Brown v. Odneal

239 S.W. 350, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1922
DocketNo. 1284.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 239 S.W. 350 (Brown v. Odneal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Odneal, 239 S.W. 350, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 562 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

WALTHABB, J.

H.' T. Odneal brought this suit against Howell Johnson, E-. P. Sweatt, Geo. M. Brown, and R. P. Hinyard, jointly and severally, to recover a commission on the sale of an oil and gas lease to Schimmel & Co., on 13,440 acres of land belonging to Sweatt, Brown, and Hinyard, in Pecos county. Odneal was engaged in the real estate and oil lease brokerage business at Pt. Stockton, Tex., and Judge Hbwell Johnson was also acting as a broker in the sale of oil leases. Sweatt, Brown, and Hin-yard owned the said lands and listed same exclusively with Johnson for sale of an oil and gas lease thereon.

Odneaf s petition is in two counts. In the first count he declares upon an express oral agreement alleging that Johnson, acting for himself and as agent for Sweatt, Brown, and Hinyard, engaged him to sell an oil and gas lease on said lands to Schimmel & Co., and agreed to pay him 4½ cents an acre as his commission; that thereafter, acting under said agreement he sold an oil and gas lease on said lands to Schimmel & Co. for 25 cents an acre cash and yearly rental of 25 cents an acre, and that thereafter Johnson, Sweatt, Brown, and Hinyard sold to Schimmel & -Co., a lease upon said land. Odneal alleged that prior to the sale all defendants had full knowledge of his services and of the agreement with Johnson for the commission and of his having been the efficient and procuring cause of said sale, and that by reason of said agreement, knowledge, and sale defendants became liable to him for a commission of 4½ cents an acre, amounting to the sum of $604.80.

In the. alternative, Odneal alleged that Johnson acting for himself, Sweatt, Brown, and Hinyard, represented to him that he (Johnson) was the exclusive agent of the other defendants for the sale of the oil and gas lease on said lands, and listed said land with him for sale of an oil and gas lease; that by his own personal efforts he negotiated a sale of an oil and gas lease to Schimmel & Co. for a consideration agreeable to and accepted by defendants, with full knowledge prior to such sale of all of his efforts connected herewith; that the usual and customary commissions at Pt Stockton for securing purchasers for oil leases through real estate brokers is five cents an acre, aggregating $672, which he alleged to be a reasonable sum for said services.

*351 Defendants answered by general demurrer ; special exception to tbe alternative plea. Sweatt, Brown, and Hinyard deny all tbe allegations in tbe petition, and specially deny tbat tliey ever at any time authorized Od-neal to sell or lease said land; they specially deny tbat Johnson was authorized by any of them to employ or contract with plaintiff to lease, sell,- or dispose of any or all of said lands for oil and gas or other purposes.

Brown, answering for himself and Sweatt and Hinyard, alleges that Odneal approached him and desired to represent them in the leasing of said lands, but that he (Brown) then and there refused to discuss the matter with him and informed him that Johnson was the only person authorized to lease said lands, and refused to entertain or listen to Odneal about the matter. Sweatt, Brown, and Hinyard further answer that Johnson informed them that he could lease said lands for oil and gas for 25 cents net an acre to them and an annual rental of 15 cents an acre, which they accepted.

The case was tried without a jury. The court sustained exceptions to the petition as to Johnson and dismissed the cause as to him, to which action appellee made no objection. The court likewise sustained exceptions to the cross-action of Johnson against Odneal and dismissed the cross-action. The court held in favor of Odneal on his second or alternative plea as to Sweatt, Brown, and Hinyard, and as to them, a jury having been waived, the court rendered judgment in favor of Odneal for $672.

Sweatt, Brown, and Hinyard prosecute this appeal.

The trial court made no findings of fact. The material facts are as follows: Howell Johnson and H. T. Odneal live in Ft. Stockton, and both were engaged in the real estate and oil lease brokerage business, and, at the inception of the matters involved in this controversy, were occupying the same building, but before the deal was -actually begun of leasing the lands Johnson had removed to another building. At that time Johnson and Odneal were on intimate and friendly terms, each talking over with the other the matters each had in hand. Johnson was the exclusive agent for the leasing of Sweatt, Brown, and Hinyard lands, and Odneal had as a prospective buyer of oil and gas leases Schimmel & Co., of Fort Worth. Early in May, 1921, J. D.- Schimmel went to Ft. Stockton, and met Odneal. Schimmel expressed to Odneal his desire to lease about 40 sections of land. Odneal told Schimmel he thought he could get the lease of the Sweatt,. Brown, and Hinyard lands for hiip, and they, Schimmel and Odneal, agreed on the price. Odneal told Schimmel that he would charge him 5 cents an acre commission, and Schimmel agreed to it and that' he would let Odneal get out and rustle it for him. At that time Odneal called Johnson from across the street and introduced him to Schimmel and had him explain the title to other lands not involved here. Odneal then saw Mr. Livingston and explained to him that he had a man to whom he could lease his (Livingston’s) lands. The Livingston lease was written and signed, Johnson writing the lease.

Here the evidence of Odneal and Johnson are somewhat at variance. Odneal testified:

“While he (Johnson) was drawing up the papers (Livingston lease), and he mentioned about the Brown and Sweatt stuff, and said, ‘I have got the exclusive sale,’ and so Judge (Johnson) asked me to put in that Brown and Sweatt stuff, and I said, ‘All right, you just write Mr. Brown or wire him and tell them we will give them $100 a section for his land and 25 cents rental,’ which would leave Us 9 cents for us to split, and he says, ‘All right.’ After we got through drawing up the papers on the Livingston land, I told him I was going to El Paso the next day with Schimmel and for him to get me up a list of all the Brown and Sweatt land so that I could put it up to Schimmel when I went off. So he came over to the courthouse and got a list the next morning of all the numbers of the sections, and I put it up to him while in El Paso, or while on the train, I don’t know which, and—
“The Court: What was Schimmel willing to pay? A. Twenty-five cents and 25 cents rental.
“The Court: You would be getting $128? A. At 20 cents I would have been getting that; I was trying to get the Brown and Sweatt stuff at $100 a section, and I told him to offer them $100, and we would have 9 cents to split between us. I was fixing to go with Mr. Schim-mel to El Paso. Judge (Johnson) got this inventory of this land and handed it to me on all the numbers of the Brown and Sweatt land, the 21 sections. * * * I took this up with Mr. Schimmel and showed him the inventory of these sections, and he took out his map and marked them off, and I told him just to take the inventory list, and he said, ‘All right,’ and he said as quick as he could get back to Fort Worth he would have his boy write to me in regard to this land. When he got back to Fort Worth, I got a letter stating that his boy was in East Texas, and that as soon as he got back he would have him write me, and so I waited then for a few days, and when his boy got back he wrote me a letter.

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.W. 350, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-odneal-texapp-1922.