21 P. 412 | Idaho | 1889
The plaintiff in this action alleges that in the month of August, 1886, the plaintiff, being engaged in the business of buying and selling real estate upon commission, was employed by the defendants to find for them a purchaser for a certain ranch, known as the “Booth Banch,” then the
In considering the evidence upon a motion of this character we are bound to assume that the same was true, and to consider what natural inference the jury might arrive at from a consideration of the testimony. The plaintiff was employed by the defendants to do a particular thing- — namely, to procure a purchaser for the ranch, at the sum of $8,000, for which services he was to receive ten per cent, upon the-purchase money paid. It appears that in the month of March, 1887, the defendants revoked, or attempted to revoke, the agency of the plaintiff, and in their notice of revocation they used the following language: That the plaintiff was not to act any further as agent to procure a purchaser for said ranch, and discharged the plaintiff from their employment, and stated further that they did not desire to sell the ranch. Yet, in the face of this statement, and about a month thereafter, they consummated a sale with the very person with whom the plaintiff had negotiated, and to whom he had introduced the defendants as a purchaser. It is also fair to presume that some negotiations had preceded the actual consummation of the sale, so that it could not have been very far from the time of the revocation by the defendants of the plaintiff’s agency that the negotiations were taken up by the defendants in person. Considering these facts, and considering the fact that the defendants stated in their letter of revocation that they did not desire to sell the ranch, yet, in the very teeth of that statement, proceeding to sell, and to the very person to whom the plaintiff had introduced them, it was a fair inference from the testimony that the object of the letter of revocation was an attempt to deprive the plaintiff of his commission. (Lloyd v. Matthews, 51 N. Y. 124; Martin v. Silliman, 53 N. Y. 615; Sussdorff v. Schmidt, 55 N. Y. 319.) The evidence, although not very full, was sufficient to justify