Two questions are raised in this appeal. One is the sufficiency of the evidence to show authority on the part of Shropshire to employ appellee on a commission to sell the seed, and the other is the sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding of any custom or usage fixing a price to be paid for such services. In his charge the court told the jury that they might find for the plaintiff if they believed from a preponderance of the evidence that Shropshire had authority to bind the appellant by such an agreement, or that in making that agreement he was acting within the "apparent scope" of his authority. No objection was made to this charge on the ground that the appellant would be liable if the agent was acting within the apparent scope of his authority. It is admitted that Shropshire had the authority to sell the seed at the price at which they were sold, but it is denied that he had any actual authority to employ a broker to assist him. Under the facts of this case the jury had a right to conclude that such power was within the apparent scope of Shropshire's authority. He occupied a position which justified the inference that he was impliedly authorized to do what Carter says he had agreed to do if Carter sold the seed.
The next question is: Did the evidence justify the finding of a customary price for commissions on sales of this character? There was testimony tending to show that the customary price ranged from $2 to $5 for selling cotton seed. There was other testimony tending to show that a commission of $2 or more was paid by buyers as commission to agents for purchasing cotton seed. *Page 506 The appellee is not limited in this case to a price fixed by custom, but he was entitled to recover the reasonable value of his services. The appellant requested a special charge authorizing the jury to find what the actual services of Carter were worth. That was refused by the court, and properly so, because it incorporated other matters which should not have been included in the submission of that issue.
We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support the findings of the jury, and the judgment is affirmed.
