Reasoner v. Yates

90 Neb. 757 | Neb. | 1912

Letton, J.

This action was brought to recover commissions claimed to have been earned by the plaintiffs as subagents for the defendants in the sale of certain lands situated in Colorado. Plaintiffs were land agents, whose place of business was in Lincoln, Nebraska. Defendants were in the same business in Colorado Springs, Colorado. There are six causes of action set forth in the petition. The first alleges that the plaintiffs by an oral agreement with defendants undertook to procure persons who would purchase certain lands in the San Luis valley through and from the defendants as agents, of the owners, and defendants undertook and agreed to pay to plaintiffs 10 per cent, of the purchase price of each piece of the land sold to such purchasers. The plaintiffs advertised the lands extensively, and procured a purchaser ready, willing and able to purchase, whereby the agreed commission became due and payable. The first six causes of action are-identical, except as to the name of the purchaser, the date and amount of the sale, and the amount of commission. The seventh cause of action is of like nature, except that it alleges a part payment of the commission anu a balance due. The answer is a. general denial to the first six causes of action, and a settlement as to the seventh. The settle*759ment is denied by the reply. A verdict was returned for the plaintiffs. The court required a remittitur of a part of the recovery, overruled the motion for a new trial, and rendered judgment.

Defendants first contend that the recovery is excessive for the reason that two of the purchasers failed to complete the purchase on account of the owners of the land failing- to furnish satisfactory title thereto, and also in this connection complain of the giving of instructions Nos. 1 and 13, given at request of plaintiffs. These instructions in substance told the jury that the plaintiffs were entitled to their commission after a contract of salt was made and the purchasers were able, ready and willing to comply with the terms of sale. Defendants argue that the evidence shows that “the prospective purchaser ivas able, ready and willing to buy, provided he should receive a good title, but the good title was not forthcoming so he ivas not walling to purchase,” and, hence, the contract was never fulfilled.

The evidence shows that one of the purchasers., to whom the law laid down in these two instructions is applicable ivas able, ready and walling to carry out the contract from the time it was made in 3907 until the time of the trial in 1909, but was prevented from doing so by the inability of defendants to convey a good title, and that the other purchaser had also been ready to fulfil until the contract was finally canceled by his consent and that of the defendants for the same reason. It is also shoivn that the plaintiffs had no hand in this cancelation, and did not waive their right to a commission on the sale. It is settled law in this state that, where the vendor of lands enters into a contract of sale of the same with a competent purchaser produced by a land broker or agent, the subsequent inability of the vendor to convey a good title, by reason of which the contract is not- performed, does not release him from the obligation to pay the agent’s commission. Potvin v. Curran & Chase, 13 Neb. 302; Jones v. Stevens, 36 Neb. 849; Lunney v. Healey, 56 Neb. 313. This is the general *760rule. Monk v. Parker, 180 Mass. 246; Smith v. Schiele, 93 Gal. 144; Davis v. Lawrence & Co., 52 Kan. 383; Phelps v. Prusch, 83 Cal. 626; Bruce v. Wolfe, 102 Mo. App. 384.

The fact that the contract is canceled afterwards by mutual consent of the vendor and the vendee can in nowise affect the right of the agent to recover the agreed compensation for procuring a purchaser, where the vendee has at all times been in such a position that performance could have been enforced. Millett v. Barth, 18 Colo. 112; Swigart v. Hawley, 140 Ill. 186; note to Breckenridge v. Claridge & Payne, 43 L. R. A. 593 (91 Tex. 527). The same reasoning applies with reference to the liability of a general agent for the sale of lands to persons whom he may employ as subagents. In such transactions the original agent stands in the same relation to the subagent, so far as liability to pay the agreed compensation upon the furnishing of a competent purchaser, as the vendor does to him, and, when the subagent has produced a purchaser with the requisite qualifications, the liability of his principal to pay the agreed commission exists, irrespective of whether the owner of the land refuses to ratify the sale or is unable to make a good and satisfactory title. Barthell v. Peter, 88 Wis. 316; Oliver v. Morawetz, 97 Wis. 332; Smith v. Schiele, supra.

It is also argued that the plaintiffs’ testimony that one of the defendants guaranteed the title to the land to be perfect cannot be of any benefit, for the reason that this alleged guarantee or warranty was not in writing, and hence is void under the statute of frauds. The contention that the statute of frauds is involved we think is unsound. The liability of the defendants does not depend upon whether the vendors were competent to convey good and perfect title. The defendants represented to the plaintiffs that they had the right to sell the lands for the owners. Even if no express representations had been made by them that the owners were competent to convey a good and perfect title the plaintiffs were justified in relying upon the implication that the persons for whom the defendants *761were acting were possessed of a marketable title to the real estate. In an action by an agent against an owner, if the only reason that a sale has not been completed is that the vendor cannot furnish a good and perfect title, it is not essential to recovery by the agent that the owner had represented to him that his title is good. Neither is it so in a case of subagency. Gorman v. Hargis, 6 Okla, 360, 50 Pac. 92.

The giving of instruction No. 2 is complained of. This instruction in substance told the jury that if plaintiffs rendered to defendants a written account or statement of the commission due on the sale to Wheeler, and the defendants acknowledged its receipt, but made no objection, such acknowledgment is evidence of the correctness of the statement. Perhaps it would have been better to have amplified this instruction so as to explain more fully to the jury its applicability to the evidence. It applied particularly to the evidence furnished by a letter written by the plaintiffs to the defendants, and a reply to the same. These letters showed a claim was made for 10 per cent, commission on the Wheeler sale, and that no specific objection was made by the defendants to the amount. Defendants’ answer to this letter speaks of a dispute between plaintiffs and one McCullough, and states that as soon as plaintiffs and McCullough come to some understanding they were ready to make a settlement concerning commissions.

It seems that McCullough had made an arrangement whereby plaintiffs were to pay him a commission of 3 per cent, on sales to purchasers procured by him, and that he had made a claim direct to defendants that commissions be paid to him, instead of to the plaintiffs. When considered in connection with all the other testimony, we cannot see how the defendants were prejudiced by this instruction being given.

It is next urged that the court erred in admitting in evidence plaintiffs’ exhibit 6. This is a carbon copy of a letter, which the evidence shows was written by the plain*762tiffs to defendants, duly stamped and addressed to defendants at their usual place of business a.t Colorado Springs. Notice was served upon the defendants to produce the original letter for inspection. It was not produced but. it was stated at the trial that they had made a diligent search and were unable to find the same. Since the original Avas not accessible, and proper diligence had been exercised to procure the same, secondary evidence of the contents of the letter was admissible. Birdsall v. Carter, 5 Neb. 517.

Instructions Nos. 3 and 4 are correct statements of the laAv as applied to the facts in this case. We believe, in the light of the prior correspondence and the subsequent acts of the parties, that M. T. Yates had authority to act in the matter of commissions.

The assignments of error Avith respect to the ghnng of instruction No. 14 and the admission in evidence of the case of Long v. Herr, 10 Colo. 380, will be considered together, since the point involved is whether it is necessary to the validity of the contract relied upon that it should be in writing. Defendants contend that, under the provisions of section 10856, Ann. St. 1911, the contract is void. This section provides: “Every contract for the sale of lands, between the OAvner thereof and any broker or agent employed to sell the same, shall be void, unless the contract is in writing and subscribed by the OAvner of the land and the broker or agent, and such contract shall describe the land to be sold, and set forth the compensation to be alloAved by the owner in case of sale by the broker or agent.” We are of opinion that this section has no application to the facts in this case. The contract here does not fall within its terms. It was not made betAveen the OAvner of lands and an agent. The contract was betAveen an agent and a subagent. The statute Avas designed to protect the OAvner of lands, and Ave cannot extend its terms by construction or interpretation so as to embrace another class of persons. Before its passage oral contracts whereby one person employed another to procure a *763purchaser for his land upon commission were valid, irrespective of whether the employing person was the owner of the premises or not. The law has been changed by the statute so far as landowners are concerned but it remains unaltered as to all other persons. Sadler v. Young, 78 N. J. Law, 594. Instruction No. 14, therefore, is not objectionable for the reason that the contract was not in writing, nor was the introduction in evidence of the report of the Colorado case prejudicial, even if erroneously admitted, which point we find it unnecessary to determine.

Finally, it is argued that the verdict is unsupported by the evidence, and must have been the result of passion and prejudice on the part of the jury. The evidence satisfies us that the jury were warranted in believing that the sales were made under the contract proved. We cannot say the verdict is not sustained by the evidence.

The judgment of the district court is

Affirmed.

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