John E. DeWolf Co. v. Harvey

161 Wis. 535 | Wis. | 1915

Barnes, J.

It is not now asserted that the proposition (which for convenience will hereafter be referred to as a contract) submitted by Harvey to the plaintiff was literally complied with by the latter, although the original complaint was framed on that theory. The claim that there was a substantial performance was made by an amended complaint, but was not submitted to the jury, and the sole issue submitted for determination was whether or not the arrangement as made and carried out by the Ticonic Investment Company was taken and considered by the parties to this action as a ful-filment of the contract between plaintiff and defendants, it being conceded that the contract signed by Harvey was made in behalf of his codefendants as well as himself.

The fact that the counter offer of the Ticonic Investment Company was accepted, taken in connection with three items of evidence, is relied on by respondent to support the verdict returned. One of these items of evidence related to a conversation in the office of Carey, Upham & Black, another to a conversation in the Plankinton House, and the third to a payment of attorneys’ fees by defendants to Carey, Upham & Black.

The general contentions of the appellants are: (1) The Plankinton House conversation was incompetent. (2) Excluding the conversation, the evidence is insufficient to support the finding of the jury. (3) If the evidence pertaining to this conversation was properly received, still the verdict is *541without support in the evidence. (4) The court erred in refusing to submit a question to the jury asking whether or not there was an understanding between the parties that defendants would pay plaintiff a reasonable compensation for its .services instead of the sum named in the contract. (5) That •the question submitted did not fairly state the issue, if there was any. (6) That the court erred in instructing the jury. (7) That the court erred in refusing to give certain requested instructions.

In considering the main question in the case (i. e. the refusal to grant a nonsuit or direct a verdict) the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff need only be considered where there is a conflict, the jury having found in plaintiff’s favor.

It must be conceded that the question whether the evidence sustains the verdict is a close one, so close that, if incompetent evidence was received which was prejudicial to the defendants, a new trial should be ordered unless we are satisfied 'that the competent evidence offered was insufficient to support the verdict, in which contingency the complaint should be •dismissed.

The parties are not entirely agreed as to what transpired .at the Plankinton House talk, but the variance is not very material. In substance the defendants wanted to know what arrangement could be made about commission provided they concluded to go on with the deal. Plaintiff’s officers asked “them what they had to offer, whereupon they said they would pay $10,000. This the officers of plaintiff refused to con.sider, saying in effect that they would insist that' the entire amount be paid. Defendants said they would not pay $25,000; that they would drop the deal first. To this plaintiff’s officers replied that they had better drop it then. De-Wolf insisted that plaintiff had performed its contract, while Harvey insisted that it had not'.

The position of defendants is that this talk related to a compromise settlement and that conversations showing offers *542made in furtherance of attempted settlements cannot be received in evidence. This question would seem to he ruled in defendants’ favor by repeated decisions of this court: State Bank v. Dutton, 11 Wis. 371; Richards v. Noyes, 44 Wis. 609; Jewett v. Fink, 47 Wis. 446, 455, 2 N. W. 1124; Gibbon v. Hughes, 76 Wis. 409, 411, 45 N. W. 538; Taylor v. Tigerton H. Co. 134 Wis. 24, 29, 114 N. W. 122; Tobin v. Nichols, 156 Wis. 235, 237, 145 N. W. 659.

However, we may not reverse unless the error was prejudicial. If harm resulted to the defendants, it must be because-the offer might be construed as an admission of liability on the contract to the extent of $10,000. It is because settlements are favored in the law, and because parties would refrain from making offers if these offers were to be used against them as admissions, that the rule referred to has been adopted.

If the only question in the case were liability or nonlia-bility under the contract, it might be difficult to say that this evidence was not prejudicial to the defendants. But this was not the only question in the case. The defendants, through the efforts of the plaintiff, had secured an investment of $400,000 upon terms which presumably were highly advantageous to them, although not as much so as those recited in the written contract set forth in the statement of facts. Whether acting from motives of fair dealing or of expediency, they did not take the position that they were freed from all liability. On the contrary, they insisted that they were liable for the'reasonable value of the services rendered. They insisted that the question of their liability on quantum meruit should be submitted to the jury by a specific question covering this issue. The court charged the jury that if it appeared “that it was the intention of the defendants to pay and the plaintiff merely to accept merely what the services were reasonably worth, and not according to the terms of the contract, then you should answer the question in the nega-*543live.” In defendants’ brief it is said that they “maintained -throughout the trial that the conduct of the parties, after it .became apparent that plaintiff could not produce a purchaser :in accordance with the terms of the original proposal, evidenced an understanding that the plaintiff was to be paid the reasonable value of its services for such service as it actually rendered in procuring a purchaser, but not the commission offered in the original proposal.”

"With defendants taking the position that they were not liable on contract but were on quantum meruit, it is difficult to ■see wherein they were prejudiced by the evidence of the .Plankinton House conversation. They emphatically denied liability on the contract, but offered to pay a much lesser sum. "This offer was consistent with an admission of liability for the reasonable value of the services. Plaintiff’s officers admitted a refusal to pay the contract price. It seems to us that this evidence was beneficial to the defendants as supporting their quantum meruit theory, and did not tend to support -the claim of the plaintiff that defendants had agreed to pay the sum named in the contract for the work actually done. If this be correct, then no error was committed in receiving the evidence that could be considered prejudicial to the defendants. Under the circumstances shown, we think there was nothing about this offer of settlement that was helpful to 'the plaintiff’s case, and that it must stand or fall on the other testimony and the inferences that might properly be drawn therefrom.

Before discussing the other two items of evidence referred 'to, it might be well to direct attention to some other facts in the case. The defendants had an option on the Mariner property for $300,000, and actually bought it for $290,000. The original proposition made to the plaintiff company called for an advance of $435,000 on this property, which, however, was still further secured by a contract to erect a $300,000 building on the premises within seven years, on which de*544fendants were to take a ninety-nine-year lease. • This contract was in turn to be secured by a surety bond guaranteeing that the building would be erected, and conditioned in the sum of $200,000. If the original proposition was carried out, the-defendants would have the sum of $435,000 at once available-for purchasing the Mariner property and commencing work on the building. Under the proposition of the Ticonic Company the sum of $285,000 only was immediately available. The remaining $150,000 was to be applied in payment of the-last items of cost of the building to be erected. Because of' this change, the amount of the surety bond was reduced to-$100,000. If the first proposition had been carried out, the-defendants would have been relieved of the necessity of advancing $5,000 of their own money to buy the Mariner lot,, would have had cash on hand to pay the plaintiff’s commission without drawing on their own funds, and would have had. $120,000 left with which to start building operations. In, lieu of this they were to be paid $150,000 at a later date to-apply on the last cost of the building, and were relieved of the necessity of furnishing a $200,000 bond, one for one half of that sum only being required, on which, however, there was a. saving of $1,000 a year in premiums. These are the substantial differences between the proposition originally made by defendants and that finally made by the Ticonic Company and accepted by defendants. The importance of the change-insisted on by the Ticonic Company would depend largely on the ability of the defendants to provide ready money from other sources to pay the $30,000 referred to and to provide-the initial sum requisite to carry on building operations. Although the contract sued upon was dated March 1, 1913,. and the deal was completed a short time thereafter, there had been correspondence in reference to the proposed deal between plaintiff and Iiarvey as early as November, 1912, but. pending a decision of the case of Upham v. Plankinton, 152 Wis. 275, 140 N. W. 5, defendants declined to bind themselves by making an unequivocal proposition.

*545In the $25,000 offer made to plaintiff it was stated: “I will pay snch sum as you may actually incur for attorneys’ fees not exceeding $2,000 as a part of your expenses.” After the deal was consummated defendants paid the law firm of Carey, Upham & Black $1,500 for legal services. The plaintiff argues that this sum was paid in pursuance of the above offer and strongly tended to show acceptance of the Ticonic Company’s proposition as a compliance with the contract in suit. The evidence is rather meager as to why the money in question was paid. Mr. Kichardson, of the firm of Carey, Up-ham & Black, gave the only evidence hearing on the subject. He testified:

“At the time of this transaction the firm name of our present organization was Carey, Upham & Black, the legal end of it. I was familiar at that time with the charges which the firm made in relation to or on account of attorneys’ services rendered in connection with this Mariner transaction and I know what the charges of the firm for those legal services . . . were.”

The amount was stated to he $1,500, which sum was paid by Mr. Harvey. Presumably the services or some of them were for examining abstracts and drawing the contract, lease, surety bond, and other papers necessary to complete the transaction in reference to the Mariner property. This is 'a fair enough inference from the testimony offered. The evidence is of doubtful importance because of failure to show that the attorneys’ fees which Harvey agreed to pay plaintiff were for services of this character. It does not satisfactorily appear that had the Ticonic Investment Company been willing to accept the terms of the Harvey proposition the plaintiff would have been liable for attorneys’ fees for services rendered in drafting the necessary documents to finally consummate the deal.

The finding of the jury must rest almost wholly on the conversation in Upham’s office and on what was subsequently done. The jury might believe from the evidence that after *546Mr. Upham stated just what he was willing to do, Harvey said to plaintiff’s officers: “This was entirely different from my understanding, and my first understanding of any change, but I will attempt to fill as per the terms laid down. ... I will have to get in touch with Cleveland, and we will try to fill on this. . . . You fellows [plaintiff’s officers] will have to help me out with a little money.” The Upham proposition was accepted and the deal was consummated without plaintiff having been requested to furnish any money to aid in carrying it through. The plaintiff brought the defendants and the Ticonic Company together. Defendants were unable to get just what they wanted or just what they offered to pay $25,000 for, hut they were offered something that might suit their purposes almost if not quite as well. They were getting all the money needed to buy the Mariner property except $5,000, and were to get the remaining $150,000 to pay on the building, and they were saving $1,000 a year on the cost of a surety bond. They might of course refuse to accept the Ticonic offer and escape liability to the plaintiff. They might also treat it as a satisfactory substitute for their own proposition. They elected to accept, and we think the jury could reasonably infer from such acceptance, coupled with the testimony as to what transpired between the parties in the Carey, Upham & Black office, that the defendants accepted the contract offered as a fulfilment of the contract which plaintiff undertook to perform.

The defendants requested the court to submit to the jury the question whethér the conduct of the parties showed that it was their intention that defendants should pay to the plaintiff the reasonable value of the services rendered by the plaintiff. The court refused to submit such a question to the jury, but, as before stated, charged the jury that if they found the intention of the parties was that plaintiff should be paid the reasonable value of its services, then the question submitted should be answered in the negative. It is the contention of *547tbe appellants that the requested question presented an issuable fact upon wbieb they -were entitled to have a specific finding by the jury; that it was error to refuse to submit the question, and that such error was not cured by the instruction ¡given.

It would, we think, have been more fair to the defendants to have submitted the question, because it would have presented the issue more forcibly to the jury than it was .presented. It was discretionary with the trial judge, however, to cover the matter with his charge, rather than by a question in the special verdict. This court has said in many cases that where some issuable fact is squarely raised by the pleadings and a question is requested covering such issue, it is error to refuse to submit such question, and, generally speaking, prejudicial error. The recent cases in this court dealing with the subject are reviewed in Wawrzyniakowski v. Hoffman & Billings M. Co. 146 Wis. 153, 131 N. W. 429. This decision was subsequently followed in the case of Sadowski v. Thomas F. Co. 157 Wis. 443, 146 N. W. 770.

Where, however, the proposed question does not cover facts-specially pleaded, an instruction such as was here given is a sufficient substitute therefor. Vogel v. Herzfeld-Phillipson Co. 148 Wis. 573, 579, 134 N. W. 141. See, also, Steber v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 139 Wis. 10, 120 N. W. 502. There was-no such issue raised by the complaint or by the answer in this-case as defendants sought to have submitted to the jury by the proposed question, and we therefore hold that it was not error to refuse to submit the question.

The question is raised that the alleged contract between the plaintiff and the defendants was unilateral, and, not having been performed by the plaintiff, there could be no recovery thereon. The testimony showed that after receiving the defendants’ proposition the plaintiff proceeded to secure some person ,wlm would purchase the Mariner property under the conditions set forth in the proposition. It proceeded to do *548tbe work wbicb it was contemplated would be done by it, and such action on its part constituted an acceptance and made the contract mutual thereafter. Schoenmann v. Whitt, 136 Wis. 332, 117 N. W. 851, and cases cited.

A number of exceptions were taken to the refusal of the court to charge the jury as requested by the defendants, and some exceptions were also taken to the charge as given. The •requests to charge are twenty-five in number and occupy more than twelve printed pages. A special verdict consisting of only one question was submitted. The court properly charged the jpry on the burden of proof, and, further, that there must be a meeting of the minds of the parties evincing an intention on the part of both that the proposition of the Ticonic Investment Company should be considered as a compliance with the terms of the plaintiff’s proposition, in order to warrant the jury in answering the question in the affirmative. As before stated, the jury was further instructed that if it was the understanding of the parties that plaintiff was to be paid the reasonable value of its services instead of the price stipulated in the contract, the question submitted should be answered in the negative. The charge of the court was quite full, and fairly advised the jury as to the law by which it should be governed in answering the question. A number of the requested instructions are correct enough as abstract propositions of law, but we think there was no error in the charge as given and that it was sufficiently full and complete and that thérefore no error was committed by refusing to give such of the requested instructions as were refused. It would serve no useful purpose to discuss these assignments of error in detail.

By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.

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