29 Ind. App. 305 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1902
Suit by appellants to recover brokerage commission. The jury, upon an instruction by the court to that effect, returned a verdict for appellee. Overruling the motion for a. new trial is assigned as error. The complaint avers that appellants contracted with appellee to sell and dispose of a certain stock of goods, for which appellee agreed to pay a certain commission; that appellants sold the goods, and did and performed all the conditions of the contract.
As it appears that the contract of employment was partly through letters and partly oral, it will be treated as a parol contract. Although the complaint avers that the contract was to sell the goods, and that appellants did sell them, yet in such case it is held that the broker is entitled to his commission when he shows that he procured a purchaser ready and willing to purchase upon the terms proposed; that an averment that the broker sold the property necessarily includes the averment that he found a purchaser. Lockwood v. Rose, 125 Ind. 588.
In McFarland v. Lillard, 2 Ind. App. 160, 50 Am. St. 234, it was argued that there is a distinction between the case of a broker undertaking to sell, and one undertaking to find a purchaser, but the court said: “We can not find any meritorious distinction between the two classes of cases. The broker, in either case, is required to do no more than find a purchaser. He can not do the selling unless specially authorized to do so by power of attorney. That must be done by the principal. The undertaking to 'sell’ in such cases is no more than an engagement to find a purchaser who is ready and willing to buy.” Treat v. De Celis, 41 Cal. 202; Duffy v. Hobson, 40 Cal. 240, 6 Am. Rep. 617; Goss v. Broom, 31 Minn. 484, 18 N. W. 290; Reynolds v. Tompkins, 23 W. Va. 229.
It appears from the evidence that appellee accepted the offer of the purchaser produced by appellants, and that appellee and the purchaser entered into a written contract for the exchange of property. When this'eontract was made, the
To determine the relative value of the respective properties the stock of goods was to be invoiced, and there is some evidence that two or three days after the contract was signed Schroeder .desired to begin the invoice and appellee refused to proceed with it. It is true, it is shown by the cross-examination of appellants’ witnésses, appellee not having testified and having introduced no witnesses, that Schroeder did not execute the deed and furnish the abstract, and that his property was subject to a lien. Whether Schroeder’s failure to comply with the contract was due to appellee’s conduct, or to his inability to do so, is not clear. Appellee did not testify, and his refusal to proceed with the invoice is left unexplained. If two or three days after the contract was made he refused to carry it out, and the ex
Issue was joined on the complaint by an answer in general denial only, and a careful consideration of the record discloses some evidence in support of the complaint, the sufficiency or insufficiency of which should have been submitted to the jury.
Judgment reversed.