11 Or. 361 | Or. | 1884
This is an action on a special contract to recover commissions on the sale of real property. The contract is in writing, signed by the owner of the property, and recites as the consideration, “valuable services performed and to be performed.” It bears date November 8, 1882, and gives the appellants “the exclusive sale” of the property for 185 days, and afterward until five days’ notice by the respondent of her intention to terminate the agreement. It also binds her to make conveyance in case of sale by -the appellants, and
1. A denial of the contract.
2. Fraud on the part of appellants in obtaining it.
3. A parol agreement at the time of delivery of the written contract, that it should not become operative without the assent of <T. C. Carson, the respondent’s husband, which was not obtained.
4. A recission of the contract by the respondent before the sale by the appellants, and a tender and payment into court of $40, as the reasonable value of the appellants’ services prior to such rescission.
These matters were all put in issue and submitted to a jury, who found a verdict of $40 for the appellants. Judgment was entered accordingly in their favor on respondent’s motion. The errors assigned on the appeal arise wholly upon instructions given or refused at the trial.
1. The court below charged the jury in effect that the parol agreement alleged in the defense, if established by the evidence, would bar any recovery beyond the $40 tendered and paid into court, unless the assent of the respondent’s husband had been obtained. The written contract sued on is not under seal, and even at common law the authorities cited by appellants’ counsel would not apply. Worral v. Munn, 1 Seld., 229; Braman v. Bingham, 26 N. Y., 483; Ward v. Lewis, 4 Pick., 518; Foley v. Cowgill, 5 Black, 18; and in fact all the authorities relied upon by them, are cases where it was sought to qualify the delivery of sealed instruments to grantees by parol evidence. And the evi
The rule upon wiiich the first mentioned class of decisions rest is that a deed, if intended as an escrow, must be delivered to a stranger, and not to the grantee himself. If delivered to the latter, the act is conclusive of the intention of the parties that it shall be operative.
2. The court instructed the jury that unless the contract sued on was based upon actual indebtedness, given for a valuable consideration, or was a power coupled with an interest, the respondent could rescind it at any time before a sale by appellants, by notice to them.
There is siirely nothing in this that appellants can complain of. If there was no consideration for respondent’s engagement, as the first part of the instruction assumes, it must be conceded she could rescind at any time before becoming bound through a sale by the appellants. And whether there was a consideration was a question of fact, properly left to the jury. Probably the court should have charged the jury that the written instrument sued on did not create “a power coupled with an interest,” as the term is understood in this country. (Hunt v. Rousmumers Adm'r, 8 Wheat., 174; Hartly v. Minor’s Appeal, 53 Pa. St., 212.) But the error, in submitting the question as to whether it did or not, to the jury, as seems to have been done by the latter portion of the instruction, manifestly could not have prejudiced the appellants.
3. The court refused to instruct that the plea of tender “admitted every fact” necessary for the appellants to estab
Judgment affirmed.