85 F. 161 | 6th Cir. | 1898
after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
At the conclusion of all the evidence the plaintiff in error moved the court to instruct the jury to find for the defendant. This was denied, and is the principal error now assigned. If the issues of fact submitted to the jury were controlling, then it would have been error to instruct for the defendant, unless such an instruction was warranted, although there should be a finding upon those issues in favor of the defendant.
The view taken of the contract upon which this action was brought, and of the bearing of the issues of fact submitted, is indicated by the closing paragraph of the charge of the learned trial judge, which was in these words:
“To sum up, if you believe from the evidence that the defendant and the Robisons agreed to consolidate the properties on the basis of the gross earnings of the two companies, to he ascertained by an agreed examination of the books, respectively; that such an examination took placo, and the gross earnings were thereby ascertained, that the plaintiff, Kumler, was ready and willing at all times to carry out his part of the bargain ‘by negotiating for and obtaining the consent of the parties to any subsequent steps that were necessary to effectuate the consolidation agreed upon; and that the defendant, Hale, refused to accept for himself and his associates that basis of agreement, and to proceed with the business of arranging for a consolidation on that basis,— the plaintiff is entitled to recover such proportion of $25,000 as the percentage allowed the Toledo Consolidated Street-Railway Company hears to 100 per cent.”
The contract under which Kumler sued contains none of the terms or conditions upon which Hale would consent to a consolidation. It follows from this that it was impossible for Kumler to earn the stipulated compensation unless Kumler could obtain from the Toledo Electric Street-Railway Company such terms and conditions as should be in all respects satisfactory to Hale. It was therefore not only necessary that he should satisfy his own company and original principal with the terms obtainable from Hale, but that he should bring Hale into an agreement with terms satisfactory to the Toledo Electric Street-Railway Company. The case is therefore one not governed by that class of cases holding that a real-estate broker employed to sell property upon terms stated by the seller in advance has complied with his agreement and earned his commission when he produces a purchaser able and willing to purchase at the price and upon the terms named in the contract of employment, although the contract fails of consummation for any reason. Kock v. Emmerling, 22 How. 69; Holden v. Starks, 159 Mass. 503, 34 N. E. 1069; Middleton v. Thompson, 163 Pa. St. 112, 29 Atl. 796; Sibbald v. Iron Co., 83 N. Y. 378; Fraser v. Wyckoff, 63 N. Y. 445; Sayre v. Wilson, 86 Ala. 151, 5 South. 157; Smith v. Mayfield, 60 Ill. App. 266; Prickett v. Badger, 1 C. B. (N. S.) 296.
These eases, and many others which might be cited, proceed upon the ground that the duty of the broker is finished when he has produced a purchaser able and willing to comply with the terms upon
Kock v. Emmerling, cited above, was a case where the broker was employed to sell a plantation owned by the principal at the price of ■¡$250,000. The agent produced a purchaser willing to buy at that price, and the terms of sale were ágreed upon, but a sale was defeated by a change of mind upon the part of the seller. The broker was held to have earned his compensation as if a sale had been consummated, Mr. Justice McLean saying:
“Where the vendor is satisfied with the terms, made by himself, through the broker, to the purchaser, and no solid objection can be stated, in any form, to the contract, it would seem to be clear that the commission of the agent was due, and ought to be paid. It would be a novel principle if the vendor might capriciously defeat his own contract with his agent by refusing to pay him when he had done all that he was bound to do. The agent might well undertake to procure the purchaser; but, this being done, his labor and expense could not avail him, as he could not coerce a willingness to pay the commission which the vendor had agreed to pay. Such a state of things could only arise from an express understanding that the vendor was to pay nothing, unless he should choose to make the sale.”
go the ordinary contract between a principal and his broker, by which, the former agrees to pay a commission if a sale shall be made on terms and conditions set out in the contract, is always subject.to revocation before a sale is actually made or’ a purchaser produced ready and willing to take the property upon tbe stipulated terms. If. revoked before any services have been rendered or expense incurred, tbe broker can recover nothing, though, if revoked after the agent has rendered services or incurred expense, he is entitled to reimbursement, unless the terms of the agreement imply otherwise.
Thus in Prickett v. Badger, 1 C. B. (N. S.) 296, the case was this: The defendant employed the plaintiff to sell a parcel of land at a stipulated price, and was to receive, in case he made a sale, a commission on the price. He found a purchaser at the price named, but the principal refused to sell because he was unable to make title. The agent was held entitled to recover a reasonable compensation for his expense and services, which under the circumstances was held, as matter of law, to be the entire amount of the commission agreed for. But in Simpson v. Lamb, 17 C. B. 603, an agent was employed to sell an advowson at a stipulated price, and was to receive a commission of 5 per cent, upon the price. The principal afterwards sold the living himself without communication with his agent, who brought an action for a wrongful revocation of the authority. It was held, in the absence of evidence of expense or liability incurred, that the agent could recover nothing. Jervis, C. J., saying:
“There can be no doubt that the authority was revocable; -but that does not carry with it an absolute right on the part of the principal to revoke without reinstating the agent when his position has been altered. That will depend upon the terms of the original employment. I take it to be admitted that it is not competent to a principal to revoke the authority of an agent, without' paying for labor and expense incurred by him in the course of the employment The right of the agent to be reimbursed depends upon the terms*167 of the agreement. A general employment may carry with it a power of revocation or payment only of a compensation for what may have been done under it; hut there may also he a qualified employment, under which no judgment shall he demandablo if countermanded. In the present case 1 think the evidence showed that the employment: was of that qualified character, like the case of the house agent, or the ship broker, the plaintiff undertaking the business upon an understanding that he was to have nothing if he did not sell the advowson, taking the chances of the large remuneration he would have received if he had succeeded in obtaining a purchaser.”
Williams, J., said:
“Looking, however, at the peculiar nature of the employment, here, and the. scale of remuneration in the event of a negotiation terminating successfully, I think it clearly was incident to the employment; that the plaintiffs’ authority might be revoked at pleasure by the defendant, unless something had been done upon it, or some expense had been incurred by the plaintiffs in furtherance of it.”
But tlie contract here involved is unlike any of those referred to in the cases we have cited. It not only contains no authority to Kumler to sell or consolidate upon terms stated, but makes any compensation contingent upon an actual consolidation, and payable only when such consolidation should be consummated. The contingent diameter of the compensation is so evident as to hardly need discussion. It appears in three distinct aspects: (1) Hale was not to pay any definite sum, but that proportion of 825,009 which the percentage allowed the Toledo Consolidated Street-Railway Company should bear to the percentage allowed that corporation in the capital .of the consolidated company. Tims his compensation from Hale was to be measured by the valuation at which the property of the Toledo Consolidated Street-Railway Company was received into the consolidation. (2) The affirmative part of the contract: was that, if within 60 days an actual consolidation should be carried into effect, the stipulated compensation was earned. (3) To emphasize the necessity of an accomplished consolidation, it is provided that, if the consolidation “is not fully accomplished,” Hale is to be under no obligation to pay anything.
Nothing short of an actual accomplished consolidation would entitle Kumler to any compensation, and that it was so understood by both parties is shown by Ivumler’s letter of August 22, 1894, to Hale, in which he insisted that the proposition to pay him a commission restricted him too narrowly. JLn that letter he insisted that:
“The contract onght to provide, as between yourself and myself, that if a contract, for the consolidation of the two properties is entered into by which a consolidation of ilie street-railway properties is effected, that then and under those circumstances the commission ought to be fairly earned.”
To this Hale replied, refusing any modification, saying:
“I should not be willing to make any preliminary contract either for the sale or consolidation of our Toledo property. When it is done it must be done, and that must be ihe end of it. You will therefore see that I could not change the terms of my proposition on the basis of reducing to writing a preliminary agreement * * * I want to'make the arrangement perfectly fair between us, and want to fix it so that yon can earn the commission, hut I also want to be sure that there is no misunderstanding at the end.”
That the contract required a legal consolidation of the two companies is also very clear, — a consolidation in fact, and not a mere illegal
“(1) The directors of the several companies must enter into a joint agreement under the corporate seal of each company for consolidation, providing (a) the terms and conditions; (b) the mode of carrying the same into effect; (e) the name of the new company; (d) the number of directors and the other officers thereof and their places of residence; (e) the amount of the capital stock of the new company agreed upon; (f) the number of shares of capital stock, and the amount of each share; (g) the manner of converting the capital stock of each into the new company; (h) with such other details as they may deem necessary to effect the consolidation and new organization of the company. .
“(2) This agreement must be submitted to the stockholders of each of the companies, at a meeting thereof, called separately, due notice of which must be given to each of the persons appearing as stockholders on the books of the company, unless this is waived by all the stockholders being present in person or by proxy. This agreement of the directors must be considered and voted upon by ballot, ballots to be cast in person or by proxy, and, if adopted by two-thirds of all the votes cast at the meeting, may then be certified to the secretary of state.
“(3) When all this is done, each stockholder not assenting must be paid the highest market value of his stock at any time within six months next preceding the consolidation, previous to the consolidation, so that any valid' contract' for consolidation, not assented to by every stockholder in the manner provided by statute, must, as a condition of its existence as a contract, provide for the payment to dissenting stockholders.”
Now, if we assume, as we must, that Hale represented all the stock of his company, and could, through that control, have caused all the formal corporate steps to be taken when a satisfactory preliminary agreement had been reached by conference with the owners and representatives of the rival company, we find that only the first step was agreed upon as a result of such conference. That step was an agreement upon the percentage to be allowed the respective companies in the capital of the consolidated company. None of the numerous and important details of such a consolidation were torched upon at the Mackinac conference. That the comparative valuation of the two properties was the most vital'of the subjects upon which an agreement was. essential, before the matter was in shape for separate corporate action, is clear. But, when such valuation was fixed, it became equally essential that there should be an agreement as to the name of the new company, the amount of the capital stock, the adjustment of the mortgage and general debt of each company, the number of directors and other officers, etc. Assuming, as we do, that at Mackinac an agreement was reached that a consolidation of the two companies should be brought about upon the basis of the gross earnings of each company, to be ascertained by an examination of their books for an agreed period and by experts selected by Hale and the Robisons, and assuming, also, as we must, that this examination was made and the result reported, we reach the inquiry whether, if either
“So long as tíiey aro only in negotiation, either party may retract; and though the parlies may have agreed on all the cardinal points of the intended contract, yet, if particulars essential to the agreement still remain to he settled afterwards, (here is no contract. The parties, in such case, are still only in negotiation.”
Mow, if an agreement as to the basis of a consolidation was subject to retraction and «'consideration at any time before an agreement as to all ihe other terms and conditions, was there any tiling in Kum* ler’s contract with Hale which would make the latfer liable to the former for the agreed compensation, if Hale, in the exercise of Ms liberty as owner, should change his mind as to the desirability of a consolidation upon the provisional basis reached at Mackinac? The learned trial judge seems to have been of opinion lliat if Hale, after agreeing to that step, changed his mind, and refused to accept that as a basis, and to continue the negotiation upon that basis, his conduct would he wrongful, and prevent any reliance by him in this action upon the defense that no actual consolidation had been effected, and that the compensation was therefore not earned. This brings us to the question as to whether, in the contract between Kumler and TIale, there is any express or implied agreement hv which Hale would be liable as having wrongfully prevented performance, if, after provisionally agreeing upon some of the terms of a consolidation, he should change his mind in respect to the term or terms so provisionally settled, and refuse to proceed further with the formation of the contract, unless those terms were modified to his satisfaction. The whole charge of the circuit judge is based upon t.he assumption that any change of mind by Hale as to any term of consolidation, once agreed upon, would he in violation of Hale’s obligation to Kumler, and prevent him from relying upon ihe defense of nonperformance when sued by Kumler. To this construction of Kumler’s contract with Hale we must dissent. The principle contended for by the counsel for the defendant in error that, where one by Ms own wrongful act prevents full performance of a contract by the other party, the latter is thereby excused from such performance, is undeniably sound, and has been more (han once announced and applied by this court. Hods-
But that principle has no application here, unless Hale was under some express or implied obligation to Kumler, whereby, having once accepted a basis for a contract of consolidation, he was bound to stand by that term, and on that basis proceed with the negotiation as to the terms remaining to be settled. But we fail to find any such express or implied provision in this contract. Not one single term upon which Hale would agree to a consolidation is stated in the authority under which Kumler acted. He therefore retained the right to exercise his own judgment in respect to all the terms and conditions necessary, to a complete agreement. If, in the courser of the negotiation, he should agree as to certain terms, such agreement was necessarily provisional, and was subject to retraction at any time before a complete settlement of all the essential terms of the contract. So long as the contract was in process of formation, the. right to reconsider any term provisionally agreed upon remained to the negotiating principals, and we see no authority in the terms of the agreement between Kumler and Hale for implying a surrender of this liberty as between principal and agent. The uncertainty of a successful result from his efforts was doubtless taken into consideration when Kumler fixed his compensation. He took the chances of making a great sum or nothing, and left Hale at liberty to settle upon every term and condition, with the implied right, during the negotiation and while the contract was in process of formation, of reconsidering or retracting any term while only provisionally agreed upon.
If the terms and conditions upon which Hale was willing to consent to a consolidation had been stated in this agreement, and Kumler had then brought the opposite party to an assent to those terms, and Hale had then refused to do or have done the necessary corporate acts, there would be no doubt but that Kumler’s compensation would have been earned. He would have brought the parties together, and obtained the necessary agreement for a consolidation, and if then his principal had reconsidered the matter, and refused to enter into a binding obligation, the fault would have been that of the principal, and the agents’ compensation earned. But here Kumler was not authorized to bring about a sale or compensation upon any particular terms, nor was. Hale under any agreement to accept any terms other than such as he could see fit to accept, and was under no obligation to agree to any consolidation unsatisfactory to him in any particular. Whether his reasons for being dissatisfied were good or bad is not a subject for inquiry. He reserved to himself the right to exercise his own judgment at every step of the negotiation. Suppose he had proceeded with the negotiation, though dissatisfied, and had imposed such further terms as to the capital stock of the new company, or its officers or name, ‘as were wholly unacceptable to the Robisons, and had rejected counter propositions,' which third parties might deem altogether reasonable; would evidence of the unreasonableness of his own
The facts of this case seem to bring it: within the principles upon which the cases of Moffatt v. Laurie, 15 C. B. 583, and Walker v. Tirrell, 101 Mass. 257, were decided. In Moffatt v. Laurie the facts were that Laurie, an owner of land, contracted with Moffatt, a surveyor and architect, that if Moffatt would lay out and plat a tract of land belonging to him, making no charge for his services, in the event the land was disposed of for building purposes he should be paid a commission upon the buildings erected on the land. Moffait performed bis work, and, Laurie dying, his executors saw fit to dispose of the land for other than building purposes. Moffatt brought an action to recover compensation, upon the theory that Laurie was under obligation to do nothing which would prevent the land from being disposed of for building purposes so that he could earn his compensation. His action was defeated, Williams, J., saying:
“I entertained some doubt, during the course of the argument, whether a contract might not be implied on the part of Laurie and his executors that they would do no act to prevent the occurrence of the event on which the plaintiff’s remuneration was made to depend. * * * But there is another difficulty in the plaintiff’s way: The declaration is not framed so as to entitle the plaintiff to claim damage's from the defendants for preventing him from acquiring the profit he is entitled to under the contract, but the plaintiff seeks to recover damage's for improperly dispensing with Ills services. But, upon consideration, I think -none of these points arise. The plaintiff agreed to prepare the plans gratis, and not to look to Laurie or his executors for any remuneration, unless certain events should happen which have not happened. If Laurie, or his executors, thought fit to change their minds as to the disposal of the property, I see nothing in the contract: set out in the declaration to prevent them from so doing, or to give the plaintiff any right to damages in ilxe event of their doing so.”
Walker v. Tirrell, 101 Mass. 257, is more in point. That was an action in contract by a broker on a written agreement with the defendant for the sale or exchange of Ms land, with a count for services rendered in negotiations for such a sale. The contract sued on was as follows:
“If you send or cause to be sent to me, by advertisement or otherwise, any party with whom I may see fit and proper to effect a sale or exchange of my real estate above described, I will pay you $200.”
The court said:
“The plaintiff declares on this contract, alleging its performance on his part, and adds a general count for his services in the performance of it. But although he made all proper efforts, and found a purchaser who offered to purchase the property, he did not find one with whom the defendant saw fit and proper to effect a sale or exchange. Thus it appears tha t the compensation is not due by the terms of the contract. He might have a claim for his services, if the sale or exchange fell through the fault of the defendant, upon the principles stated in Prickett v. Badger, 1 C. B. (N. S.) 296, and Cook v. Fiske, 12 Gray, 491. But no such fact appears. The defendant expressly reserved the*172 right to exercise his own judgment as to the fitness and propriety of making a sale to any person who might offer to purchase. There might be good reasons for reserving such a right, and it was legal to make a contract on those terms. The plaintiff might have required him to stipulate that he should assign good reasons for refusing to sell or exchange, and in such case it would have been necessary to pass upon the validity of the reasons assigned by‘him. But the plaintiff-did not require such a stipulation, but agreed to leave the matter to his judgment, without requiring him to assign any reasons. The effect of this was to throw upon the plaintiff the risk of satisfying him. The compensation, then, by the terms of the agreement, was made to depend upon the completion- of the sale or exchange. The court can not see that the compensation, in case of the completion of the contract, was not made larger in view of the risk. But this is not material. The point to be decided is, what are the terms of the contract? and, as it is found to contain a condition which has not been fulfilled, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover upon it; and, as it does not appear that the defendant is in fault,-the plaintiff cannot recover upon a quantum meruit.”
The condition upon which Kumler is entitled to recover compensation has not been fulfilled, and, as he has not been prevented from its performance by the wrongful conduct of Hale, the latter is entitled to rely upon the nonperformance of the condition.
This judgment must be reversed for error in not instructing the jury to find for the plaintiff in error.