Brennan v. Roach

47 Mo. App. 290, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 465
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 47 Mo. App. 290 (Brennan v. Roach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brennan v. Roach, 47 Mo. App. 290, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 465 (Mo. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

This action was commenced before a justice of the peace to recover an amount claimed to be due the plaintiff from the defendant for services rendered by the plaintiff as a real-estate agent in procuring a purchaser for a house of the defendant, which he had put into the plaintiff’s hands for sale. The defendant denied that the plaintiff had procured a purchaser for the house ; but, on the contrary, alleged that • another firm of real-estate agents, Charles EL Gleason 6 Co., had procured such purchaser, and that the defendant had paid to them the usual commissions, to-wit, two and one half per cent, on the purchase price. [292]*292There was a trial before a jury in the circuit court, and a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for the amount claimed, from which the defendant prosecutes this appeal, assigning for error that the court erred in its rulings on the instructions, and that, as matter of law, there was no evidence warranting a recovery.

The evidence tended to show that the defendant, having a house for sale with seventy-five feet of ground attached to it, offered it for sale with thirty-seven and one-half feet of the ground for $8,500, and pub it in the hands of three real-estate agents for sale on those terms, — the plaintiff, Mr. Farrelly and' Gleason & Co. As to whether the defendant, when he put the house into the hands of the plaintiff for sale, informed the plaintiff that he had put it into the hands of any other agent, the evidence is conflicting. The plaintiff advertised the property for sale, and thereafter one Ready called upon him, and desired to examine it and inquired the price and terms, and, at the plaintiff’s procurement, did visit the property and examine it, and was pleased with it and satisfied with the price and terms. Then the evidence tends to show that Mr. Ready, having a friend, Mr. Yon Phul, who was a real-estate agent, procured Mr. Yon Phul to act for him in the matter, and that Mr. Yon Phul thereupon went, not to the plaintiff, but to Gleason & Co., one of the other agents in whose hands the defendant had placed the property for sale, and paid' to them, as agents of the defendant, $100 earnest money, and took from them, as such agents, a written contract of sale, and that thereafter the sale was consummated between the defendant and Ready through Gleason & Co., and that the defendant paid the commissions to Gleason & Co., and refused to pay them to this plaintiff.

The evidence makes it very clear that the worTc, which brought about the sale, was done entirely by the plaintiff, and not by Yon Phul or by Gleason & Co. [293]*293The defendant himself testifies that he got the information about Ready, the purchaser, from the plaintiff; that the plaintiff told him who the party was ; that he thereupon made an appointment with Ready at the house. It also appears from the testimony of Ready that the plaintiff gave him the terms of sale, and the name of the owner; that the defendant thereupon called upon him, Ready, and made an appointment with him to see and examine the house, which Ready did; and that this was all the influence brought to bear upon Ready ’ s mind from any source in deciding him to buy the house. It also appeared from Ready’s testimony that, when Yon Phul called his attention to this house, he stated to him that he had seen it, told him who the owner was and the price of it, and asked him to see the defendant, believing that he could do better with him than he himself could do.

Upon substantially this state of evidence the court gave the following instruction at the request of plaintiff: “If the jury believe and find from the evidence that the plaintiff is a real estate-agent, and that defendant placed in his hands the sale of the property or premises, 3829 Page avenue, in the city of St. Louis, with instructions to sell the same or procure a purchaser therefor; and, if you further find from the evidence that, in accordance with such instructions, plaintiff did advertise the said property for sale in one or more newspapers published in the city of St. Louis, and did use such efforts and exertions on his part as were necessary to be done to bring the sale of the said property to the attention of purchasers contemplating the purchase of such property, and by reason of such efforts procured a purchaser for such property and introduced, or caused to be introduced, such purchaser to the defendant, the owner of the said property, and that the said purchaser so introduced by the plaintiff to the defendant subsequently purchased the said property from the defendant as the [294]*294owner at the price fixed upon it by the plaintiff, without any further introduction or agency on the part of the said plaintiff, and that the purchase price of the. said property was $8,500, and that two and one-half-percent. commissions is the usual and reasonable price for such services, you will render your verdict in favor of the plaintiff for an amount not to exceed the sum of $212.50.”

The defendant requested, and the court refused, the following instructions: “ The jury are instructed that, even if they believe from the evidence that Bart. Ready first learned of the house in question from the plaintiff, and that, at Brennan’s request and direction, Ready and Roach sought each other out with a view of negotiating for the purchase or sale of the house in question, they must find a verdict for defendant, unless they further believe from the evidence that Ready then and there either offered the price fixed by Roach with Brennan, or some other price and terms which Brennan accepted.

“If the jury believe from the evidence that, at or about the time Roach placed the house in question in Brennan’s hands for sale, he placed the same in the hands of Thomas F. Farrelly and Charles H. Gleason & Co. for the same purpose, and that Ben Yon Phul went to Charles H. Gleason & Co., paid the earnest money required by the latter, and took the usual receipt therefor, then the jury are instructed that the paying of the earnest money and giving of receipt constituted a sale by Gleason & Co. of the house, and unless they further find from the evidence that Roach directly referred Ready to Gleason & Co. at any time after Roach & Ready came together, they must find for the defendant, unless they further believe from the evidence Ready, when he*met Roach, offered to buy his house at the figures fixed by Brennan and Roach, or offered some other sum which Roach accepted.”

[295]*295“The jury are instructed that, though Ready and Roach came together through the reference of each to the other by Brennan, and Ready did look at the house and inquired the price and terms of sale, still, if they find further from the evidence that Ready did not make an offer then and there or at any other time to Roach in person, but that Ready subsequently employed an agent to negotiate for the purchase of the house, and the agent thus employed went to Gleason & Co., and finally closed the sale of- the house by paying earnest money, they will find for defendant.

“The jury are instructed that, even if they find from the evidence that Ready and Roach came together first through Brennan, through the reference of each to the other by Brennan, still, if they find that Ready did not at the time, or at any other time, in person, to Roach in person, make an offer for the house on the terms fixed by Roach with.Brennan, or any offer which Roach in person accepted, they must find for defendant.”

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Bluebook (online)
47 Mo. App. 290, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brennan-v-roach-moctapp-1891.