— C. T. Shropshire sued E. H. Adams to recover damages for breach of a contract. He has appealed from a judgment sustaining a general demurrer to his petition and here complains of the action of the trial court. The following is a substantial statement of the material facts of the petition:
Plaintiff averred that at the request of E. H. Adams he undertook to find a purchaser for certain land belonging to'Adams at a price satisfactory to him. That in consideration of his bringing about such a sale Adams promised to furnish money sufficient to purchase one thousand head of good cows (to be owned jointly by plaintiff and defendant), to furnish pasturage for them for five years, the plaintiff to manage, care for and control them in the meantime, and that at the end of five years the stock and its increase should be divided one-fourth to plaintiff and three-fourths to defendant. The cattle were to be purchased before January 1, 1903.
There is no allegation as to what would have been the cost of the *342one thousand head of good cows, the value of the pasturage, the value of the plaintiff’s services in caring for and controlling them for five years, or the probable increase either in numbers or value at the end of that time.
Appellant further averred that he undertook the sale of the land for Adams and thereafter reported to him that H. Masterson wished to purchase it and had offered him, Shropshire, $5,000 in cash in case he, Shropshire, would bring about the purchase. That Adams assented to plaintiff’s acceptance of the joint employment by Masterson, and said he would be glad to see Shropshire make that sum, and that his acceptance of it would in no wise interfere with plaintiff’s contract with deféndant. That thereafter plaintiff brought Adams and Masterson together and the latter purchased the land for $110,000 and Adams executed a conveyance. That Masterson at all times knew of plaintiff’s contract with defendant and paid plaintiff the $5,000 promised him, but defendant has refused to furnish the money to buy the cattle, and has wholly repudiated his agreement. That his interest in the cattle at the end of five years would have been worth .$15,000 for which sum he sues.
He prays in the event hé is not allowed to recover for the breach of the cattle contract, he be awarded the reasonable value of his services to plaintiff in bringing about the sale of the land, the value being placed at $15,000.
To this petition defendant interposed a general demurrer which was sustained and plaintiff refused to amend.
Defendant here contends that the petition stated no cause of action for these several reasons:
First. Because it shows upon its face that plaintiff had forfeited his right to compensation from Adams by accepting the inconsistent employment for the same purpose from the purchaser, Masterson.
Second. Because the cattle contract was void under the statute of frauds because not performable within one year.
Third. Because, if the contract is valid, the measure of ' damage sued for is not applicable under the law; and
Fourth. He can not in any event recover oh a quantum meruit because he alleges a specific contract by which the parties bound themselves as to the compensation he should receive.
We are of opinion the first objection to the petition is not sound. It is generally true that the double agency of a real estate broker undertaking to represent the vendor and vendee will not be countenanced but the objection to such agency disappears when each party knows of and assents to the -double employment. Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, vol. 1, page 1113.
In our opinion the second objection is equally without merit. Under the allegations of the petition the compensation promised the plaintiff by defendant was the formation of a partnership with him in the ownership, handling and ultimate disposition of one thousand head of cattle. For the purchase of these defendant was to furnish the money, and they were to embark in the enterprise by January 1, 1903. It is thus apparent that the promised partnership relation was to be established within the year, and to that extent at least the statute of frauds had no application. The enterprise once begun the defendant, accord*343ing to the agreement, would have owned an undivided three-fourths interest in the cattle, and the plaintiff the remaining one-fourth. From that time the rights and relations of the partners would have been controlled by the terms of the partnership agreement. That is to. say, the defendant must have furnished pasturage. If he failed or refused to do so, the plaintiff might have procured it at his expense, or terminated the partnership and claimed his interest in the stock. If the plaintiff had failed or refused to perform his duty in caring for and managing the stock, defendant could have terminated the partnership relation. It follows on this view of the case that immediately upon the purchase of the cattle plaintiff would have become interested therein to the extent of an undivided one-fourth.
Inasmuch as the death of either party would work a dissolution of the partnership (22 Ency. Law, p. 199), it follows also that the contract of partnership was not within the statute of frauds. Weatherford, M. W. & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Wood, 88 Texas, 191.
It follows further from what has been said, that as the cattle were never purchased, and the partnership never in fact begun, the obvious measure of plaintiff’s damage was the value of two hundred and fifty head of “good cows,” if the descriptive words “good cows” had a meaning definite enough to enable the court to ascertain their value.
Had the contract for compensation been void plaintiff would have been entitled to recover upon a quantum meruit. The defendant would not be permitted to accept his valuable services and escape all liability on the ground that he had not bound himself by a lawful contract. Thouvenin v. Lea, 26 Texas, 615.
As, however, the contract by which' defendant undertook to compensate the plaintiff for his services in selling the land was valid, plaintiff can not recover on a quantum meruit, but may hold the defendant only as he bound himself. The defendant did not promise to pay the plaintiff what his services were reasonably worth, but promised him a definite thing.
The plaintiff did not seek to recover a sum equal to his interest in the cattle at the time they were to be purchased. Neither did he state any fact from which the court might ascertain what their value would have been either per head or in the aggregate. The pleader contented himself with the allegation that at the end of five years his interest in the cattle would have been worth $15,000, and when this was held to state no cause of action he refused to amend.
The only question which remains to be determined is whether under •the facts stated the plaintiff was entitled to recover a sum equal to what his interest would have been at the end of the five years.
Unquestionably he is unless the measure of damage upon which he seeks to recover is too speculative and uncertain to be safely adopted. Under plaintiff’s pleadings as they stand the court would be confined in its inquiry to what plaintiff’s interest in the cattle would have been worth at the end of five years. This sum would have depended on the number and value of the increase added to the number and value of the original stock alive and undisposed of at that time. To our minds it would be impossible (in view of the many contingencies upon which the result would depend) to make even an approximate *344guess. The court would be called on to speculate on the number and value of calves unborn. To speculate on the number of the original stock and the increase which would survive the five years, and to guess what the market price will be at that time. It is difficult to imagine an inquiry depending on so many uncertainties.
Future profits as an element of damage are in no case excluded merely because they are profits but because they are uncertain. In any cáse when by reason of the nature of the situation they may be established with reasonable certainty they are allowed. But when future profits are in a given case for any reason difficult of proof, and a standard by which to measure them difficult, if not impossible, to find, and the facts of the case furnish a.safe and obvious measure of compensation, the court will seize upon and apply the latter even though it may fall somewhat short of full compensation. 8 Ency. Law, p. 612; McCardell v. Henry, 23 Texas Civ. App., 383.
It is clear to us that for the breach of the contract to furnish the money to buy the cattle there is an obviously safe and reasonably ample measure of damage suggested by the facts, namely, a sum equal to one-fourth the cost of the cattle and interest to the date of recovery.
As to the other obligations in the contract, they were clearly designed to offset each other. The plaintiff’s management and care of the thousand head to offset the pasturage to be furnished by defendant.
Because the petition furnishes the court with no basis for ascertaining the value of the cattle and applying the proper measure of damages the trial court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer. The judgment should therefore be affirmed and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.