12 Ga. App. 456 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
Rehearing
ON REHEARING.
Was Woodley a real-estate agent? What is a real-estate agent? Nothing more nor less than the agent of some one else who has real estate to. sell and who helps him to sell it. It is not necessary that the land to be sold shall belong to the principal.
In the motion for rehearing learned counsel for the defendant in error contended that the judgment of this court, reversing the judgment of the court below in this ease, was rendered under a misapprehension of the evidence, in that there is no evidence that Woodley was a real-estate agent. If this be true, of course the ruling of this court was totally wrong. In our conception of the exclusive prerogative of the jury to determine all disputed issues of fact, we go even further than that, and declare without hesitation that the judgment heretofore rendered would be wrong if there were any legal testimony upon which the jury could find that Woodley, in this investigation, was not a real-estate agent within the ruling in Ford v. Thomason, 11 Ga. App. 359 (75 S. E. 269). True, Woodley testifies: “I was not a real-estate agent at the time;” but this was merely a conclusion of the witness and wholly without probative value, if by law, and under the facts upon which his conclusion is based it can not otherwise legally be held than that the admitted facts constitute him' a real-estate agent within the terms of the act of 1909. The statement of Woodley that he was not a real-estate agent at the time, but that Horsley was a licensed real-estate dealer, and he (Woodley) was co-operating with Horsley, is absolute demonstration of the fact that Woodley, whether liable or not, had not registered and paid the tax required by law;; for there is no other reasonable inference upon this point which can be drawn from his denial that he was at the time of the sale a real-estate agent, and that he was depending upon Horsley’s license, if license was required.
Let us then see whether or not his conclusion that he was not a real-estate dealer is supported by any evidence. He had a general arrangement with Horsley, by which he was to try and bring Horsley customers in the real-estate business from South Carolina, and, if Horsley sold to them, the commissions upon the sales were to be divided. In pursuance of this agreement Woodley brought a Mr. Sublette to Horsley, and Horsley sold to him the I. P. Cocke place for $40,000. The real-estate dealer’s commission'was $2,000; Horsley paid Woodley $500, and the suit' is brought for the remain
Woodley’s testimony shows, without contradiction, that he was not only interested in the sale which is directly involved, but that he was carrying on other real-estate transactions in Terrell county; for he testified that he did not turn Sublette over to Horsley until after he himself had failed to induce him to buy Mr. Lowry’s farm (in the sale of which Horseley was not interested), and the letter of November 10, from Horsley to Woodley, which Woodley says confirmed a prior verbal agreement, is a general promise on Horsley’s part to pay Woodley “one half of my commissions on any sale made to parties brought down by you or influenced by you.” It further appears from Woodley’s testimony and his letters that he made more than one effort to earn commissions on sales of land which Horsley was handling in other instances than those to which we have already referred. From his letter of December 11 it is very apparent that his agreement with Horsley had interested him in a sale of land to one Eutledge; and Sublette, the purchaser of the land from the sale of which was derived the commissions now involved, testifies that, while Woodley did not especially recommend any particular farm except the Lowry place, he came to Terrell county on Woodley’s account.
If a real-estate dealer is one who in consideration of an anticipated commission engages in the business of promoting sales of real estate, and who in thus dealing attempts to sell or' aids in selling the land of another, then we think that under the ruling in Ford v. Thomason, as well as under the act of 1909, Woodley must be held to have been a real-estate dealer, although (basing his conclusion on the fact that his principal business was the pursuit of some other calling) he may erroneously have concluded that he was not. In the Ford case we were dealing with a case in which there was a sale completed by the person whom we held to be a real-estate dealer—subject to the provisions of section 978 of the code, because the proof showed that he had made a sale such as would have entitled him to his commission if the statute embodied in that section had never been passed. But it was not intended
It is strenuously urged that, even if under the rule in Ford v. Thomason, supra, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover his commission—for the reason that he had not paid the tax required by law of real-estate dealers, still the trial judge did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial, because the illegality of the contract or invalidity of the consideration should have been pleaded as a matter of affirmative defense. It is also strongly urged that tne point was not made by the plaintiff in error himself until after the ruling of this court in the Thomason case. This view is not
It matters not that counsel for the plaintiff in error does not call the attention of the court to a specific ruling under which the particular finding is contrary to law, if, as a matter, of fact, the court knows that the result reached in the trial, was contrary to law. Counsel may not know the law; the courts must know it.
While it is the better practice to raise by plea, as a matter of affirmative defense, the point that the plaintiff’s claim is invalid, because it is founded' upon an illegal or immoral consideration, ■ still, upon the hearing of a motion for a new trial, the general assignment of error, averring that the verdict is contrary to law and without evidence to support it, is sufficient to demand an investigation of the evidence. If it appears, from a review of the evidence* either in the trial court or in this court, that the plaintiff’s demand is void because the consideration was founded wholly on an immoral or illegal consideration, the verdict should be set aside. The law will not shut its eyes to the fact that the consideration of a contract is illegal, when that fact appears. undisputed from the testimony, and the illegality of the consideration has not been expressly waived.
The judgment of this.court, in this case, reversing the judgment of the court below, is adhered to.. . . , . .
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The only defense filed in the trial court
But further than this, I do not think Woodley is,such 'a real-estate agent as that he was required to obtain a license. -This question must be determined solely by the nature of the transaction between Horsley and himself. It makes no difference that Wood.ley, generally speaking, may have been a real-estate agent, and may have, as to other transactions, engaged in the real-estate business; the question is, was he a real-estate dealer in reference to the particular transaction with Horsley for which he claims the
Lead Opinion
The decision of this case is controlled by the ruling of this court in Ford v. Thomason, 11 Ga. App. 359 (75 S. E. 269). The suit was brought for commissions alleged to be due by the defendant for the plaintiff’s services as real-estate agent in aiding another real-estate agent to make a sale. As it affirmatively appears that the plaintiff had not registered with the ordinary, nor paid the tax to the tax-collector, required by section 978 of the Civil Code (1910), he can not recover commissions accruing from the sale of real estate. Ford v. Thomason,supra. The court, therefore, erred in overruling the motion for a new trial.