155 N.W. 769 | S.D. | 1915
Plaintiff brought this action to recover a commission on a certain land deal, of which he claims to have been the procuring cause. In his complaint, he alleges that, on or about ■the 1st day of June, 1910, the defendant listed: with plaintiff, as a middleman, a certain store building, with fixtures, and a stock of merchandise, situated in the city of Vermillion, for the purpose of trading the same for land; and that defendant agreed that, in
Defendant contends: First, that he never employed plaintiff to act for him in disposing of his said store building and stock of merchandise; second, that plaintiff acted as the agent of the said H. C. AVebber Dane! Company in making said trade; third, that the trial court erred to his prejudice in the admission and rejection of testimony and in its instructions to the jury; and, fourth, that the evidence is insufficient to- support the verdict.
“The conversation was like this: If I could find a man that he could deal with — I told -him I ¡had land for exchange, and- I told -him I would write. In that -conversation he put a value of $10,000 on the building. The stock was to go at invoice price. He asked me what I would charge. I told him 2 per cent. He said that was all right. That is all there was to it. I wrote a land man; Skinner. I told Mr. Anderson that. I told him Skinner had the land at Wessington Springs or up in that country, and we set the day to go, the 4th of July.”
This testimony was competent and sufficient, if believed by
“Mr. Anderson denies that he ever made any such an agreement as this claimed with Mr. Jordan, so the first and important question in the case is: Did Mr. Anderson so agree ? If you. find that he did! not, that, of course, would end the case and your verdict should be in favor of Mr. Anderson.”'
This submitted the question squarely to the jury, and, -the verdict having been for plaintiff, settled the question of employment in his favor.
“Was Mr. Jordan the one who furnished! or procured for Mr. Anderson, the purchaser, the Webber Land ‘Company, that after-' ward purchased or traded for Mr. Anderson’s store and stock of goods here? Lor a real estate agent, or middleman, as the plaintiff in this case has termed himself, to have procured the purchaser, or the one with whom the trade or exchange was made, he must have been the original discoverer or finder of the person for Mr. Anderson, and with whom he negotiated and to whom he after-v and sold- or traded his store and stock of goods. If Mr. Jordan ■ ■was not such original finder or discoverer of that purchaser, the land company, he would not be the .procurer of a purchaser within the meaning of the law or the allegations of his complaint in this case upon which he seeks to recover from Mr. Anderson. In short, Mr. Jordan must have been the one that was originally instrumental in bringing the panties together so. that that trade or exchange was effected.”
“I said that if I found anything that suited me, of course, I would trade, but 'not for him to go out for me.”
Plaintiff moved that 'the “last part of the answer be stricken out.” The motion was granted, and defendant excepts. Just what part, or how much, of the answer this motion was intended to reach, or upon what theory it was granted, does not appear from the record before us. The question that elicited the answer is not preserved in the printed record. Defendant contends that the answer was directly responsive, and it appears to be material to' the issue that was being tried. But we are unable to see how defendant was prejudiced by having the last .part of the answer stricken out. The answer indicates, that defendant de- ■ dined to accept plaintiff’s services and, had defendant gone no further with the matter, might have precluded plaintiff’s recovery.
The distinction between a real estate agent and a mere middleman is discussed at considerable length in Langford v. Issenhuth, 28 S. D. 451, 134 N. W. 889. In that case -we held that, where -a plaintiff seeking to recover commissions has taken no part in- the transaction other than to bring the buyer and seller together, he is entitled! to recover from both parties, and it is immaterial whether either of the parties to the trade knew of plaintiff’s 'employment by the other. In Ranney v. Donovan, 78 Mich. 318, 44 N. W. 276, it Is said:
“A broker who merely brings the parties together, and has no hand in the negotiations between them, and where they make their own bargain without his aid or interference, can receive legally a compensation from both of them, though each was ignorant of 'his employment by the other.”
This language is particularly pertinent to this case. The trial
“True, the plaintiff piloted the defendant to Farmer, where they found Skinner, but thence forward plaintiff was a cipher.”
This admits, plaintiff’s whole case. But plaintiff did more than to pilot defendant to Fanner. He accompanied plaintiff and Skinner to Wessington Springs, where they met -the officers of the Webber Company; hut Skinner was the agent of that company, and it was not essential that plaintiff should have gone farther than Farmer. The fact that defendant was piloted by plaintiff shows that defendant found both Skinner and the Web-ber Land Company through the instrumentality of plaintiff, and the fact that plaintiff “thence forward became a cipher” shows that he took no part in the negotiations that culminated in the exchange of properties. Upon the whole record, we believe that the jury was justified in, finding that plaintiff was employed by defendant; that plaintiff was the procuring cause of bringing, about the exchange between defendant and the Webber Land Company; and that plaintiff is entitled to a commission from defendant.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.