This suit was brought by ap-pellee, Jones, against appellant, Lumsden, to recover commission alleged to be due for services performed by appellee as broker in procuring a purchaser for certain cattle list *376 ed with him by appellant for sale. Such statement of the pleading and facts as is necessary will be made in connection with the questions discussed.
The first five assignments present in various ways objections to the sufficiency of the pleading to support the recovery and are based on the following facts:
“Defendant having denied an express agreement to pay 50 cents per head for sale of the cattle sold by him, comes the plaintiff and alleges that the reasonable value of the services rendered by plaintiff alleged in the petition, were 50 cents per head, or the sum of $1,665. Wherefore he prays for judgment as before.”
The jury found that Lumsden authorized Jones to find a purchaser for his cattle, that Jones was the procuring ca„use of the sale, that there was no express agreement to pay 50 cents per head commission, and that the reasonable value of the services was 50 cents per head, and judgment was based on the implied promise to pay a reasonable compensation for the services performed under the express listing for sale. Appellant contends that the pleading is insufficient to support such a recovery, because there is no allegation of “promise to pay” in connection with the allegations of reasonable value of the service performed under the contract of enlistment.
“You are instructed that, where it is brought to the knowledge of an owner that two agents are involved in the sale of his property, the law demands strict neutrality as between them on the part of the owner. Now, if you find from the evidence that C. W. Jones opened negotiations with J. T. Robb for the purchase of the defendant’s cattle, and the defendant, with knowledge of this fact, aided or assisted another broker in the sale of the property to the prejudice of C. W. Jones, then you are instructed that he cannot in law take advantage of the services of the second broker in closing the transaction on an issue as to whether the.first broker, O. W. Jones, was in fact the procuring cause of the sale.”
- The requested charge, made the basis of the tenth assignment, correctly states the law; but this was sufficiently covered by other charges given.
We overrule the eleventh assignment. The transactions referred to, which took place after the consummation of the sale, throw no light on the issue of fact as to who was the procuring cause of the sale, and have no weight, we think, as tending to impeach the testimony of the witness Robb.
We overrule the twelfth, fourteenth, and sixteenth assignments. The answer made to the interrogatory referred to in the sixteenth assignment was responsive, and, even if the other answers to the other interrogatories referred to in these assignments were not responsive, this answer reiterated the same statement, and would render harmless any error in the admission of the other answers.
For the reasons stated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
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