Thomas v. Wyckoff

Salinger, J.

I.. Lyons, the purchaser, was asked:

“The fact that Mr. Thomas stated to you that he would not buy the farm, it was full of gulleys, and things of that kind, led you to believe that you would not buy the place?”

1. asm,: evidence: This was objected to as leading, immaterial, and incompetent, and a question for the jury. The objection was sustained, and the ruling is assigned as error. It seems to us that the question was leading, and that we need not go beyond saying this in refusing to reverse upon this assignment.

II. Lyons was asked:

“Well, then, there was not anything said or done by Mr. Thomas that induced you to buy this place, was there ?”

2. evidence: reícompetency^ rerraentatfons.rep" Plaintiff objected that’ this called for a conclusion, was incompetent, and was a fact for the jury. The objection was sustained. This was error. While the testimony of the purchaser that he recognized a certain person ag t]ie agent and purchased through him *s conclusive, it is admissible. Fenton v. Miller, 153 Iowa 747, at 760; Larson v. Thoma, 143 Iowa 338, 344. And such testimony is fairly within the rule that one may testify directly on whether he did or did not rely or was or was not moved to act by a representation made to him.

Defendant said:

“I said the man that completed the sale was the man that got the commission. Told them all the same. They would all testify to it if they would let them.” Counsel for plaintiff then said: “Move to strike out the latter part of the answer as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial.”

The objection was sustained. It should have been overruled.

III. Defendant testified he told plaintiff that he, defendant, had a farm he would sell at $125 cash; that he *152would take $140 in trade or town property at $2,000 or $3,000; that’lie had the farm in several different hands, and that the man that sold got the commission; that whoever completed the sale or trade, that was the man; that he had tried several other men; that he had paid $500 commission to Joe Dean; and that he never placed his farm with exclusive right in “his” hands. Thereupon, plaintiff moved, without stating any reason therefor, that “the answer” be stricken out. This motion was sustained: Then the witness was asked whether he had placed the sale of this property in the hands of other real estate agents at the same time. To this it was objected by plaintiff that it was immaterial and irrelevant, “unless it is claimed that the agent was the procuring cause of sale.”

The assignment is that it was error to sustain objections to the question whether defendant had not told the plaintiff that the lands were in the hands of Espy, Dean, and other real éstate agents, on the same terms on which Watkins had it. There seems to be no such testimony, and no such ruling. But the motion to strike is broad enough to include the statement:

“And the man that sold got*fhe commission. Whoever completed the sale or trade, that was the man.”

The motion stated no ground of objection. But having been sustained, the ruling cannot be disturbed unless there be no good reason for the ruling. The said stricken-out testimony on part of defendant was a denial of- plaintiff’s allegation that he had an exclusive agency, and a contradiction of the testimony of-plaintiff in support of that plea. It was error to sustain the motion to strike. Indeed, the court at one time ruled that said plea admitted such testimony as this.

IV. The witness Dean was asked whether or not he had the farm in question in his hands for sale along in 1913, and whether ór not he had it on condition, and with *153knowledge that other real estate men, naming Espy for one, had it for sale also.- Thereupon, the plaintiff objected that this was incompetent, immaterial, and irrelevant, and that there was no claim that Dean had anything to do with the purchase of the farm. At this point, counsel for defendant said:

“Defendant offers in evidence the testimony of H. N.. Dean, J. E. Espy, and George Harkens, for the purpose of showing that they would testify that defendant J. L. Wyckoff had the farm in question in this case in their hands, and each had the knowledge that other agents had it for sale, and that said employment was not to be an exclusive agency. It is offered on the theory and under the pleadings in the case to show that no exclusive agency was entered into by plaintiff and defendant, or that he was the procuring cause .of the sale for which he sues for commission.”

The court then said:

“You are not claiming that either one of these other agents had anything to do with the sale?”

Counsel for defendant responded, “No.” Then the court sustained said objection. We think the ruling was right. Rounds v. Alee, 116 Iowa 345, at 348. Neither Newton v. Ritchie, 75 Iowa 91, at 93, nor McFarland v. Howell, 162 Iowa 110, at 112, nor Fenton v. Miller, 153 Iowa 747, are to the contrary.

3‘ BoPB?Aassign-EE' brieÍSpoints.ror: V. It is complained that the court erred in permitting the plaintiff to interrogate defendant as to the latter’s running a gambling house, being convicted of a nuisance, selling liquor, gambling, and that it was misconduct for counsel to attempt to show a Plea guilty m ihe same. We give this assignment no consideration, because no brief point presents it.

YI. Plaintiff attempted to elicit testimony which ap*154pellant says was hearsay, and we may assume that it was objectionable on that ground. But as plaintiff withdrew the question, there is nothing to complain of.

4' mROK^rerfew-1' iTgeneraifquel Iret rtta!d onc appeal. VII. Much argument is devoted to the claim that, though an exclusive agency be created, this will not prevent the owner from selling personally, notwithstanding. There is no such holding as that in Kruse v. Hauser, 153 Iowa 661, nor in McPike v. Siver, 168 Iowa 149. These decide, in effeet, that such right of the owner subsists unless expressly negatived, and that the agent cannot prevail on some of the claims made in those cases, unless he did have the exclusive right to sell. In Metcalf v. Kent, 104 Iowa 487, that an exclusive agency can exist, is impliedly held, because recovery is allowed for the, reason that there was an express agreement that a commission should be paid in any event, “in case the above-described property is sold during the pendency of this con. tract.” In Mitchell v. Hagge, 178 Iowa 926, at 932, which appellant erroneously cites as Palmer v. Wolfe, it was said:

“Peters did not have an exclusive agency; and if he had, this did not deprive the owner of his right to sell to another.”

The part of this pronouncement which the appellant stresses is pure dictum. It was unnecessary to decide what rights there existed under an exclusive agency, where it is found that no such agency was created. The real holding of the Mitchell case is that recovery under an exclusive agency, where the agent himself does not do the selling, is not to be had in' some forms of action. For it is said further:

“This is not an action for damages on the part of the agent, but an attempt on the part of a supposed purchaser to cancel a contract made by another agent, which was accepted by the owner.”

*155We may concede, for the sake of argument, that, on objection made to pleading, we would hold that, in a naked suit to recover commission upon express agreement to pay it, there could not be a recovery on the theory that an exclusive agency was. created, and that damages equal to the reasonable value of the commission was due where the owner made a sale during the existence of an exclusive agency. But here, the plaintiff expressly tendered the exclusive agency as a basis for recovering the contract commission, and no objection to the pleading which tendered this issue was made. If it be the law now that this plea of exclusive agency did not entitle the plaintiff to the relief he demanded upon it, that was the law when plaintiff filed his amendment to petition asserting the exclusive agency as a basis for said relief. Under- oft repeated decisions, the defendant may not, after the plaintiff prevailed upon that plea, urge here for the first time that no recovery was due even if that plea were proved.

VIII. Since there must be a reversal on other grounds, following many decisions in this court, we will not pass upon the complaint that it was error not to direct a verdict for the appellant, upon the evidence.

5' tions^ :ii?uesUaña era?^questioSnn’ gated.tarIly Uti IX. It is argued that no commission was due because the plaintiff acted in bad faith in decrying the quality of plaintiff’s land to the man who afterwards purchased it. There is no plea of estoppel; but the ques-^on seen 3 t° have been voluntarily litigated, an,l vas instructed on, and we will treat it as being for review. The defendant was not entitled to have a verdict directed on account of this conduct on part of the plaintiff, because there is a conflict on whether such conduct ever occurred. He is not entitled to have reversal because the court submitted that question to the jury: first, because, if error, it was an.error in appellant’s favor; and *156second, the parties having voluntarily put evidence on that question into the record, the court had the right to instruct upon it.

e. brokers: comducfng °cause.' X. . An instruction was refused which asked a charge, in effect, that there could be no recovery without evidence that plaintiff had been the main and moving cause of inducing the customer who purchased to meet with the owner and negotiate with him,— must be the main and inducing cause of the sale. Of course, this is good law, and the sole question is whether the essential thought of the offered instruction is not covered by those given. In Instruction 7, the court instructed that the plaintiff had the burden of showing the contract alleged by him, and that, while acting thereunder, he interested and produced Lyons as a prospective- purchaser, notified defendant of the fact, and thereafter defendant sold to Lyons. In another instruction, the jury was told that, if it failed to find “that.the plaintiff was the efficient and procuring cause of the production of Lyons as a prospective purchaser, and failed to find that it was through the efforts of plaintiff that Lyons was found and produced as a prospective purchaser,” then plaintiff cannot recover. In still another instruction, the jury was told that, if someone other than plaintiff found Lyons as a purchaser, and Lyons was not found and produced by plaintiff, then plaintiff is not entitled to commission. In still another, if the jury found the sale “was the result of the efforts of someone other than plaintiff, * * * and failed to find that the sale to Lyons was made as a result of the efforts of plaintiff, then plaintiff is not entitled to re-, cover.” We are of opinion that the essence .of the offer was fully covered in the charge given. This disposes of the refusal to give Instruction 7, to which all that has just been said, applies.

*157 7. Brokers : compensation : owner’s want of knowledge of sale by broker.

*156XI. It is complained that the court refused to give *157Instruction No. 1, offered. What has just been said in part disposes of that objection. But in this offered instruction, a charge was prayed that, if the jury found that Lyons, the purchaser, and the defendant entered into contract, and that, at that time, defendant had no knowledge that plaintiff had ever seen Lyons concerning the purchase, or that he had been instrumental in bringing about such purchase, then the jury is to find that plaintiff was not the inducing cause of the sale, and verdict- must be returned for defendant. In fewer words, if the defendant did not know, when he sold to Lyons, that plaintiff had been the main, efficient cause .of inducing Lyons to buy, then plaintiff cannot recover a commission, even if plaintiff was the inducing cause. That is not the law. See Kelly v. Stone, 94 Iowa 316; Rounds v. Alee, 116 Iowa 345.

„ _ 3 instructions; ment to petiXII. The plaintiff did not file his amendment which for the first time asserted an exclusive agency until he was in trial, and it was not filed for about four years from the time .of filing the original petition. The court refused an instruction, in effect, that this was a circumstance to be weighed, in connection with all the evidence. The instruction should have been given. We find nothing in the charge that is the equivalent of such an instruction.

9. brokers : com-den of proof. XIII. In Instruction 11, the jury was told that defendant asserted no exclusive agency was given; that the farm was listed with plaintiff on condition that there should be no commission unless plaintiff sold and exchanged the property on defendant’s terms; and that it was placed, not only with , plaintiff, but with other agents on the same terms; and that “the burden of proof is on the defendant to show by a preponderance such employment on said terms;” and, if the evidence satisfied the jury that Wat*158kins made the sale or brought Lyons and defendant together, and they consummated the sale, “then, in that event, your verdict shall be for the defendant.” This was erroneous. The burden was on the plaintiff to show what his contract was, and that he had performed it. The defendant did not have the burden of proving that the contract was something other than what was asserted by plaintiff, nor the burden of proving that someone other than plaintiff had been the promoting cause of the sale.

10' penStion :C°m" agent.aith of XIV. In Instruction 12, the jury was told that, if plaintiff told the purchaser he would not want the land of the defendant, that there was no use to go and see it, and that it was rough, and cut up with gullies, anfl if; thereafter, Lyons none the less bought the farm, but through the efforts of someone other than plaintiff, “then you are warranted in finding that plaintiff was not the efficient and procuring or producing cause, and is not entitled to recover.” This is an erroneous instruction. It should have been charged that, if the jury found the matters set forth, that, instead of being merely warranted in finding for defendant, it must, in that event, find for him. If the agent did these things, he was injuring, instead of promoting, the sale.

xl- pen°satfon:- in“" ductag cause of XV. Instruction 16 charged that whether the listing agreement between the parties was exclusive or not, all plaintiff was bound to do to earn his commission was to find and produce a purchaser ready, able, an<l willing to purchase, on terms and con¿itions satisfactory to defendant. One exception taken is that this eliminates whether the agent was or was not the “procuring” cause. The objection is hypercritical. One who produces such purchaser certainly has procured him; and so the instruction *159does not eliminate the procurement as“a test, but includes it as a test.

12. brokers : comflicting claims, The serious exception is the one against that part of the instruction which tells the jury the plaintiff may recover even though he had paid commissions to someone other than plaintiff, because “the defendant knew, when he paid Watkins, that the plaintiff claimed to have found and produced Lyons as a purchaser, and was claiming the commission accruing under the listing agreement on account of the sale of the lands- to Lyons.” As to this, the exception is that it usurped the province of the jury, because the jury could find from the evidence that defendant did not know of these claims on part of plaintiff at the time when he paid Watkins. Beyond all doubt, the jury could find that defendant did have this knowledge when he paid Watkins. The question is whether there is such absence of conflict as that the jury was bound so to find. The conflict, if it be one, .is created by testimony of the defendant that he never had any knowledge, either directly or indirectly, from any source whatever, that Lyons had seen Thomas, until after the sale had been consummated; that defendant didn’t know that plaintiff knew Lyons; that Watkins fetched Lyons to defendant; that plaintiff never spoke to defendant “about the trade in the least;” that plaintiff never told defendant that plaintiff had seen Lyons, or that he had a prospective buyer, or that he hdd ever shown the land to anyone; and, finally, that the first time plaintiff spoke to defendant about a commission:

“I thought he was joking. I expected Phil Watkins would want the commission. Then I found out that Thomas was in earnest. I told him I would not pay him anything, because he had not done anything.”

It seems to us the jury could fairly find, from this testimony on part of the defendant, that he asserted he did *160not know, when be paid Watkins, that plaintiff was making any claims to tbis commission; and that, therefore, tbe court should have submitted whether or not such payment had been made with such knowledge, instead of peremptorily charging that this had been done.

XVI. After judgment on the verdict, the court, on motion, added a judgment against the surety of defendant on delivery bond. In view of the reversal, complaint of this action will not be considered.

For the reasons stated, the judgment must be and is— Reversed.

Ladd, C. J., Evans and Preston, JJ., concur.