By the Court.
Woodruff, J.This action, so far as relates to the question in controversy on the appeal herein, was brought to recover for services rendered for the defendant in negotiating a purchase of real estate. The pleadings are not laid before us, but I gather from the case as submitted, and the arguments of counsel, that the defendant denied his liability for those services, resting such denial upon the ground that the plaintiff was employed by and reóeived com*300pensation. from the vendor of the property in making the sale. And in regard to the rule of law upon which such defence is urged, there appears to be no controversy. At all events the appellant assumes that the charge of the judge who presided at the trial was correct upon that subject.
A verdict having been found for the plaintiff, the defendant moved, at special term, for a new trial, and, on the denial of the motion, he appeals from the decision there made, and insists that the verdict is against evidence, and contrary to the law declared by the court to the jury, applied to facts which he claims were conclusively proved by the defendant.
Upon the general question, whether the defendant employed the plaintiff to effect the purchase for him, or whether, on the other hand, he was employed by the vendor of the property, the verdict is not only not against the evidence, but is strongly supported by it, unless a certain receipt, which will be presently noticed, is to be taken as so conclusive against the plaintiff that the other evidence ought not to have been submitted to the jury at all.
That the defendant became the purchaser is not disputed. That the negotiations for the purchase and sale, and the settlement of its terms down to the time the written contract was signed, were conducted through the plaintiff, seems not disputed, and I think there is no evidence that the vendor and purchaser themselves ever had an interview until that time, if they were even then in each other’s presence.
The plaintiff’s witness (Mr. Wood) testifies to a conversation with the defendant, in which the defendant stated in terms “ that he had employed Mr. Gatlin in relation to the purchase of the Conner farm,” that being the subject of the purchase and sale now in question. Tire witness also says, “Mr. Gatlin conducted the negotiation altogether.” The conversation above inferred to was after Mr. Gatlin had sent to the defendant stating his claim for compensation for services in that matter.
Again he says: “ I was present when Mr. Grote employed Mr. Gatlin. He told him he might offer $38,000. Mr. Oat*301lin bought it at $35,000.” Other portions of his evidence tend to show that’ when Hr. Catlin was employed by the defendant he not only had not seen the vendors, or been employed by them, but had not been informed of their views in regard to the price of the farm.
One of the vendors, being examined, testifies “ that he employed nobody to act for him in the negotiation; that Hr. Catlin acted for Hr. Grote; that he did not consider Hr. Catlin as acting for him, and did not even know him before.” And he adds, “ I had no employee in the sale.” And again, “I acted on my own behalf.” Again, “neither Wood nor Catlin were employed by me to sell the property.” There are other circumstances tending to the same result, and the fact that the plaintiff’s services were in a high degree efficient in promoting the advantage of the defendant is very prominent. It appears that the vendor’s original price was $40,000, and that the defendant authorized the plaintiff to effect the purchase at a price, if necessary, as high as $38,000; and yet the plaintiff procured the property for him at $35,000—$5,000 less than the vendor’s price, and $3,000 less than the defendant would have been willing to pay if necessary to secure the purchase. Upon this evidence there would be no room for doubt or hesitation as to the plaintiff’s right to recover. There is proof of a retainer, services rendered, and those services proved to be of great value. And it is plain that upon no mere conflict of evidence, when the plaintiff’s case is thus established, could the case be taken from the jury, or their verdict in support of a case so grima facie proved, be disturbed. Hothing short of evidence which is conclusive, conclusive in a sense which precludes any inquiry whatever, could take such a case from the jury, and such evidence amounts to an estoppel.
The defendant insists that such evidence was produced and appears in the case submitted. Thus, there is evidence that the vendor had stated, in conversation, that he would give $2,000 to any one who would find a purchaser for the farm at $40,000. Before the actual signing of the contract, but *302after the employment of the plaintiff hy the defendant to make the purchase, the witness, Wood, to whom this declaration of the vendor was made, mentioned it to Mr. Gatlin, the plaintiff. This witness was in some way related to the family to whom the estate belonged, and was in the office of the plaintiff as a clerk; but had not then, as he states, mentioned this offer of the vendor to Mr. Gatlin. So that, in the negotiation in behalf of the defendant, the plaintiff does not appear to have acted upon the inducement afforded by such offer; on the contrary, his negotiation was wholly addressed to the procurement of the farm at as low a price as possible, and not to procure a purchaser who would pay the vendor’s price, and so enable him to earn the $2,000 thus offered. And the result of the negotiation was in conformity with this view of his endeavors, in entire fidelity to the interests of the defendants who had employed him.
When the terms of the purchase were agreed upon, and the contract was ready for signature, the plaintiff sends the defendant a letter, naming the compensation he should expect for his services in the matter, together with some professional charges. After which, and on or before the 5th December, the contract of sale and purchase was duly executed by all of the vendors, except one, and was duly proved as to them on the 5th of December. On what precise day the defendant and the other vendor signed the contract does not appear, whether before the 5th December or after, unless it be inferred from the fact that its execution by them was duly proved for record on the Yth December, a circumstance which hardly warrants the inference that it was not signed until that day. Indeed, but for the plaintiff’s letter, dated November 30, which says the contract “ will be executed tomorrow,” the inference would be that it was executed on the day of its date, as it in terms purports.
On the 6th day of December the plaintiff received from the vendors $100, of which $200 appear to have been given to the witness, Wood, to whom the vendors had made the declaration above referred to, and who appears to have inter*303ested himself in bringing about the purchase and sale. And on the receipt of that money the plaintiff gave a receipt in these words: “ Received from Messrs. Richard and Jonathan Conner, Esqrs., $700, in full of all demands for services on the sale and conveyance of the farm of the late Richard Conner, deceased. December 6th, 1853. (Signed,) George Catlin.”
This payment evidently grew out of the conversation which one of the vendors (James Conner) had had with the witness, Wood ; and Wood testifies that it was paid for finding a purchaser, notwithstanding $40,000 were not obtained, and he, Wood, appears to have conceived himself entitled to a share of it. Mr. Conner, who paid it, says that he never employed either Wood or Catlin, but he had made an offer, in conversation, to pay $2,000 to any one who would find a purchaser at $40,000; and he paid $700 because he thought something ought to be paid for finding the purchaser who did buy, though at a less price.
Under these circumstances, it is insisted by the defendant that the receipt above mentioned was conclusive evidence that the plaintiff acted, in the matter of this purchase and sale, as the agent of the vendors, and received compensation for them for the services which he rendered in that matter; and by the receipt of the $700 he is so concluded that he can neither allege on this trial that he acted under the defendant’s employment, nor demand a compensation from the defendant for the services which he rendered.
I do not so understand the effect of the receipt. It is undoubtedly true that, disconnected from all the other circumstances attending these transactions, the receipt imports that the plaintiff had rendered services on the sale and conveyance of the estate in question; for which he sought payment, and for which he was paid. But the admission so implied, from a receipt given by the plaintiff to a third party, does not necessarily estop the plaintiff to prove the real state of the transactions, if it becomes material, as between him and the present defendant. It is only as an admission that it *304is urged in evidence. And an admission only operates as an estoppel where it has been acted upon by the party in whose favor it is claimed so to operate, and in such wise that he would suffer injustice if the admission were retracted or contradicted. Such is not this defendant’s position. He is a stranger to the receipt, and to the payment of which it is evidence. Assuming the facts to be as the jury have found, it always was and is now a matter of indifference whether that receipt is true or false. The receipt did not, therefore, operate as an estoppel, the defendant being such a stranger to it, and having never acted on the faith of it.
Nor, in my judgment, did the receipt so imply that the plaintiff was acting for the vendor as to preclude the submission of all the evidence on the subject to the jury for the other reason suggested, to wit, that the receipt being taken according to its import, it is written evidence, and not to be overcome, contradicted or explained by any oral testimony.
In the first place, however conclusive between the parties to it, it only operated as between the parties to this suit as an admission, and that only by implication. Now, viewed as an admission only, it is an error to say, that because in writing, it may not be contradicted or explained by oral testimony. It has, as between these parties, no higher effect than a letter to a friend, or any mere statement in writing, which, being found by the defendant, he might introduce on the trial as an admission by the plaintiff, though he never saw or heard of it before.
The case in this respect bears no analogy to an attempt to alter the legal effect of an instrument as between the parties to it or their privies. A man may declare once or ten times, verbally or by writing, that he is not my agent, and yet no one, not even himself, is precluded from proving the contrary, except when such declaration has been acted upon in such wise that it amounts to an estoppel, as before suggested. Nor if such agent should bring his action against me, to recover for his services, would he be held concluded, unless I could show such a state of things. I by no means intend *305that such declarations are not high evidence. I do mean to gay, that such evidence may be overcome by other proof, though oral.
But again, the receipt is consistent with the other facts relied upon by the plaintiff to support his claim, and is not, therefore, to be taken as a contradiction of the writing itself. It is true, that it is not consistent with the implied admission which the defendant infers from the receipt, but it is with every fact stated in it, and with its entire legal effect, according to its purport as between the parties to it.
Thus it is plainly proved, by the other evidence, that the plaintiff had in fact no legal claim to any compensation from the vendors whatever. They had not employed him for the service for which the defendant is now proceeded against. He had rendered them some professional services after the contract of sale was made; and being called upon by the witness, Wood, to whom their willingness to pay a much larger sum for a purchaser who would pay $40,000, they thought they ought to pay something for a purchaser at a less price. It was not paid for services in making the bargain. It was not paid for services in selling at the best price. It was not so treated or understood by the payor, but he seems to have acted upon some idea that he was in honor or in conscience bound to give something to the plaintiff for finding a purchaser.
This is not inconsistent with the utmost fidelity of the plaintiff to his employer, nor inconsistent with the receipt itself. Indeed, if there were no qther oral testimony to this point than that the plaintiff1, after "the contract was made, did render some professional services for the vendors in closing up the transaction, drawing deeds, and other matters relating to the title, the words “ services on the sale and conveyance” would not necessarily imply at all that the plaintiff had not rendered other services for a third person in effecting the purchase.
It is unnecessary to inquire what the effect of the whole evidence would have had on my mind, had I been sitting as a juror. I have, in what I have above recited from the case, *306presented it somewhat personally to the plaintiff1. But I have only done so for the purpose of showing that it was a case to be submitted to the jury, and I concur in the opinion of the first judge at special term, that their finding must govern us. The order should, therefore, in my opinion, be affirmed.
Order denying a new trial affirmed, with costs.