68 W. Va. 13 | W. Va. | 1910
This action is to recover commissions on the price of a house and lot in the City of Charleston, which plaintiff claims to have been instrumental in selling for defendant. Suit was first brought before a justice of the peace who rendered judgment for $142.50 in favor of plaintiff. Defendant appealed to the intermediate court of Kanawha county where the case was tried by a jury, and a verdict rendered for defendant. Plaintiff then petitioned the circuit court of Kanawha county for a writ of error which was denied. He then obtained a writ of error from this Court.
It is proven that after the expiration of the written contract plaintiff took Samuel Glover to defendant’s house and introduced him to her, and that she showed him through the house. Plaintiff told Glover, at'that time, that he was offering to sell the property for $3,000.
Plaintiff’s right to commissions depends wholly on two propositions: (1) whether, or not, there was an agreement, express or implied, to extend the time of the contract; and (2) in the event of such an extension of the time, then whether, or not, plaintiff performed his part of the contract, or was prevented from doing so by the conduct of defendant. These were questions for the jury, upon proper instructions by the court.
Plaintiff asked for ten instructions, all of which were refused except the last. It was given, and it correctly states the law of plaintiff’s case. The effect of it is, that plaintiff is entitled to recover commissions if the jury believed that defendant still looked to plaintiff to make sale of her property after'the'expiration of the written 'contract, and if they further believe that plaintiff was the efficient cause of making sale to Glover. This instruction is certainly as favorable a presentation of the law as plaintiff was entitled to. There is no error in refusing the other nine instructions. There is no evidence whatever .that-defendant fraudulently prevented plaintiff from making sale himself, to Glover; nor was there any evidence,that Glover was willing to pay any more for the property than the price he actually paid, or that plaintiff did anything more towards effecting a.sale than to take Glover to defendant’s house and introduce him to her.'
This case clearly .falls within the principles announced by this-Court in Parker v. The National Mutual B. & L. Ass'n., 55 W.
Plaintiff states that he only saw defendant once after the contract expired, and that she then asked him “if (he) had made any disposition of' her property,” and that he told her he had not, but that he was working on it. Defendant says that the contract was never extended. The jury were the judges whether the facts proved established an implied agreement to extend the time. The court did not err in refusing to set aside the verdict, and the judgment, rendered by the intermediate court for Kanawha county on the 13th of June, 1908, will he affirmed. Affirmed. .