68 Mo. App. 406 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
Plaintiff was the owner of a farm in Barton county and gave to defendant a deed of trust thereon to secure the payment of $2,600 money loaned. Plaintiff defaulted in payment of the money when it became due and defendant foreclosed the deed of trust, himself becoming the purchaser for a sum less than the amount of the debt. Plaintiff charges that defendant thereafter, on the fifth day of November, 1894, made a contract with him whereby he agreed that if plaintiff would find a purchaser for the farm within one year from the date of defendant’s purchase at the foreclosure sale (April 9, 1894) he would pay plaintiff whatever sum over $2,800 the land sold for. Plaintiff further charges that he, in pursuance of said contract, did find and produce a purchaser who was ready, able, and willing to pay $3,600 but that defendant refused to recognize the contract, on the contrary repudiating the contract and himself selling the farm to the purchaser whom plaintiff had produced, for the sum of $4,000. The plaintiff recovered judgment for $800.
The court instructed the jury, at the request of plaintiff, that if they found that defendant made the agreement aforesaid and that “plaintiff did sell or could have sold the real estate but for the intervention of defendant, within a year from April 9, 1894,” for more than $2,800 they would find for plaintiff the excess over that sum. Eor the defendant, the court instructed that the purchaser must have been ready, able, and willing to pay $2,800 of the purchase money
These instructions covered the case as it was developed by the evidence and we must accept the verdict made by the jury, since, in our view, there was evidence amply sufficient to sustain it.
We are furthermore of the opinion that there was no error in the ruling made on the evidence. By a course of examination of one or more witnesses, counsel had endeavored to show how unlikely it was that defendant would have made the agreement to give plaintiff all over $2,800, when a sale should be made, when his debt, interest and expenses, amounted to more than that sum. Under these circumstances, it was but responsive to what defendant had drawn out, for plaintiff to show what the crop was which defendant retained, or was to have. So of other testimony objected to. It was material to the case and had its bearing on the question whether defendant did, in fact, make a contract with plaintiff. After an examination of the whole record, we are satisfied that a fair trial and a legally conducted trial has been had and we will affirm the judgment.