Hennegan v. Wiley

WHITING, J.

Action to recover broker’s commissions which plaintiff claims to have earned through finding a. purchaser, ready, able, and willing to purchase defendant’s farm in accordance with terms fixed by defendant. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff, and defendant has appealed from the judgment and from an order denying a new trial. .Such appeal presents three questions.

[1] Certain testimony, touching the ability of the party claimed to have been procured as a purchaser to make the necessary cash payment, was received over objection. This particular testimony was clearly incompetent; but, inasmuch as such party’s ability to make the payment was established by testimony of another witness — which testimony was free from objection — ■ the error was without prejudice.'

[2] One ground of -motion for new trial was “newly discovered evidence.” This evidence is the testimony of a witness, and, if it had been introduced at the trial, the verdict would probably have been for appellant; but no sufficient excuse is shown for appellant’s failure to have the witness or her deposition at the trial. .

[3-5] After all the evidence was in, appellant moved for a directed verdict. This motion was overruled. Upon this ruling the judgment below miust stand or fall. Respondent urges that, under the instructions of the court, there was ample evidence to support the verdict. If this motion was erroneously overruled,' it could not be cured either by appellant’s failure to except to instructions or by the verdict. There was evidence — some of it absolutely incompetent, but received without objection — tending to prove that respondent found a party ready, able, and willing to purchase appellant’s land in accordance with the terms proposed. Appellant moved for directed verdict on the ground that it appeared undisputed that respondent never, at any time, produced or brought to her such party; that respondent never secured the signature of such party to any contract binding him to purch*152ase- said land; and that such party never offered, to appellant, to consummate a. sale.

[4, 5] Respondent concedes that, ordinarily, it is incumbent upon a broker, before he can recover commissions, to not only find a purchaser, ready, able, and willing to purchase on the seller’s terms, but to produce his proposed purchaser to the seller or secure his signature to a binding contract, binding him to purchase the land- in accordance with the proposed terms; -but respondent contends that he was excused, through appellant’s act from either producing his party or procuring such a contract. It was incumbent upon respondent to prove that, if it had not been for such act on the part of appellant, he could and would have done one or the other of the omitted acts. It appears that, on Friday evening, respondent phoned appellant, who lived in a neighboring town, that he had sold the land, and for her to come the next morning and “draw a contract.” She drove over and interviewed respondent that same evening. Respondent testified that appellant asked where his purchaser was, and he advised 'her that he had gone to bed; that appellant said she had just come over for a pleasure trip; that he said, “iCome over in the morning and we will fix up the deal;” that s'he said, “It iooks kind of like rain, and if -I can’t come ‘I’ll phone you;” and that the next morning appellant phoned that she had taken the land off the market, and would not deliver same. This certainly excused respondent from either going on and having a contract executed or from bringing his party to appellant, though, in order for the jury to find for plaintiff,- it must be of the opinion that, ■ if it had not been for appellant’s refusal to close a sale, respondent could and would either have procured a contract, of purchase or else brought his party to appellant. There was testimony going to prove that, on Friday, both respondent and his proposed purchaser were intending to close this deal. The jury, if it believed such testimony, had a right to infer that such design would have been persisted in and acted upon Saturday, nothing to the contrary appearing, because it is a legitimate inference that the design continued to exist at least for a day. 10 R. C. L. 872; Barker v. Wesern Union Tel. Co., 134 Wis. 147, 114 N. W. 439, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 533, 126 Am. St. Rep. 1017; Chamberlayne, Modern Law of Ev. § 1030.

*153[6] Appellant contends that she had a right to cancel the brokerage contract at any time if her motive- was not to- escape liability for the broker’s commissions; and she testified that her motive was not merely' to. escape payment of such commissions. But, as stated in 4 R. 'CAL. 254:

“If in such a case the agency is terminated on the very eve of its successful culmination, the time of the revocation is a strong indication of bad faith on the part of the employer, and unless such inference is rebutted by other evidence, the employer will be held liable.”

The trial court did not err in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant.

The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.