Buchtel v. Evans

28 P. 67, 21 Or. 309, 1891 Ore. LEXIS 46
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 28 P. 67 (Buchtel v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buchtel v. Evans, 28 P. 67, 21 Or. 309, 1891 Ore. LEXIS 46 (Or. 1891).

Opinion

Bean, J.

This is an action by plaintiffs as real estate brokers to recover the sum of $7,400 as commissions for the sale of a tract of land near Tacoma, Washington, belonging to defendant. The complaint in substance avers that in April, 1890, plaintiffs agreed with defendant to procure for him a purchaser for certain real estate owned by him near Tacoma containing seventy-four acres, and to receive as their compensation for so doing whatever sum such purchaser might pay for said land in excess of $1,000 per acre; that they did in pursuance of their contract procure one H. C. Clement, who purchased said land paying defendant therefor in cash $1,100 per acre, but defendant refuses to pay to plaintiffs the amount by him received in excess of $1,000 per acre.

[311]*311The answer of defendant is a specific denial of the allegations of the complaint.

Evidence having been given by defendant on the trial tending to show that plaintiffs were acting as the agents of Clement in the purchase and sale of the land in question, and not of defendant, the court among other things instructed the jury in effect, that if plaintiffs were in the actual employment of both Clement and defendant, and concealed from each their employment by the other, they could not recover to the giving of which instruction plaintiffs by their counsel duly excepted, because it was not within the issues made by the pleading, and then requested the court to instruct the jury that there were no issue or averment by defendant that plaintiffs were employed by Clement, and that the question of double employment was not a matter for their consideration, which instruction the court refused to give.

The giving and refusal of these instructions are the errors relied on by plaintiffs on this appeal. Their contention is, that before defendant can avail himself of the defense of the illegality of this contract with plaintiffs by reason of their employment by Clement, it is incumbent on him to plead it. The question, therefore, now before us is, conceding that the employment of a real estate broker by both buyer and seller is illegal and void and cannot be enforced against either, must such fact of double employment be alleged as a defense, or can it be proven under the general issue?

At common law under the general issue the defendant was entitled to give in evidence any fact which went to show a valid defense. The code of this state has wrought an entire change in that regard and substituted for the general issue an answer, which must contain (1) a specific denial of the material allegations intended to be controverted; and (2) a statement of any new matter constituting a defense. (Hill’s Code, § 72.) If the defendant by his answer merely deny the facts alleged, he can only offer in [312]*312evidence such facts as go to disprove the plaintiff’s canse of action. Under the code a general traverse will not permit the defendant to introduce other evidence than that which tends directly to disprove the facts alleged in the complaint. (Benedict v. Seymour, 6 How. Pr. 298; Pomeroy Rem. § 673.) So that if a defendant intend to rest his defense upon any fact which does not directly tend to contradict the evidence of plaintiff or disprove his material averment of fact, and is not included in the allegations necessary to the plaintiff’s cause of action, it is new matter and must be pleaded (Boone Cd. Pl. 111; Pom. Rem. § 691); “the true rule,” as Mr. Bliss says, “being that under a denial that defendant should be permitted to show no fact that does not go directly to disprove the fact denied.” (Bliss Cd. Pl. § 327.)

A defense, therefore, which admits the apparent validity of the contract or transaction set out in the complaint but seeks to void its effect by establishing some circumstance, transaction or conclusion of fact not inconsistent with the truth of the complaint, is new matter and must be set out. In the case at bar, the plaintiffs alleged a contract with defendant valid on its face, which the latter denied. It was the existence of this contract as a fact which the defendant denied, and which he could introduce evidence to disprove. Proof that the plaintiffs were in the employment of another, was no fact included in plaintiffs’ allegations and necessary to sustain their causé of action. That was a matter new and independent of the allegations of the complaint and which could not be proved unless pleaded. It in no way tends to disprove the allegations of the complaint, but on the other hand necessarily admits the contract as alleged, but seeks to avoid liability thereon, by showing that plaintiffs were also acting as the agents of the buyer at the same time, and consequently it is illegal and void.

Plaintiffs allege that they made a contract with defendant, which he denies. It is the existence of this fact which defendant was entitled to disprove; and if the facts when developed should contain any element of illegality, — that is [313]*313the facts of their contracting with each other, — the plaintiff must fail; but he fails either because the facts do not exist upon which the contract is based, or that the facts contain an element of illegality, which relieve from liability. In such case it is manifest that if the facts were such as a defendant may be hable upon, and were not disproved, a recovery could be had; but if they were such that the statement of them involves an illegal element, the plaintiff has not shown a valid contract and cannot recover. In this case the fact that plaintiffs were the agents of Clement was not in any way included in plaintiffs’ cause of action, and if true in no way tended to show that plaintiffs did not make the contract with defendant as alleged, but necessarily admitted such contract, else there was no double employment. So that when defendant undertook to interpose the defense of double employment he necessarily assumed that there was a contract relation between him and plaintiffs apparently valid, but sought to escape liability by showing that because of some new and independent fact the contract with him was void. Before he can do so it is incumbent upon him to plead such matter so that plaintiffs may be fully informed of his defense and prepared to meet it, if they so desire.

“The rule is well settled in strict accordance with the true theory of pleading under the code,” says Mr. Pomeroy, “ that all defenses based upon the asserted illegality of the contract in suit which admit the fact of a transaction between the parties, purporting to be an agreement and apparently binding, but which insist that by reason of some violation of the law the same is illegal and void, are new matter and must be set up in the answer in order to be provable.”' (Pomeroy Rem. § 708.)

In Suit v. Woodhall, 116 Mass. 547, in an action on an account for liquors sold in violation of law, it was held that the defendant could not avail himself of the defense that the contract of sale was illegal, without clearly and specifically setting it up in his answer. In an action brought to [314]*314recover a balance for goods sold and delivered, it was held that although defendants had proved that the goods had, by means of false invoices and under-valuations, been fraudulently entered in the custom-house by plaintiff, in consequence of which the goods were forfeited to the United States, the defendants could not avail themselves of such defense because not pleaded. (Honegger v. Wettstein, 94 N. Y. 252; Boone Cd. Pl. 111; Brennan v. Mayor, 62 N. Y. 365; Greenhood Pub. Pol. 125.)

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Bluebook (online)
28 P. 67, 21 Or. 309, 1891 Ore. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchtel-v-evans-or-1891.