Leadville Mining Co. v. Hemphill

FRANKLIN, J.

On or about October 22, 1912, the appellant, Leadville Mining Company, who was defendant below, by its agreement gave an option to one Apollos Puller to purchase its property situate in the Turquoise mining district, Cochise county, Arizona, and the said Puller having paid to appellant on account of said option some $30,000, the appellee, as plaintiff, brought this action to recover compensation for his services in the matter. The plaintiff’s right to remuneration must necessarily arise by reason of a contract therefor, either express or implied. We must note with care this agreeement, if any, and if we can get a clear comprehension of this essential and basic feature, it will not be difficult to ascertain in what manner and to what extent the party seeking remuneration shall be compensated for his services, if at all.

Owing to the variations in the form of the condition of a broker’s employment, it must readily occur how impossible it is to deduce any general rule as to his undertakings governing a given case, and in this case an oversight to first clearly ascertain the facts before attempting to accommodate a rule'of law to the situation has invited a misapprehension of its true perspective, and has occasioned some confusion as to the real issue involved in the trial of the case. “The right of a commission for the sale of land,” says Mr. Justice McClain, in Jones v. Buck (Iowa), 120 N. W. 112, “is dependent so much upon the terms of the agreement under which such commission is claimed that authorities applicable to one set of facts and language used in opinions with reference thereto may be 'entirely without application to facts which are essentially different.” Was there a special contract of employment, and if so, what service did the party who asks for compensation undertake to perform, and has he performed the service contracted for? If the services contracted for have been performed, does the contract fix the amount of compensation for such services ? Such are the inquiries in this case. In substance the complaint alleges that *148the appellee had a contract --with the appellant, by which he was employed to procure a customer with whom the appellant would enter into an optional contract for the purchase of the appellant’s properties, known as the Leadville properties, situate in 'the Turquoise mining district, Cochise county, Arizona, and that it was agreed between appellant and appellee that appellee should receive as compensation for his services a commission of 10 per cent of any and all moneys paid to-appellant on account of said optional contract; that this contract of employment further provided that all the terms and conditions of any such optional contract were left entirely with and were to be fixed by the said appellant and the customer-'secured 'by appellee; that appellee did secure a customer, and that appellant and such customer did enter into an agreement by which said customer was given an option to purchase said properties and has paid on account of said option-some $30,000.

Before the trial, by leave of court, one S. M. G-reenidge and one H. B. Dugan were permitted to intervene in said action. In the answer and petition in intervention they set up-a contract of employment with the appellant, and also pleaded a recognition in writing by appellant of said contract of employment, which is as follows:

“Know all men by these presents, that whereas, the Lead-ville Mining Company, a corporation, duly organized and existing under the laws of the state of Arizona, is the-owner of valuable -mining properties, situate in the Turquoise mining district, in Cochise county, state of Arizona, and is desirous of selling the same, does by these presents, acknowledge that S. M. Greenidge, mining engineer and broker of Douglas, Arizona, has assisted and finally concluded the sale of the said properties to Apollos Fuller, and that the said S. M. Greenidge was requested by the said company to sell said-properties upon the condition that if the said Greenidge consummate a sale of the same, he should receive a commission of 10 per cent. of the purchase price for which said properties were to be sold. The said commission shall-be paid to the said Greenidge as the same is paid to the company; that is to say, 10 per cent of each payment as it is-paid, to be set aside to the credit of the said Greenidge in the First National Bank of Douglas, Arizona.

*149“Done at Pearce, Cochise county, Arizona, October 21, 1912.”

The interveners further show that while the contract was in the name of Greenidge, the said Dugan was equally interested with him therein, and that they have received from appellant the sum of $3,000 for said services. Whether or not the leave to intervene on the showing made was improvidently granted because interveners did not show an interest in the subject matter of appellee’s suit which could be affected by the judgment; in other words, because interveners do not show they were possessed of such an interest in the subject matter of the- action of such a direct and immediate character that “they would either gain or lose by the direct legal effect and operation of the judgment,” we do not pause to consider. Interveners have not appealed. But that such intervention did occasion much confusion as to the real issue, in the case, to the disadvantage of appellee becomes apparent.

The duties of a broker in the absence of a special contract therefor may, of course, be broadened or narrowed according as a special contract for such services shall specify. Here we observe a marked difference in the services which the appellee undertook to perform, and the services which the interveners undertook to perform. The services of appellee were in reality those of a middleman, whose duty is performed when by his efforts as the procuring cause the buyer and seller are brought together and a sale results, even though the owner of the property effects the sale without the aid of the person who brought the owner and purchaser together. In Stewart v. Mather, 32 Wis. 344, Chief Justice Dixon says:

“A broker whose undertaking merely is to find a purchaser at a price fixed by the seller, or at a price which shall be satisfactory to the seller when he and the purchaser meet, is in reality only a ‘middleman,’ whose duty is performed when the buyer and seller are brought together. ’ ’

Under the contract of employment relied upon by the interveners they undertook to negotiate a deal, and their right to compensation was upon condition that they finally conclude or consummate a deal.. The undertaking of the appellee was simply to bring the parties together. He had no hand in the negotiations between them, but they were to make their own bargain without his aid or interference, his compensation, *150however, to be contingent upon such bargain being finally concluded. That of the interveners was different. They were called upon not only to negotiate a bargain,-but to finally conclude and consummate the same.

Notwithstanding this marked difference in their respective undertakings, and the fact that interveners had been fully paid for their services, the course of the trial, by clever tactics on the part of appellant, drifted into a contest between appellee and the interveners, instead of a contest between appellee and appellant. The theory was pressed with more ingenuity than skill that appellee and interveners were, under their respective employment, rival brokers; their rights being governed by the case of Garver v. Thoman, 15 Ariz. 38, 135 Pac. 724. This ease has no application whatever here. That is one of a class of cases where a principal employs more than one broker to make a sale of property, and the several brokers act independently and with knowledge of this fact, and the one who first completes a sale is entitled to the commission. In such a ease a number of brokers may have rendered meritorious services, and each contributed something essential in producing the ultimate result, and without which it would not have been accomplished. In this circumstance it would not be right fqr all of them, to recover compensation, so a discrimination must be made between them to ascertain whose services must be deemed the efficient and effective cause of the sale. Such was the case of Whitcomb v. Bacon, 170 Mass. 479, 64 Am. St. Rep. 317, 49 N. E. 742, cited as authority in the Garver Case, supra. In this latter ease the court said:

“So where several brokers have each endeavored to bring about a sale which finally is consummated, it may happen that each has contributed something without which the result would not have been reached. One may have found the customer who otherwise would not have been • found, and yet the customer may refuse to conclude the bargain through his agency; and another broker may succeed where the first has failed. In such a case, in the absence of any express contract (italics ours), that one only is entitled to a commission who can show that his services were the really effective means of bringing about the sale, or, to use the language of Phillips, the predominating efficient cause.” .

*151See, also, Scott v. Lloyd, 19 Colo. 401, 35 Pac. 733; Daniel v. Columbia Heights Land Co., 9 App. D. C. 483; Farrar v. Brodt, 35 Ill. App. 617; Mears v. Stone, 44 Ill. App. 444;, Platt v. Johr, 9 Ind. App. 58, 36 N. E. 294; Higgins v. Miller, 109 Ky. 209, 58 S. W. 580; Kice v. Dugan, 143 Ky. 676, 137 S. W. 240; Ward v. Fletcher, 124 Mass. 224; Francis v. Eddy, 49 Minn. 447, 52 N. W. 43; Vreeland v. Vetterlein, 33 N. J. L. 247; Dreyer v. Rauch, 3 Daly (N. Y.), 434; Baker v. Thomas, 12 Misc. Rep. 432, 33 N. Y. Supp. 613; Jennings v. Trummer, 52 Or. 149, 132 Am. St. Rep. 680, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 164, 96 Pac. 874; Glascock v. Vanfleet, 100 Tenn. 603, 46 S. W. 449.

As we have said, it is so important to note the contract of employment, if there be an express contract, and ascertain what the broker undertook to do, and if he has completed his undertaking. Under the allegations of his complaint the appellee here was entitled to his commissions by putting the appellant into communication with the one who took an option upon the property. It was no part of his employment to consummate the deal, for the consummation thereof was by the very terms of his employment reserved to the appellant. If the owner chose to employ another broker to consummate the deal, that was no concern of the appellee, for the owner had that right. The owner was at liberty to employ one person to find a customer and another to finally consummate a trade with that customer, and if the owner has done this, it is just simply one of those cases where the owner of property has by his acts made himself liable to pay double commissions on account of one transaction.

It is very clear that if the employment of a broker is to find a customer, and he brings his principal and the prospective customer together and a trade is consummated, the broker is entitled to his commission, even though the principal effects the deal without the aid of the broker. See Clark v. Morris, 30 App. D. C. 553; Dean v. Archer, 103 Ill. App. 455; Henry v. Stewart, 185 Ill. 448, 57 N. E. 190; Wright v. McClintock, 136 Ill. App. 438; Gibson v. Hunt (Iowa), 94 N. W. 277; Driesback v. Rollins, 39 Kan. 268, 18 Pac. 187; French v. McKay, 181 Mass. 485, 63 N. E. 1068; Willard v. Wright, 203 Mass. 406, 89 N. E. 559; Reishus-Remer Land Co. v. Benner, 91 Minn. 401, 98 N. W. 186; Enochs v. Paxton, 87 Miss. 660, 40 South. 14; Myers v. Dean, 10 Misc. Rep. 402, 31 N. Y. *152Supp. 119; Holmes v. Neafie, 151 Pa. 392, 24 Atl. 1096; Canadian Improvement Co. v. Cooper, 161 Fed. 279, 88 C. C. A. 325.

Under such a contract as the one alleged by appellee, it is not necessary, in order to fulfill his undertaking, that the broker should take the customer to the owner of the property and give him a formal or any introduction. It is sufficient if he is the procuring cause of negotiations which result in a binding contract, even though the negotiations are conducted and concluded by the owner in person, or through the agency of some other person employed for that purpose. If the owner of the property before consummating the deal acquires the knowledge — it matters not in what manner — that the person he is dealing with is the client of the broker, and has been procured by such broker for that specific purpose, this is all that is necessary. If there be real doubt under the peculiar circumstances of the given case, as to whether or not the broker has fulfilled his undertaking, such a doubt must be solved by the triers of fact and not by the appellate court. See Church v. Dunham, 14 Idaho, 776, 96 Pac. 203; Wright v. McClintock, 136 Ill. App. 438; Wood v. Smith, 162 Mich. 334, 127 N. W. 277; Gray v. Carroll (Tex. Civ. App.), 105 S. W. 214; Lane v. Cunningham, 171 Mo. App. 17, 153 S. W. 525; McLaughlin v. Campbell, 78 N. J. L. 541, 74 Atl. 530; Shea Realty Corp. v. Page, 111 Va. 490, 69 S. E. 327.

Appellant contends that the verdict of the jury that appellee was the procuring and efficient cause of the sale is against the weight of the evidence. That the weight of the evidence is for or against an issue is exclusively the province of the jury to determine, with whose judgment in such a matter we may not interfere. It is also assigned as error that the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment. The burden of the argument on this assignment is that the evidence fails to show that Hemphill, the appellee, brought Fuller, who took the option on the property, in accord with the Leadville Mining Company, the appellant. But the bringing of the owner and the optionee into accord and finally consummating the deal was no part of the undertaking of appellee. That duty by the terms of their employment rested upon the interveners, and for the performance of that duty *153the interveners were compensated by the appellant. The jury believed the testimony of the appellee and disbelieved that of the appellant and interveners, and it is very clear from appellee’s testimony that he put the appellant into communication with the person who subsequently became the optionee, and that appellant knew when it was dealing with such person that he was the customer of appellee. As observed by Mr. Justice EAKIN, in Jennings v. Trummer, 52 Or. 149, 132 Am. St. Rep. 680, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 164, 96 Pac. 874:

“Although plaintiffs did not actually introduce Mrs. Lange to the defendant, it was not necessary that they do so. They did advise Mm of the prospective sale and of the name of the purchaser, and, if defendant dealt with her as the result of such information, then plaintiffs brought them together and the evidence was sufficient to be submitted to a jury on that question. . . . Whatever may be the rights of a real estate broker who takes a customer away from another and closes a sale between such customer and the owner, if done without the aid or connivance of the owner, yet if the owner, with knowledge of the facts, deals with the customer of the first broker, even through another agent, he will be liable to the first broker; and, in view of the evidence in this ease, it is a question for the trior of the facts to determine, whether the defendant did not collude with Cottrell to defeat plaintiff in his efforts to complete the sale.”

The appellee did express, the belief at one time that he was more confident of getting some Colorado people to deal for the property than he was to get the said Puller, but this would not authorize appellant to simply cease to recognize appellee in the transaction after it had been put into communication by appellee with this prospective customer, nor authorize the appellant by carrying on independent negotiations through other brokers to escape the payment of a commission to appellee. The evidence abundantly justifies the finding of the jury in favor of appellee.

Error is predicated on the instructions of the court. The instructions complained of were given on the theory which seems to have dominated the trial that the issue in the ease was whether the appellee consummated the deal for the property and was entitled to the commission, or whether the interveners, Greenidge and Dugan, consummated the deal and *154were entitled to the commission. It was agreed on the trial there was but one commission to pay, and the amount of such commission was agreed upon.

In its answer the appellee alleges:

“That the defendant is indebted either to the plaintiff or the interveners, in the sum of three thousand dollars ($3,000.00), being 10 per cent of the thirty thousand dollars paid by said Apollos Fuller, purchaser, to this defendant as a commission and will become indebted and liable to pay to either the plaintiff or the interveners in this case 10 per cent of the said sum of five hundred seventy thousand dollars to be paid by the said Apollos Fuller to this defendant as the balance of the purchase price of the said properties owned by the said defendant, generally known as the Leadville properties in the Turquoise mining district, Cochise county, Ariz., when the said payments become due, and are paid by the said Apollos Fuller to this defendant.”

And again:

“Defendant alleges that either the plaintiff, George E. Hemphill, or the interveners, S. M. Greenidge and H. E. Dugan, made an optional contract of sale for all the properties owned by the said defendant, generally known as the Leadville properties, in the Turquoise mining district, Cochise county, Ariz., to Apollos Fuller, on or about the 21st day of October, 1912, for the sum of six hundred thousand dollars, but is not able, for lack of information and evidence, to decide which of the said parties, plaintiff or interveners, are entitled to receive the commission.”

At the close of appellee’s testimony, Mr. Richardson, attorney for appellant in the court below, said:

“I don’t know that we have very much defense one way or the other. We are willing to pay this money to the man we owe it to. I may want to ask some questions of this witness in order to protect the interest of the company. I don’t care to put on any witnesses except I may want to show that this forty thousand dollars was received for ores. Five thousand dollars of which was paid out for debts that would have been a lien on the property, leaving about five thousand that we have to pay commission on, provided that the five thousand was not used for the purpose of paying debts that would have become a lien on the property. Of course, I would want *155to make that clear in order not to have to pay any more commission. ’ ’

In view of counsel’s adroitness in switching the issue as between appellee and appellant to a contest between appellee and the interveners, we do not understand how appellant is in a position to complain, for the movement was all to the disadvantage of the appellee. If there was error in the charge so far as appellant is concerned, it was technical error. We will not reverse cases for technical error in the charge of the court below, when a correct result was reached by the jury, and where we are persuaded that another trial with a proper charge could not change the result. The appellant may not profit unjustly by the mistake of the trial court in the giving of an erroneous instruction.

Affirmed.

ROSS, C. J., concurs.