191 Iowa 402 | Iowa | 1921
Plaintiff alleged in bis petition that, during the year 1918, and for two years prior thereto, he was engaged in the business of buying, selling, and trading real estate in the city of Des Moines, and that, shortly prior to January 30, 1918,
The answer of the defendant is a general denial. The evidence shows that the defendant met plaintiff several times at the office of O. A. Luce Company, real estate dealers in Des Moines, during the year 1917. At that time, defendant was negotiating a trade of a farm owned by him in Buena Yista County for the two residence properties, which he traded to Gibney. Luce represented the defendant as agent in that transaction. The defendant claims that he did not know that plaintiff was engaged in the real estate business, except, possibly, as the employee or associate of Luce; that, during all of the negotiations resulting in the execution of a written contract between himself and Gibney, on January 30, 1918, he understood that plaintiff and the Luce Real Estate Company were representing Gibney, and it did not occur to him that plaintiff was his agent. It is conceded that Luce was the agent of Gibney in this transaction.
The only witnesses introduced by either party who gave testimony as to the services rendered by plaintiff were plaintiff himself and the defendant.
“Before you can find for the plaintiff, he must establish, by preponderance of the evidence, that he actually rendered services to the defendant under such circumstances that the defendant must have known, had he acted as an ordinarily reasonable man, that the plaintiff was expecting to be paid for such ' services.”
It has been the law in this state, since Scully v. Scully’s Exr., 28 Iowa 548, that:
“Ordinarily, and without more, where one person renders services for another which are known to and accepted by him, the law implies a promise on his part to pay therefor. ’ ’
See Shelton v. Johnson, 40 Iowa 84; Cowan v. Musgrave, 73 Iowa 384; In re Estate of Squire, 168 Iowa 597; Farmer v. Underwood, 164 Iowa 587; Snyder v. Nixon, 188 Iowa 779.
The court, in some of its other instructions, repeated substantially the language of the requested instruction, and it is
As already stated, it was the claim .of appellant that he did not know that plaintiff was claiming to represent him, or that he was expecting the payment of a commission, but that, on the other hand, he assumed and believed that he was operating for or with the O. A. Luce Company. The court apparently sought, by Paragraphs 3, 5, and 7 of the charge, to present this theory of the defendant’s to the jury.
Except for the claim of appellant that he understood and believed that the plaintiff was representing G-ibney, the jury could have found little difficulty in finding that defendant knew that the plaintiff was claiming to represent him in the transaction, in expectation of receiving compensation for his services. It was a fair question, under all the facts and circumstances appearing in the record, whether the defendant, as a reasonable man, should have known that plaintiff was claiming to be the agent of the defendant, or whether he was associated with the Luce Beal Estate Company in the transaction. The court, in the first paragraph of its charge, instructed the jury that, if the defendant knew, and without objection permitted plaintiff to perform services for him substantially as stated in the petition, and the evidence further shoAved that said services were of some value, then plaintiff rvould be entitled to recover. In the succeeding instructions, the court evidently sought to embody the theory of defendant that he Avas not liable unless he knew, or as a reasonable man should haA^e known, that the plaintiff was representing him, with the expectation of receiving a commission. Perhaps this proposition might have been emphasized, to some extent, by a different form of statement, but we are of the opinion that no reversible error is to be found in the instructions.