Hayden v. Grillo's Administrator

42 Mo. App. 1 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890

Thompson, J.

In this case there have been three trials and three judgments in favor of the plaintiff. The case has been twice before this court, and is reported in 26 Mo. App. 289, and 85 Mo. App. 647. The two opinions of this court express the deliberate judgment of this court rrpon the law as applicable to the facts of this case. It is conceded that the evidence upon the last trial is substantially the same as that upon the preced-. ing trial. We have, therefore, only to consider whether the case was tried in accordance with the theory of the law thus expressed by this court in its two preceding opinions.

In our former opinions in this case, three propositions were laid down as the grounds, upon which alone a real-estate broker is entitled to recover his commission from the person who employs him to negotiate a sale of real estate: First. He must get a contract of purchase from a solvent purchaser, capable of being enforced in law. Or, second, he must produce to his principal a person who is at once willing and able to make the purchase. But, thirds these two requirements may be *4dispensed with, by the act of his principal, where the broker notifies the principal that he has found a solvent person, who is both ready and willing to make the purchase ( such being the fact), or that he has procured from a solvent purchaser a contract of purchase, and his original principal refuses to .proceed further with the transaction, or to conclude the sale, without requiring either the production of the purchaser or the contract of purchase. In this last case the principal, by his own conduct, relieves his broker from tbe necessity of proceeding further ; for the law does not require a man to do a vain thing. He puts himself exactly in the position of a man who is entitled to have a tender made to him, but who announces in advance to the person, who stands under the legal obligation of making the tender, that he will not accept it. In such a case he wáives the tender, and the rights of the party stand in law exactly as though the tender had been made and refused. On the trial, from, which this appeal is prosecuted, the court submitted the ease to the jury in conformity with the governing principles of law as thus laid down ; and gave, among other instructions, .an instruction refused on the last previous trial, and for the refusal of which the judgment was reversed by this court. The instructions upon which the case was thus submitted to. the jury were four in number. One of them was given at the request of the plaintiff ; two at the request of the defendant; and the last by the court of its own motion.

I. The first error which is now assigned is that the court should have withdrawn the case from the jury. When we reverse for errors of law a case at law in which the plaintiff has been successful, and then remand the cause for further proceedings, our order of remand is ordinarily tantamount to an intimation to the trial court that in our judgment there is a case to go. to the jury ; and in such a case the trial court will generally be warranted in submitting the case to another jury substantially on the same evidence. If there are any *5exceptions to this rule, our opinions in the exceptional cases do, or at least should, note the exceptional circumstances for the guidance of the trial court. In this case we were of opinion on the former appeal that there was a case for a jury, and we remain of the same opinion,

II. The next assignment of error relates to the refusal of certain instructions tendered by the defendant. We have already stated that the court submitted the case to the jury upon four instructions, drawn in accordance with the theories which this court announced in its opinions in the two former appeals. This rendered the giving of any other instructions unnecessary ; and the court could not be put in the wrong, and the judgment reversed, for the refusal of any number of other instructions, however correct in themselves or appropriate in their applications to the facts of the case. But, on examining the other instructions tendered by the defendant, we regret to find that they are all either opposed to the views of the law which were distinctly expressed by this court in its former opinions, or élse unsupported by the evidence. All of these instructions, except one, proceed upon the hypothesis, that, in order to entitle the plaintiffs to recover -their commissions, it was necessary that a sale of the property in question should actually have been completed by them, either by a conveyance, or an enforceable contract. That such is no.t the law was distinctly ruled by this court in both of the previous appeals.

The other instruction tendered by the defendant, and refused, proceeds upon the hypothesis of a custom, existing among real-estate agents in St. Louis, to give their principals notice of having procured a purchaser, after the lapse of considerable time between the employment and the time of thus procuring the purchaser. The court properly refused this instruction, for the reason that there was no such issue in the case. The only answer, on which the case went to trial, wg.s a general denial. It is necessary to plead a special' custom, *6where such a custom is relied upon, to take a case out of the general rules of the law. Further, there was no evidence in this case tending to prove any such custom.

III. The last assignment of error relates to the competency of the plaintiff, I). J. Hayden, ■ to testify as a witness in his own behalf. The objection to his competency was predicated upon the fact that, since the previous trial and before the last trial, the defendant Grillo had died, and the action was revived against his administratrix. The contention is that the death of the defendant Grillo rendered the plaintiff incompetent to testify as a witness — -at least, as to any fact not embraced in his former testimony. It was held in Coughlin v. Hauessler, 50 Mo. 126, that, where the testimony of the party who has died since the last trial is preserved in a bill of exceptions, it may be put in evidence, and, consequently, that the surviving party may testify as to any points embraced in his former testimony, — -though, if he gives a different version of any of them, his testimony should so far be ruled out. In this case the only objection, taken to the testimony of the plaintiff Hayden, was an objection to his competéncy interposed before he had commenced testifying, which objection was predicted upon the general ground that the other party to the suit had died. But, as above seen, he was competent as a witness, provided he kept within the bounds above stated ; and, if he transcended those bounds, either by testifying to new points, or by giving a different version of the facts from that given in his former testimony, the objection should have been interposed on that ground, to those particular items of testimony. The objection was, therefore, taken in such form that, although the witness may have transcended the bonds prescribed by the rule (we do not say that he did), it presents nothing for review.

This disposes of all the assignments of error, and it follows that the judgment must be affirmed. It is so ordered.

All the judges concur.