Plaintiff’s action was brought to recover commission on the sale of real estate. He alleges that defendants were agents engaged extensively in the sale of real estate and that they, desiring the as*516sistaxice of plaintiff, entered into the following contract with him, viz.:
“Fred J. Gould, Versaillies,'Mo.
“Dear Sir: — We will give you one-half of all the gross profits made by us in the sale of any real estate to customers brought or sent us by you. When the party is sent us, you must.give them a letter of introduction, or otherwise notify us, before such sale is made that .such buyer is your customer. We will pay you your share in each sale as soon as the same is completed. You to transact this class of business in this county solely through our firm. You to bear your own expenses; we to bear ours; this arrangement to be terminated at the will of .either of us, but such termination not to interfere with any deal on hand, or otherwise made.
Very truly yours,
St. John & Noyes.
“I hereby accept the above conditions and will use my best efforts for the success of the undertaking.
Fred J. Gourd.”
There was a judgment for plaintiff in the trial court.
This is the second appeal of the case. At a former trial the verdict and judgment was for plaintiff and it whs set aside and a new trial granted. From the order granting the new trial plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court, where the order was affirmed. The cause was then again tried and this appeal taken. It was appealed to this court on account of the recent increase of jurisdiction bringing it within the pecuniary limit of cases appealable to this court.
Both trials of the case took a wide range in matter of evidence and the opinion of the Supreme Court (207 Mo. 619) contains a complete statement of the claim of the respective parties, as well as a detailed recitation of the evidence bearing upon these claims. We need not *517set them out, but refer to the report of the case just cited for its complete history. In the second trial of the case there was additional testimony in plaintiff’s behalf which, in the opinion of the trial court, relieved his case of the embarrassment of not having a preponderance of evidence in his favor, which that court and the Supreme Court thought it lacked at the first trial.
We have gone over the evidence in connection with the oral and written arguments of the counsel, and have concluded that the plaintiff made a case which entitled him to the opinion of a jury as to his right to recover.
The particular claim made by him is that he discovered to defendants the parties who finally bought a tract of land several thousand acres, with .coal underlying much of it. That defendants were authorized to sell what were known as the Halderman tract, the Hubbard & More tract and the Bailey tract. That he brought parties to Morgan county to examine the latter tract, with a view of buying it, and while there for that purpose, not succeeding in selling it to them, he called their attention to the Halderman tract and in that way caused them to purchase it of defendants. In a general way, the trial court instructed the jury in behalf of plaintiff that if they believed this to be the fact, plaintiff was entitled to one-half of commissions defendants may have made out of the sale. We think there can be no doubt that the jury, under these instructions, in connection with those for defendants, must have believed that plaintiff, within the rule stated in Ramsey v. West, 31 Mo. App. 676, and Crowley v. Somerville, 70 Mo. App. 376, was the procuring cause of the sale by producing the parties who aftenvards purchased.
We do not consider that defendants have any substantial ground of complaint as to the instructions. As a series they certainly left no room for misunderstanding on the part of the jury. Those for the defendants covered every point of legitimate defense and the objec*518tions made as to those refused are in greater part technical. Of the latter, No. 6 is the subject of principal complaint. It stated that if plaintiff was introduced to C. W. Waldeck as the partner of defendants when he was not, and that ■ plaintiff permitted such deception by his actions and otherwise, and if by such deception he obtained the name of Magenheimer as a possible or probable purchaser of the land and telegraphed to him, then such telegrams and the answer thereto should be disregarded in making a verdict, “unless you further believe that said Gould procured and induced or caused to be procured the purchaser for said lands fairly.” We find it difficult to understand the instruction. It is subject to the criticism made by plaintiff’s counsel. Notwithstanding what it terms a fraudulent assumption of partnership between plaintiff and defendants whereby he obtained the name of a prospective purchaser who bought the land, yet it is a concession that the purchaser may have been procured “fairly”. At any rate, the effect of the instruction, as offered, was to select a special circumstance claimed by defendants, and thus give it prominence with the jury. We think that defendants’ case had been clearly enough set forth in other instructions and that they were not entitled to this one, making special selections of a certain feature of it. We find no cause of complaint as to the admission of evidence.
The sum of the whole matter is'that the case was one depending upon the solution of a great amount of contradictary testimony, much of which was subject to inferences of a nature favorable or unfavorable to either party, depending upon the point of view from which they were considered. It is a case, therefore, particularly for the determination of a jury. There has been no error that can be considered of substance, and with the result we have no right to interfere. The judgment will be affirmed.
All concur.