Citation Numbers: 188 Mo. App. 713, 176 S.W. 511, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 129
Judges: Trimble
Filed Date: 5/3/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
Herein is another of those oft-recurring controversies between a real estate broker and his principal over the payment of a commission.
Respondent claimed that appellant engaged his services as a real estate broker to procure a purchaser for his farm at $125 per acre, and agreed to pay therefor the regular commission; that he procured two men who were ready, able, and willing to buy the farm at that price and brought them and the owner together, hut that just as they were on the point of going to a lawyer to draw up the contract the owner refused to sell; wherefore, having performed his side of the contract, he says he should receive his pay.
Appellant admits that he placed his land with respondent to sell at $125 per acre and that he agreed to pay the regular commission, but he says that the authority to sell was “only for a few days” instead of without limit as to time as claimed by the broker; and that the' broker did not secure a purchaser within a reasonable time; that the purchasers were not presented to him until after he had made certain improvements on the farm subsequent to his agreement with respondent to sell at $125 per acre, and that consequently he could not afford to sell at that figure, and therefore refused to do so. He admits that he never told respondent he was putting improvements on the farm nor that the price thereof was raised until the moment he refused to sign a contract, and this was after the purchasers had been obtained and the broker’s work had been completed.
If no limit of time was placed on the agent’s authority, then he had a reasonable time in which to procure a purchaser. Ordinarily what is a reasonable time depends upon the facts in the case and is more frequently than otherwise a question for the jury to determine taking into consideration the acts of the parties in relation to the contract. The property was placed in respondent’s hands in July, 1912, and the purchasers were not finally procured until some time in the fall of 1913—fifteen months later, and appellant would have us say this lapse of time was unreasonable as a matter of law. But the evidence amply tends to show that respondent was showing the farm to prospective buyers during the fall of 1912, and the spring and summer of 1913, and appellant knew respondent was bringing men to look at the farm and did nothing to change or affect the agent’s authority. During this time other real estate agents, who also had the farm listed, were showing the farm at $125. This was undoubtedly as late at least as May, 1913. Dray, one of the men whom respondent procured as a purchaser was taken to see the farm at least three separate times, once in the fall of 1912, once still later that year, and a third time in the spring of 1913. He was wanting to buy all the time but not being situated where he could look after the farm personally, he wanted to buy it with some one who could help, him in looking-after it. Finally about October, 1913, a man was found who with Dray looked at the farm, and who was willing to buy it with him. They agreed to do so, and the two were shown to be ready, willing and able to purchase. There is no evidence that appellant ever told
Under these circumstances it was a question for the jury to say whether respondent performed his contract within a reasonable time or not, and we cannot pass upon it as a matter of law. Nlor is there any merit in the point made that appellant was never told that the proposed purchasers were willing to give $125 per acre for the land. The evidence fully shows that this was done, and that appellant refused to proceed further because he wanted more money. Consequently, there is no doubt but that the court did right in overruling the demurrer. There is no evidence in the record to support the charge that these two purchasers were not procured in good faith or that their offer and readiness to buy were a mere sham to enable respondent to apparently comply with his contract and demand a commission.
There is no dispute over the amount of the commission to be paid, and both sides agree that it coincided with the usual and regular rate in such cases. If a commission was earned and was due from appel-" lant, it amounted to $450 according to the conceded facts. Since there was no disagreement on this feature of the case, there was no error in plaintiff’s instruction number 1 referring to the commission as “the amount it was understood between the parties, in the event a purchaser was procured, was to be paid as commissions.” The instruction did not authorize or permit a recovery on a quantum meruit, but authorized the jury, if they found the required facts which were necessary to plaintiff’s recovery, to find for him in the amount understood and agreed upon between them. This was not in dispute and coincided exactly with the allegation of the petition and the jury returned a verdict for that amount.
The evidence in support of the respondent’s case tends to show that he did all that was required of him by his contract within the time provided when he procured purchasers who were ready, able and willing to
Appellant’s liability depends wholly upon questions of fact presented by the evidence. The various inferences arising therefrom were for the jury to determine. We cannot draw them or decide the case upon them. If appellant has unfortunately become entangled in a contract with a real estate agent it is because of his carelessness in creating an obligation and in making no effort to absolve himself therefrom until after the agent has performed his part of the contract and the liability has become fixed. In such case where the issues of fact involved have been properly submitted to a jury of his peers and they have decided against him, there is no help for him in Israel.
The judgment is affirmed.