137 N.W. 402 | S.D. | 1912
Appeal from circuit court of Brown county. The complaint states two causes of action. The first for the recovery of $1 per acre commission, on a sale of 640 acres of land. The second for the recovery of $2.50 per acre for commission on a sale 'of 640 acres. The commission of $1 per acre was alleged to be due on a sale consummated under the terms of a written contract of agency between plaintiff and defendant. The commission of $2.50 per acre was claimed under a special oral contract, alleged to have been entered into between plaintiff and defendant while the written agency contract was in effect.
The answer admits the written agency contract, but denies the other allegations of the complaint. By the terms of the written contract, plaintiff agreed to act as local agent for defendant in effecting sales of land handled' by him, and to promote such spies by distributing advertising matter furnished, and endeavoring to induce persons to examine lands handled and for sale by •defendant. The contract provided for payment of a commission of $1 per acre on all lands sold by defendant through plaintiff, such commissions to be paid immediately after each sale had been closed, and to be full compensation for all services rendered in •such sale. Plaintiff agreed to act exclusively as agent for defendant, and for no other real estate firm, corporation, partnership, or individual in any way engaged in the sale of lands in the state of South Dakota during the life of the agency contract. Evidence in support of the first cause of action tended to show that in January, 1911, plaintiff interested one Barker, a resident of Ft. Pierre, in the purchase of land, brought him to the city of Aberdeen, and introduced him to defendant. Both, plaintiff and defendant accompanied Barker to North Dakota to examine lands for sale by defendant. At the conclusion of negotiations, Barker entered into' a contract with defendant for the purchase of 640
Upon the second cause of action, evidence was received, over defendant’s objection, tending to prove that the defendant orally agreed with plaintiff that if plaintiff would induce one James Phillips to purchase either one of three sections of land in Brown county owned by defendant, which were priced’ respectively at $55, $60, and $65 per acre, he would pay plaintiff a commission of $2.50 per acre on such lands as might be sold or traded to Phillip; that, pursuant to this oral agreement, .plaintiff brought Phillip and introduced him to defendant at defendant’s office in Aberdeen; that Phillip was shown and examined these lands, and after some negotiations defendant traded to Phillip 640 acres of the land in exchangee for a stock of merchandise in Aberdeen and a plunge bath .at Ft. Pierre, valued at $9,000, which had been acquired by him in -the-trade set out in the first cause of action. A written contract in consummation of the trade was entered into between defendant and Phillip, -in which the valuation of the land was $65 per acre; a deed from defendant and his' wife to Phillip' for the land was offered and received in evidence: and plaintiff never received any compensation for his services in this transaction. Plaintiff demands $640 for services in this sale to Barker, and $1,600 in the sale to Phillip.
At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, defendant moved for direction of a verdict, which was denied and exception taken. Defendant then rested, without offering any evidence, and, upon plaintiff’s motion, a verdict was directed for plaintiff for the full amount of commissions claimed on both sales, to which defendant excepted.
Appellant’s assignments of error are grouped -.and discussed under three general propositions: First. That the court erred in directing a verdict -for plaintiff for the full amount claimed on
We shall consider these questions in the order named,
Suppose, in the transaction under consideration in this case, defendant had in fact paid plaintiff the cash commission of $1,600 on the Phillip sale, but had refused to pay the commission of $1 per acre on the Baker sale, and this action was to recover the commission of $640 on the latter sale, in such case defendant could not plead that he had paid plaintiff $i,6oo, an amount in excess of the commissions on both sales, and was not therefore indebted to him. It would be plain in such case that the oral contract to pay the commission of $1,600, having been fully executed by payment, would be binding- alike on both parties, and the sum so paid could not be pleaded in satisfaction of the claim for commission on the Baker sale. We are clearly of opinion the court was in error in directing a verdict for the amount of the commission claimed on the second cause- of action at the rate of $2.50 per acre, instead of at the rate ®f $1 specified in the written contract of agency.
For that reason alone, the judgment and order of the trial court are reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.