151 Minn. 105 | Minn. | 1922
Plaintiff sued for his commission for selling a farm for defendant and recovered a verdict for $1,200, and defendant appeals from an order denying a new trial.
Plaintiff wns authorized to sell the farm for the sum of $25,600 net to defendant and was to have as his commission whatever amount he obtained above that price. He sold the farm for the sum of $27,800, being $2,200 above the net price of defendant, but in order to consummate the deal three lots in the city of Fairmont were taken as payment of $4,000 of the selling price. This fact and the fact that defendant obtained only $2,400 for the lots when he subsequently sold them, and incurred an expense of $150 in making the sale, give rise to the present controversy.
Defendant sold the lots, realizing therefrom $2,250 after deducting the expense of making the sale, and offered plaintiff $225 as his share of the excess above $1,800 received for them. Plaintiff refused the offer and brought suit for the sum of $2,200. Defendant tendered judgment for the sum of $225. The court instructed the jury to the effect that they should return a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $2,200 if they found the agreement to have been as asserted by him, and in the sum of $225 if they found it to have been as asserted by defendant. They returned a verdict for $1,200.
Defendant contends that a verdict in the sum of $1,200 is wholly without evidence to sustain it; that under the evidence, and the theory of both parties at the trial, plaintiff was either entitled to the sum of $2,200 or only to the sum of $225. We think this contention well taken. No evidence was offered as to the value of plaintiff’s services and no claim was made that he was entitled to recover upon quantum meruit. Both parties relied upon an express
Order reversed.