77 P. 216 | Idaho | 1904
This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal given and entered after demurrers to the complaint were sustained. The action was brought to recover commission alleged to have been earned in a real estate transaction. It is alleged, in the complaint that the defendants are a voluntary, unincorporated joint-stock company. The plaintiffs, who are appellants here, are real estate dealers. The defendants owned a large tract of land situated in Idaho county, which they, through their vice-president and secretary, placed with plaintiffs for sale at a specified price. Said contract was entered into in the month of May, 1902, and was for the sale of two thousand seven hundred and twenty and eighty one-hundredths acres of land, so as to net the defendants $17.50 per acre and to pay the plaintiffs five per cent commission over and above that price.
It is alleged in the complaint that after the employment as aforesaid they entered upon the discharge of their contract and procured a purchaser for said lands who was ready, willing and ¿ble to purchase the same and pay therefor, and introduced said purchaser to the defendants through said association’s vice-president; but that thereafter, and while plaintiffs were still negotiating with said purchaser for the sale of said lands, the defendants concluded and perfected a sale of said lands to said purchaser for the sum of $47,000 on August 15, 1902; the same being a smaller sum than that for which the defendants had listed said land with the plaintiffs. That the plaintiffs thereafter demanded the payment of their commission, amounting to the sum of $2,350, with interest at seven per cent per annum from August 15, 1902, no part of which has been paid. And
By; way of charging the same cause of action in a different forni and as a third count of the complaint, the plaintiffs reiterate numerous allegations found in the first cause of action, and aver that the transactions had between the defendants and said purchaser, after the introduction of the purchaser to said defendants by the plaintiffs, were peculiarly within the knowledge of said defendants; and plaintiffs therefore ask to be permitted to charge the same cause of action in a third form, and aver that by the various actions of the said defendants in so making such sale to such purchaser at a sum less than that to which said lands had been listed by the defendants to the plaintiffs. the plaintiffs became and were prevented from concluding the sale with the purchaser upon the terms and for the price which said lands had been listed with plaintiffs, and had thus prevented the plaintiffs from completing said sale and deprived them of their commission, and that by said acts of the defendants, plaintiffs became and were damaged by the breach of said contract by the defendants in the sum of $2,350 with interest, and pray for judgment for that sum.
Thereafter the defendants moved that the plaintiffs be required to elect as between the three causes of action or counts stated in the complaint, and demurred to the complaint on several grounds. The court sustained the motion requiring the plaintiffs to elect, and they elected to stand on the second count of the complaint, and the other two counts were stricken out by order of the court. The court also sustained demurrers to the complaint. Counsel for appellants refused to amend the
The appellants have specified seven (7) errors. The first is that the court erred in sustaining the motion to compel plaintiffs to elect. It appears from the complaint that the same cause of action is stated in three different counts. It appears from the allegations of the first count that the recovery is sought on the contract alleged to have been entered into for the sale of said real estate; and the allegations of the second count show that the recovery is upon a quantum meruit, and the third that the c^lncfants were prevented from concluding the sale with the purchaser by the acts of the defendants by their selling the land to said purchaser at a lower price than they had listed it to plaintiffs, and that they were therefore injured in the amount of their commission, $2,350.
It is contended by counsel for appellants that the facts constituting the sale of said real estate between the purchaser and the defendants were peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendants, and for that reason the plaintiffs are permitted to state their cause of action in as many forms as may be necessary to meet the contingency of the proof. In support of that contention counsel cites Rucker v. Hall, 105 Cal. 425, 38 Pac. 962, where it was held in an action to recover commissions for a sale of real estate under a contract for payment thereof at a certain rate if certain facts were true, and at another rate if other facts were true, and all the facts are peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant, plaintiff may state his cause of action in different counts accordingly and should not be compelled to elect on which one he will proceed. Section 576 of Eemedies and Eemedial Eights, by Pomeroy, is also cited. Inter alia, the author there states: “Under peculiar circumstances, when the exact legal nature of plaintiff’s right and of the defendant’s liability depends upon facts in the sole possession of the defendant, and which will not be developed until the trial, the plaintiff may set forth the same single cause of action in varied counts and with different averments, so as to meet the possible proof which will for the first time fully appear upon the trial. This proposition is plainly just and right,
In the case of Smith v. Anderson, 2 Idaho, 537, 21 Pac. 412, the cause of action was stated in two different counts, the first on a contract, the second upon a quantum meruit. But it does not appear to have been decided whether the plaintiff could have been compelled to elect on which count he would rely. Counsel for respondent cites in support of the action of the court in compelling the appellant to-elect, section 576 of Remedies and Remedial Rights, and People v. Slocum, 1 Idaho, 62. In the latter citation it appears that a demurrer was interposed to the complaint, the third ground of which was that the complaint was ambiguous, uncertain, etc. Chief Justice McBride, in passing upon the demurrer, stated: “The complaint contains four (4) counts, setting up claims for recovery, but whether they are really one claim stated in different forms or separate and distinct claims, it is difficult on reading the complaint to discover. Whether the plaintiffs intend to say that they have suffered losses amounting in the aggregate of $14,000, ox whether they intend to fix them at $8,000 or $5,000 it is impossible to tell on a comparison of the counts with one another.” And the demurrer was sustained on the ground of ambiguity and uncertainty. It is then stated by the learned chief justice that “The rule under the code allows a party to state as many causes of action as he may have if they are of a character to be properly combined in the same complaint, but it does not permit
The- other errors assigned may be considered under the one assignment, to wit, that the court erred in sustaining the demurrers. It is shown by the record that counsel for defendants, after the motion to elect had been sustained by the court, and after counsel for appellants had elected to proceed on the second count of the complaint, filed their demurrers to said second count on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that the same is uncertain or ambiguous or unintelligent, in that it seeks a recovery upon an express contract for a certain sum, also on an implied contract for a reasonable sum; each of said grounds of recovery being inconsistent with the other.
While it is true that plaintiffs reiterate and repeat the allegations numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 of the first cause of action as the complaint stood after the election of plaintiffs to stand on the second count, those allegations must be considered as a part of the second count of said complaint. And as we have determined above that it was error to compel the plaintiffs to elect on which one of the counts they would proceed to trial, we must then consider whether the complaint as it originally stood states a cause of action, although the demurrer sustained by the court was aimed at the second count of the complaint alone.
After a most careful consideration of the allegations of the complaint viewed in the light of the very thorough and exhaustive oral arguments and briefs of respective counsel, we