Clark v. Seay

1929 OK 406, 282 P. 357, 140 Okla. 198, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 8, 1929
Docket19235
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1929 OK 406 (Clark v. Seay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Seay, 1929 OK 406, 282 P. 357, 140 Okla. 198, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 349 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

JEFFREY, C.

E. E. Clark and Cline & Stanley, a copartnership composed of R. W. Cline and J. W. Stanley, brought this action against O. AY. Seay, Clyde Seay, Wilmer Seay, and the Farmers National Bank of Waurika, Okla., to recover tbe sum of $2,000, alleged to be due them as a broker’s commission for services rendered in securing a purchaser for an oil and gas lease on certain lands belonging to tbe defendants Seay. Tbe petition alleged that tbe Seays, who will herein be referred to as defendants, employed plaintiffs to sell an oil -and gas lease on 80 acres of land for tbe sum of $100 per acre, or a total sum of $8,000 net to defendants, and that said defendants agreed to pay plaintiffs all over and above that sum for which plaintiffs could sell the oil and gas lease. The petition alleged that plaintiffs introduced to the defendants the Mudge Oil Company, which company was able, ready, and willing to buy tbe lease for $10,000. It was further alleged that tbe Mudge Oil Company’s offer was accepted by tbe defendants; a cheek for tbe sum of $10,000 was executed by tbe oil company; the lease was executed by tbe defendants, and both were placed in the defendant Farmers’ National Bank of Waurika, with escrow instructions to be delivered to tbe proper parties upon tbe approval of title by attorneys for tbe oil company; that tbe examining attorneys for tbe oil company made objections to tbe title on account of certain defects, and that tbe defects of title pointed out were never corrected by defendants. It was further alleged that tbe defendants and the oil company, without tbe knowledge and consent of plaintiffs, went to tbe bank and persuaded the bank to return tbe check to the oil company and tbe lease to defendants. Plaintiffs then asked for judgment against all defendants in tbe sum of '$2,000. All defendants filed a general denial to tbe petition. The cause was tried to a jury, and a verdict returned in favor of de-. fendants. . From this judgment and order overruling motion for new trial, plaintiffs have appealed.

Several assigned errors are presented and argued, but our decision on the first proposition renders it unnecessary to consider any others. Plaintiffs’ first proposition is that tbe trial court erred in refusing to instruct tbe jury to return a verdict in favor of plaintiffs. A consideration of this proposition necessitates a review of that portion of the evidence relating to the terms of employment and tbe commission to be paid. Plaintiffs’ evidence substantially established tbe allegations of tbe petition, and showed that an oil well was completed in the near vicinity of defendants’ land in October, 1925. At that time, plaintiffs, who were engaged in tbe real estate and brokerage business, went out to the well, where they met the defendant, Clyde Seay. One of tbe plaintiffs inquired' of him if be bad any close-in acreage for sale, and be informed them of the 80 acres lying nearby, on which be would sell a lease at $100 per acre. Plaintiff Cline testified that when Clyde Seay priced the lease to them, he (Cline) asked: “Will that carry a commission,i1’ and he said, “No, we want $100 ah acre out of it net,” and I said, “How am I going to get my commission?” and he said, “We will give you all over $100 an acre you sell it for.” At another place he testified as follows:

“A. I asked him if he would give a commission out of the $100 an acre. Q. He said he wouldn’t pay a commission? A. Said he wanted $100 net.”

Plaintiff Clark testified that Clyde Seay stated that he would not pay a commission, and then plaintiffs asked him if he would sell for $100 an acre and give them all over that amount they could get for it. J. E. Kendrick, who was present when the conversation was. had, stated that Seay said he wouldn’t pay a commission, but if plaintiffs wanted a commission they would have to add the amount to the price fixed by him. Each of the defendants stated that they did not agree to pay a commission, and Clyde Seay testified that he told plaintiffs that they would have to get their commission out of the purchaser of the lease.

The question then is, Does the contract of employment, relied upon by plaintiffs, provide for the payment of the commission by the defendants upon the broker’s producing a person able, ready, and willing to buy at the price and upon the terms offered, or does *200 It provide for a commission oiily when a sale is completed, and then only when the sale price received exceeds the net price fixed by the owner? If the latter, plaintiffs were not entitled to recover in this action on their evidence standing alone. The general rule is that in the ordinary brokerage contract, if the broker has produced a person ready, willing, and able to purchase his employer’s property at the price and upon the terms stipulated, and the landowner has accepted the purchaser and entered into a contract of sale, the broker is entitled to his commission, and his right thereto will not be defeated by the fact that the purchaser refused to consummate the transaction because of a defect in the landowner’s title, if this fact is not known to the broker before he secures the purchaser. However, this rule is subject to modification by the parties. They may enter into any special contract regarding the payment of commissions which they may be able to agree upon. It appears that defendants did not promise to pay plaintiffs a commission, but refused to do so. All witnesses testified that Clyde Seay, who' had the agreement with plaintiffs for himself and the other defendants, stated that the price quoted by him was to be net, and not carry a commission. The witnesses further testified that the contract of employment was that plaintiffs could have all over and above the price fixed by defendants that plaintiffs were able to sell the lease for. This understanding contemplated that plaintiffs should receive their commission, if any, from the purchasers of the lease, whether directly or indirectly; and that in no event should defendants owe the plaintiffs a commission until the sale was completed and a sum in excess of the net price quoted was received by the defendants. The authorities are almost unanimous in this holding: Robinson v. Oklahoma Fire Ins. Co., 55 Okla. 52, 155 Pac. 202; McConnell et ux. v. Wallace, 92 Okla. 174, 218 Pac. 672; Hopkins v. Settles, 46 Okla. 801, 149 Pac. 890; Murphy v. W. & W. Livestock Co., 26 Wyo. 455, 189 Pac. 857; Ford v. Brown et al., 120 Cal. 551, 52 Pac. 817; Seattle Land Co. v. Day, 2 Wash. 451, 27 Pac. 74; Wolverton v. Tuttle, 51 Ore. 501, 94 Pac. 961; Seabury v. Fidelity Ins., etc., Co., 205 Pa. 234, 54 Atl. 898; Antisdel v. Canfield, 119 Mich. 229, 77 N. W. 944.

In the case of Robinson v. Oklahoma Fire Ins. Co., supra, the insurance company employed Robinson as a broker to secure an insurance company to reinsure the Oklahoma company’s business in Texas and Oklahoma. The terms of sale were that the Oklahoma company was to receive 30 per cent, discount on the unearned premiums as a net commission, and the' broker was to receive all that the reinsurer would pay over and above the 30 per cent, commission net to the Oklahoma company. The broker procured the Citizens Fire Insurance Company of Baltimore, which company agreed to pay a commission of 32y2 per cent, of the unearned premiums. The offer was accepted by the Oklahoma company, but the transaction was never closed because the Oklahoma company was unable to pay the re-insurer the amount of unearned premiums less the 30 per cent, commission to itself.

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 406, 282 P. 357, 140 Okla. 198, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-seay-okla-1929.