Blakely v. Waller & Holz Co.

ELLISON, P. J.

This action is to recover a commission for the sale of defendant’s farm to Mr. Gal-breath. The judgment was against defendant. Plaintiff owned land himself and likewise acted as agent for ■others in selling their lands receiving compensation .at the rate of one dollar per acre as his commission. Pie owned a farm near La Plata, Missouri and he resided in that place. He traded this farm to defendant •for flats in Kansas City, Missouri, the deal being closed in the latter place, September 21, 1911, in the •office of Shaw & Williams. It seems defendant, according to testimony in its behalf, immediately placed the farm in the hands of Shaw & Williams for two weeks, as exclusive agents to sell it. Though, through its president, it also requested plaintiff to find a buyer •on his return home. Plaintiff endeavored to sell it to Mr. Galbreath during the two weeks limit of the Shaw .& Williams exclusive agency, but failed. Much is made • of this agency of Shaw & Williams and of the fact that plaintiff first solicited Galbreath during that time .as their agent and not defendant’s. We think it of no importance, further than being part of the history of -the case.

We must accept the evidence in plaintiff’s behalf as the facts of the case, and from that it appears that ten days or more after Shaw & Williams’ agency had •ceased, defendant, on October 21, wrote plaintiff to .sell the land and stating the price to-be $60 per acre, but asking him to get an offer. Plaintiff continued his ■ efforts with Galbreath and then, on the 1st of November, he became a resident of Kansas City, at which •place he from time to time talked with defendant’s ■president telling him of Galbreath’s offer of $40 per acre and that he felt confident Galbreath would finally buy. In a few days after this defendant (without plaintiff’s knowledge) sent one Schweizer to La Plata (who was really a dormant part owner) and he sold the .farm to Galbreath for $46.25 per acre. The testimony *179of Galbreath. and the correspondence between him and plaintiff discloses the latter’s continuous effort to sell. Finally Galbreath, in a letter to plaintiff of November 28th, spoke of Schweizer, and finally on December 10th wrote plaintiff his first information that the sale had been made by defendant.

By calling to its aid the evidence tending to show the exclusive agency of Shaw & Williams for two weeks, and then claiming that plaintiff did not act for them, but for himself or defendant, the latter makes a lame effort to build up a theory of double dealing — the service of two masters — by plaintiff which bars him of a recovery under the rule many times asserted in this State. [Corder v. O’Neal, 207 Mo. 632; De Steiger v. Hollington, 17 Mo. App. 382.] If we were to allow defendant to make this claim at this time it would be giving him an advantage of his own wrong. If he had given Shaw &. Williams an exclusive right for two weeks, he had committed the wrong of engaging plain: tiff within that time. We are unable to understand why he should be allowed to reap the benefit of a rule he joined in violating. But, aside from that, plaintiff’s efforts to bring about the sale continued, at defendant’s special instance, long after the exclusive agency had ceased.

The action of the court on the instructions was in every way proper, save, perhaps, in view of the evidence, being too liberal for the defendant.

The judgment being manifestly for the right party, it is affirmed.

All concur.