2 Daly 189 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1867
The plaintiff was employed by the defendant to sell a country place. He found Hr. Bus-sell, who was willing to take it in part payment for a Colorado mine, which he was desirous to sell. When the proposition was made to the defendant he rejected it. Nothing more was done by the plaintiff to bring the parties together in reference to the defendant’s property. Hr. Bussell became intimate with the defendant, and a year or a year and a half after the negotiation mentioned fell through, the defendant invited him to go to his place in the country. He was impressed with the beauty of the place, and bought it as the agent of his wife. It also appears that when the plaintiff introduced Hr. Bussell it was understood between them, that if the defendant purchased the Colorado property, the plaintiff was to have an interest, and thus the success of the double enterprise would have been attended with a double benefit to the plaintiff He would have obtained liis commission from the defendant for selling his land, and from the plaintiff compensation for the sale of the Colorado property. Such transactions are not toler
The judgment should be affirmed.