a rule of practice which would compel the judge to subject the parties and witnesses to the expense and annoyance of another trial and to consume the time of the court in rehearing evidence and argument which he has heard judicially and with which, presumably, he is perfectly familiar? Though acting in a dual capacity, the facts as well as the law of the case are lodged in his breast, subject to review and revision until the close of the term during which final action is taken. The correction of an inadvertent error during the pendency of the motion for a new trial was a proper exercise of judicial right.
The findings of fact support the judgment. Plaintiff: was not given the exclusive authority to sell the property but was employed to procure a purchaser on the terms proposed. At the time of the sale by defendant his authority as agent had not been revoked and on the hypothesis that Allen and Aldrich were jointly interested in the purchase, it cannot be gainsaid that the exertions of plaintiff were the procuring cause of the sale. [Wright v. Brown, 68 Mo. App. 577; Wetzell v. Wagoner, 41 Mo. App. 516; Tyler v. Parr, 52 Mo. 250; Crone v. Trust Co., 85 Mo. App. 601; McCormack v. Henderson, 100 Mo. App. 649.]
It is immaterial whether defendant knew that Allen and Aldrich were acting in conjunction for themselves or for others. [Gelatt v. Ridge, 117 Mo. 553; Millan v.
There is no merit in the argument that as Allen was not able to purchase the property plaintiff cannot recover, since he failed to procure a customer who was ready, willing and able to buy and pay for the property. The contract of sale was fully executed by the payment in full through Allen of the purchase price. “When the purchaser is accepted and the contract executed, the principal cannot be heard to say when the agent calls on him for compensation that ‘you did not' produce a purchaser who was financially able to perform the contract and respond in damages in case of nonperformance by him and, therefore, I owe you nothing for your services.’ When the purchaser in a case of this kind has performed the contract, the question of his primary responsibility is eliminated from the controversy.” [Wright v. Brown, supra.]
As the scope of plaintiff’s services was limited by the contract of employment to the procuring of a purchaser, the fact that defendant, on its own motion made a sale for a less consideration than it authorized plaintiff to offer, did not deprive the latter of his right to a commission on the amount of the proceeds actually realized. [Nichols v. Whitacre, 112 Mo. App. 692; Grether v. McCormick, 79 Mo. App. 325; Larow v. Bozarth, 68 Mo. App. 407.]
Under the principles stated, it is manifest that the demurrer to the evidence should not have been sustained and that under the special facts found, the court could not do otherwise than enter judgment for plaintiff for ten per cent of the amount of the proceeds of the sale.
Objections are made to the declarations of law given at the instance of plaintiff, but they are fully answered in the views expressed. The case was fairly tried and