Ballweber v. Kern

164 N.W. 272, 38 N.D. 12, 1917 N.D. LEXIS 12
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 N.W. 272 (Ballweber v. Kern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballweber v. Kern, 164 N.W. 272, 38 N.D. 12, 1917 N.D. LEXIS 12 (N.D. 1917).

Opinions

Grace, J.

The action is one by plaintiffs, land brokers, for the recovery of commissions from the defendants for the alleged procuring of purchasers for two certain sections of land in Billings county, state of North Dakota, which the defendants had authority to sell, and which plaintiffs allege the defendants agreed to sell to plaintiffs or any purchaser for such land produced by plaintiffs for the sum of $13,800, plaintiffs to have for their commission all they could sell such land for in excess of $13,800. Plaintiffs allege that on or about the 15th day of June, 1912, plaintiffs produced and tendered to the defendants a purchaser ready, able, and willing to purchase said real estate upon the terms required by said contract, and who agreed to pay the sum of $19,200 for said real estate. That said defendants refused to' carry out said contract with the plaintiffs, to the plaintiffs’ damage in the sum of $5,400.

The answer makes, first, a general denial; and, second, that on or about the 5th day of June, 1912, the defendants in all things revoked and rescinded the authority of the plaintiffs in said contract set forth in said complaint.

The facts in the case are as follows: In the years 1911 and 1912’ plaintiffs were real estate brokers living in Minneapolis. Defendant Kern was cashier in a bank at Sentinel Butte, North Dakota, during the year 1911 and until about July 1, 1912. The defendant Hart during said time was a commercial traveler living at Sentinel Butte,, North Dakota, and was engaged with Kern to some extent in the real estate business. The amount of land involved, the selling for which commission is demanded, is two sections of land in Billings county, North Dakota. It was owned, not by the defendants, but by some person residing out of the state, the net selling price for which the defendants should account to him being $10 per acre. If such land was sold by the plaintiffs for excess over $10 per acre, the defendants were to have as their commission $1,000, and the plaintiffs to have all [16]*16over $10 per acre plus the $1,000 commission to the defendants, as their commission for procuring a purchaser for such land. About May 1, 1912, one of the plaintiffs, Edgerton, brought one Joseph Huber to Sentinel Butte, and together with the defendant Kern looked over the land. No sale was perfected at this time. On June 4, 1912, Ballweber, • Huber, and one Dr. Taylor left Minneapolis on a land-buying trip, Dr. Taylor going to Montana, the plaintiff Ballweber and Huber stopping at Sentinel Butte on June 6th, when the land was ;gone over by Huber, Kern, and Ballweber. Huber did not complete the purchase of the land that day, and returned on the night of June 6th to Minneapolis with Ballweber. The land was sold to the Hubers by the defendants, no notice of such sale being given to the plaintiffs.

The matters involved in this case are considerably involved and -difficult of analysis, for the reason that to some extent there is uncertainty as to the issues of the case, and uncertainty as to whether the plaintiffs by their complaint intended to allege a cause of action only •concerning the selling of the land in question to one Dr. Taylor, or whether the complaint was broad enough to admit testimony concerning the sale of the land to the Hubers also. The uncertainty of the issues is but little clarified by the bill of particulars, for which demand was made of the plaintiffs by the defendants in the course of such action. A copy of such bill of particulars furnished the defendants by the plaintiffs is as follows:

To the above-named defendants: In compliance with your demand for a bill of particulars, you are hereby advised that the name of the purchaser alleged in the complaint to have been produced by plaintiffs •and ready, able, and willing to purchase the real estate described in the complaint upon the terms -therein set forth, is Dr. E. A. Taylor, residing at Bacine, Wisconsin. You are further advised that the purchaser to whom defendants sold such land in violation of the contract with plaintiffs, to wit, Joseph Huber and Paul Huber, were purchasers procured by and through plaintiffs, all of which facts defendants at all times had full knowledge. .
E. C. Heffron,
A. H. Hall,
Attorneys for Plaintiffs.

[17]*17An inspection of such bill of particulars discloses that the purchaser referred to in the complaint was Dr. E. A. Taylor. The bill of particulars so states. The bill of particulars, • so far as it refers to the Hubers, simply calls the attention of the defendants to the fact that the defendants sold to the Hubers in violation of the contract with the plaintiffs, and that the Hubers were purchasers procured by and through the plaintiffs, of which facts the defendants had full knowledge; but the bill of particulars does not claim that the action is being maintained to recover for commissions on land sold to the Hubers by the defendants, neither does the complaint allege a cause of action for recovery of commissions by reason of land sold to the Hubers.

The answer would seem to be in fairly good form, containing, firstly, a general denial; and, secondly, an allegation of the revocation and rescinding of the authority of the plaintiffs under the alleged contract. The court, however, in instructing the jury, based its instructions, not upon the revocation or rescinding of the authority of the agent, but •based its instructions upon, and applied them to, a rescission of the contract, and not to the revocation of the authority of the agent. The case involves only the law of agency and is to be governed by the law of agency, and is not governed by the law of rescission of contracts as generally understood, the question presented really being a revocation of agency, and not rescission of contract, except as the word “rescission” may be used in connection with the word “revocation,” in revoking the authority of the agent. The appellants’ 6th, 7th, and 8th assignments of error are as follows:

“6th. The district court erred in instructing the jury at the trial of this case as follows: ‘If you believe from the evidence and by a fair preponderance that the defendants rescinded the contract and notified the plaintiffs, either orally or in writing, of the limitations upon which this .contract would remain in existence, and the plaintiffs were made aware of these conditions, and the conditions expired prior to the 15th day of J une, then such acts would amount to a rescission of the contract, and the plaintiffs would not be entitled to recover in the action.’ 7th. The district court erred in instructing the jury at the trial of this case as follows: ‘If there was no rescission, as the court has defined it, to you on or before the 15th day of June, then you will have to determine whether or not these plaintiffs procured a purchaser able and willing [18]*18to purchase the land at profit to the plaintiffs.’ 8th. The district com. erred in instructing the jury at the trial of this case as follows: ‘Did the defendants rescind the contract prior to the 15th day of June? Did they notify the plaintiffs of the time in which they had to comply with these conditions ? and upon their failure to comply with the conditions within that time, then all the agreements were off.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 N.W. 272, 38 N.D. 12, 1917 N.D. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballweber-v-kern-nd-1917.