235 S.W. 629 | Tex. App. | 1921
E. C. Willmann and R. J. Willmann sought and obtained a recovery against Henry Schmidt for $476.10, alleged to be due for commissions earned in obtaining a purchaser for 41.04 acres of land. Appellees declared on a written contract executed by appellant and appellees. The cause was submitted to a jury on two special issues as follows:
"Do you find from the evidence that the plaintiffs, E. C. Willmann and R. J. Willmann, on or about July 10, 1919, found a purchaser, in the person of Louis Hoffman, who was ready, willing, and able to purchase the land of defendant, Henry Schmidt, at the price and on the terms set out in the written contract between plaintiffs and defendant?
"If your answer to special issue No. 1 is `No,' you need not answer this question; but if your answer to said issue is `Yes,' then answer the following: Do you find from the evidence that, while said purchaser was still ready, willing, and able to purchase said land on said terms, the defendant refused to sell the land? "
Both questions were answered in the affirmative, and on the responses judgment was rendered for appellees. If the facts found by the jury were based upon evidence, and it is not denied by appellant that they are sustained by the evidence, every fact necessary to render appellant liable under the terms of his contract was established.
The second and third assignments of error are based on the proposition that a real estate broker cannot recover his commissions, unless he has the prospective buyer firmly bound to purchase the land by his contract in writing. In other words, the theory is that an agent has not found a purchaser ready, willing, and able to consummate a purchase, unless he has him so firmly bound in writing as to meet every demand of the statute of frauds. Appellant frankly admits that he "has not been able to find any direct holding upon the precise question here involved," and no authority has been cited, nor has this court discovered any, which even squints at sustaining such doctrine. The ordinary land agent, seeking a purchaser, does not have the authority to make title to the land, but merely hunts for some one, and takes him to the landowner to buy the land. When he brings a person to the owner who is ready, willing, and able to buy, it does not matter whether he got him there through a written or verbal promise; he is entitled to his commission. *630
Obtaining such a purchaser has no connection whatever with the statute of frauds. James v. Fulcrod,
Appellant refused to even discuss a sale when the agents told him they had a purchaser, stating that he was too busy getting cotton pickers. It was no defense that he did not know the name of the prospective buyer. He had been informed over the telephone that a buyer had been obtained on his terms, but says his wife refused to join him in the sale. The wife agreed to sell after she knew Hoffman would not buy. The wife did know about the sale before they got the letter dated July 17, and told her husband that appellees had telephoned to her about the sale.
The language used by counsel was improper, but was reproved by the court, and could not, under the facts, have injuriously affected appellant. The assignments are all overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.