155 Iowa 177 | Iowa | 1912
The plaintiffs were the defendant’s duly appointed agents for the sale of machinery at Milford, Iowa, for the seasons of 1906 and 1907, and under their contracts of agency they were to receive commissions on all machinery “sold, duly settled for- and delivered within the proper territory, by or through the agency of the said agent.” The plaintiffs pleaded their agency for the territory of Milford, and that they furnished to defendant, as a prospective purchaser of a threshing machine engine, one Wm. Hennick, who did, during the life of the 1906 contract, purchase of said defendant such engine at the list price of $1,400; and that during the -life of the 1907 contract they furnished a prospective purchaser to whom the defendant sold a threshing machine separator, a feeder and a stacker and extras, the whole amounting to $855. The defendant, in answer, denied that it had agreed to pay plaintiffs commissions upon all threshing machine engines sold, or for which plaintiffs should furnish a purchaser, under the contracts. Defendant expressly admitted that
The evidence fully justifies the finding of the jury that the efforts of the plaintiffs were the procuring causes of both of these sales.
We find no reason for reversing this case, and it is affirmed.