This was a suit for commissions on a sale of land, brought by Gresham, a real estate agent, against Connally, his-principal. No demurrer was filed to the petition, and the case proceeded to trial. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the court, on motion, granted a nonsuit, and the plaintiff excepted. It appeared that Connally had placed in Gresham’s hands for sale a piece of property owned by him near East Point, in Eulton county. Gresham found a party who was desirous of buying land in that locality upon which to erect a cotton factory; whereupon he immediately notified Connally. Upon ascertaining the purposes for which the prospective purchaser desired the land, Connally said to-Gresham: “I am interested in a number of other pieces down there, Gresham. If this piece of property don’t suit him, we will sell him anyhow. Take him down and locate him.” It was then.
Assuming, as we must, the truth of the plaintiff’s evidence, the substance of which we have here set forth, there can be no doubt that a prima facie case for recovery was made out. The defendant in the first instance definitely* employed the plaintiff to procure for him a purchaser for a specific piece of property. Had he stopped there, and the plaintiff brought him, face to face with a party who purchased, not the property which was the subject of the employment, but a different piece, it is clear that there would have been no right of action for the agent’s commissions. But upon learning that the prospective purchaser was anxious to buy near East Point, and evidently fearing that he might not be pleased with the particular land which had been placed in the plaintiff’s hands for sale, the defendant in effect said to the plaintiff: “I now employ you to sell to this man any piece of property situated near East Point in which I have an interest.” It makes no difference that the land actually sold was not the absolute property of the defendant. He owned an interest therein, and his employment of the plaintiff was in his own name and not that of the corporation which
Judgment ■reversed.