58 Neb. 282 | Neb. | 1899
Fort sued nambleton to recover $125 as commissions earned as real estate broker in procuring a purchaser for land owned by Hambleton in Lincoln county. He recovered judgment for $96, and tbe defendant bas brought the case to this court by proceedings in error. The first question raised, and tbe principal one in tbe case, is tbe sufficiency of tbe evidence. Tbe contract as alleged was to find a purchaser or sell the land, but there is no proof
It is contended that in the light of the evidence as to the manner the sale was made there is no proof of the amount of recovery. The only direct testimony is that of the plaintiff, who was asked what were the usual and customary commissions for the sale of land in Lincoln county. The admission of the answer is assigned as error, but if it was erroneous at the time, the error was cured by the following question. The answer was “five per cent.” Then he was asked what his services were reasonably worth in this transaction, and he answered, without objection, that they were worth “what the commission allows.” The joint effect of the two answers is that his services in this particular matter were reasonably worth five per cent of the purchase-money. There could hardly be direct proof of the proportionate value of partial services. This must necessarily be left largely to the jury to find from all the circumstances. The recovery was within the direct evidence.
Complaint is made of the sustaining of objections to a number of questions propounded to witnesses by the defendant. As in no instance was a tender made of the evidence which it was sought to elicit, the exceptions on this ground are unavailing. This rule is established by a multitude of cases, to cite which would be useless.
The instructions are complained of chiefly because not
Affirmed.