146 Mich. 558 | Mich. | 1906
Plaintiff brings this suit to recover commissions for the sale of certain lands situated in Chippewa county in this State. The case was tried in the lower court before a jury, and a verdict directed in defendant’s favor. The question for us to determine is whether or not that direction was correct. The- material facts are as follows (we state those facts,, as we should, most favorably to plaintiff) :
Henry Howard- died testate May 25, 1894, owning the
“Have written the Torrent people offering them the entire tract [this included the land in question and other land] for $90,000. The cut in price of $10,000 is made in order to close up the estate of Henry Howard. If a sale is made to them or you make a sale, I will allow you $2,500 commission. Hoping at this price you will find a purchaser at once.”
We quote from another of those letters written December 19, 1894:
“ The balance of the tract, 18 million [this is the tract for the sale of which commission is 'claimed] you may offer for $75,000 and we will allow you $2,000 commission .if you sell at this price. We are very sorry that you have not been more fortunate in making a sale of this, and hope you may be more successful in the near future.”
March 25, 1895, plaintiff wrote defendant:
“ I am about to get Mr. Frank Perry of the Soo to look the lower tract of your land.” (This was the tract Perry subsequently purchased.)
Before writing this letter plaintiff had talked with Perry many times about making this purchase. After writing it, he took Perry on the land, furnished him plats, and gave him defendant’s address. A few days later, early in April, 1895, Perry went to Port Huron to see the defendant. April 17, 1895, defendant wrote plaintiff that:
“We have taken our timber lands out of the market.”
Defendant contends that the correspondence did not obligate any one to pay plaintiff a commission for the sale of these lands except in the event of a sale at a stipulated price, and that if it did, that obligation was imposed, not upon defendant, but upon the partnership known as “ The Henry Howard Estate.” We will consider each of these questions separately.
1. Did the contract impose an obligation upon- any one to pay plaintiff commissions for the sale of this land ? It is quite clear that if plaintiff had effected a sale to the Hall & Munson Company and Perry for $75,000, he would have been entitled to a commission of $2,000. It is equally clear that the jury could have found that defendant, knowing that plaintiff was negotiating with Perry, canceled his authority, and himself effected the sale by an abatement of the price. That finding would entitle plaintiff to his commission under the decision of Heaton v. Edwards, 90 Mich. 500. It follows that whether plaintiff was entitled to commission was a question of fact to be submitted to the jury under proper instructions.
2. Is defendant, or is the partnership responsible for this commission? There is no suggestion in the correspondence between the parties that the “Henry Howard
We affirm, in answer to what we conceive to be a denial in defendant’s brief, that plaintiff had a right to recover his commission (which was really agreed compensation for services rendered) under the common counts in assumpsit. It is.proper that we should state as a rule to be applied on a retrial of this suit that if plaintiff recovers, his commission will be, not as he claims, the customary one of 5 per cent., but the $2,000 mentioned in the correspondence. That is the amount to which he was entitled had a sale been made for $75,000. He is clearly not en
Judgment reversed, and a new trial ordered.