The plaintiff sought to recover upon a contract, alleged to have been made between him and the defendant, whereby the latter employed the plaintiff to assist him in making the purchase of the first mortgage bonds of the Columbus, Chicago & Indiana Railway Company, by ascertaining the names of the owners of bonds and introducing the defendant to them and obtaining interviews between him and such owners with a view to negotiate for the purchase of them, and agreed by way of compensation for his, services to give the plaintiff one-half the , profits he, the
It seems that the bonds purchased by the defendant were held by Iselin & Co., bankers in the city of New York, and that negotiations for them were had by the defendant with
In Weidner v. Phillips,
It is also urged that the plaintiff was entitled to recover upon the quantum meruit when the court found that the alleged agreement was not made. It appears by the complaint that the action was founded solely upon an alleged, special contract. No request was made at the trial. to amend the complaint, nor was any evidence introduced or offered by the plaintiff with a view to any basis of recovery-other than that of such contract. If, however, the trial court had found the performance of services by the plaintiff for the defendant at the request of the latter, and directed judgment for their value, it may be that the complaint may have been deemed so amended as to conform to the. facts’ proved in its support, and such situation might be recognized and effect given to it on review, especially if no objection had been taken by the defendant calling attention to the issue-made by the pleadings. But that rule will not be applied for the purpose of reversal of a judgment, unless the facts proved in departure from those alleged constitute a variance merely,, when it will be disregarded. Here the substantive cause of action is on an alleged agreement containing express stipulations completely defining the rights of the parties and the nature and measure of the compensation peculiar to itself,, arising from its performance, which the plaintiff alleged he was entitled to. If the plaintiff had sought to prove the value of his services for the purpose of recovery upon the quantum meruit, an objection would have been sustained unless an amendment of the complaint had been permitted.
■ The trial court, however, found that the plaintiff did not. aid the defendant in purchasing the bonds or in ascertain
We have examined all the requests and refusals to find, and assuming that such requests were made by the plaintiff, none of the exceptions taken to such refusals seem to furnish any ground of error. Those of them embracing facts essential to the plaintiff’s right of action and recovery, which were not found as requested, the court was permitted by the evidence to decline, as it did, to find. As before suggested, the evidence did not require the court to find a state of facts in support of any recovery by the plaintiff.
The view taken renders it unnecessary to refer more specifically to the .numerous requests to find and the refusals to which exceptions are said to have been taken.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
