Clarke v. Blackfoot Water Works, Ltd.

228 P. 326, 39 Idaho 304, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 62
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 228 P. 326 (Clarke v. Blackfoot Water Works, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. Blackfoot Water Works, Ltd., 228 P. 326, 39 Idaho 304, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 62 (Idaho 1924).

Opinion

*306 WM. E. LEE, J.

Prior to and on February 5, 1919, and for something over a year thereafter, the respondent, Blackfoot Water Works, Ltd., a corporation, was the owner of a plant and system which furnished water to the city o£ Blackfoot. On the above-mentioned date, respondent entered into a written contract with appellant, E. H. Clarke, *307 of Pocatello, doing business under tbe name of Clarke Realty Company, by which respondent listed with appellant, and granted him the exclusive right to sell, the waterworks plant and system for a period of one year. The sale price was fixed at $125,000, and respondent promised to pay appellant a commission of five per centum of the sale price in the event of a sale. No sale of the property was. effected within a period of one year from the date of the execution of the contract, but the property was sold to the city of Blaekfoot on or about November 1, 1920, for the sum of $82,000, which was within a period of two years from the date of the contract. The contract contained the following provision:

“It is further agreed by the parties hereto that in the event that no sale is entered into within the twelve (12) months allowed by this option and agreement, but a sale is nevertheless made within the twelve (12) months thereafter and entered into between the Blaekfoot Water Works, Ltd., and any individual, firm or corporation with whom or with which the said Clarke Realty Company shall have been in correspondence, or shall have opened negotiations, during the twelve (12) months that this option is fully effective, then in that case the Blaekfoot Water Works, Ltd., by its officers, agrees to pay to the Clarke Realty Company a commission of two and oñe-half per cent (2%%) on the sale price.”

Upon the sale of the property to the city of Blaekfoot, appellant demanded of respondent the payment to him of $2,050, being two and one-half per centum of the sum for which the property was sold, as a commission which he alleged to be due him under the contract.

In addition to other allegations, appellant alleged that, in compliance with the terms of the contract and by reason thereof, he spent a great amount of time and money in an endeavor to effect a sale of the property, and that, within one year from the date of the contract, he opened negotiations and had correspondence with the city of Blaekfoot in an effort to sell the property to that municipality. In *308 the answer, respondent admitted the execution of the contract and admitted the sale of the property to the city of Blackfoot for $82,000, but denied that appellant opened negotiations or 'had correspondence with the said city, and further denied that there was anything due or owing to appellant on account of the sale of the property to the city of Blackfoot. The action was tried to the court and a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for respondent.

Appellant makes three assignments of error, one of which raises the question of the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, the others relating to alleged errors of the court in sustaining objections to certain testimony offered by appellant.

The testimony shows that after the execution of the contract, appellant addressed a communication to the mayor and members of the council of the city of Blackfoot, advising them that the waterworks property was listed with him for sale, and that it could be purchased for $125,000. None of the officers of the city answered the communication, and no other letter was written to them concerning the matter. At that time the newly elected officers were about to assume office, and the outgoing officials did not desire to consider the question because of the early change of administration in the municipal government. Thereafter, F. C. McGowan, an employee of appellant, went to Blackfoot and arranged for a meeting of appellant with the new mayor and council. In pursuance of this arrangement, appellant and McGowan went to Blackfoot and appeared before the mayor and council. As to what happened at that meeting, there is no serious conflict in the evidence. The minutes of the council furnish the following record:

“Mr. Clarke of Pocatello appeared before the Council in regard to the purchase of the waterworks and urged the Council to agree to arbitration of the purchase price. No action was taken at this time.”

Clarke testified that the council informed McGowan and himself fhat it would not consider, under any circumstances, the price asked, and that they then urged the council to *309 agree to arbitrate tbe matter, but that tbe council took no action toward the suggested arbitration. While it appears that Clarke appeared but once before the mayor and council as a body, he testified that he made twenty or thirty trips to Blackfoot and talked with members of the council and different citizens in the interest of the sale.

There is no substantial conflict in the evidence on any question material to the determination of the issue. It is not disputed that appellant and McGowan made many trips to Blackfoot and urged the city officials to purchase the waterworks for the city. It is claimed that they refused to entertain the proposal to purchase the system. This contention is not sustained. The city refused to consider the purchase of the waterworks for the sum of $125,000, but the evidence shows that the city officials did not refuse to treat with appellant with respect to the purchase of the waterworks. The city entertained the idea of the purchase and suggested a price of $50,000, but the parties were not able to agree on a price, and no sale was then made. It must be understood that appellant is not seeking a recovery on the theory that he was the procuring cause of the sale— that he found a purchaser who was ready, able and willing to buy. The recovery is sought on the ground that the waterworks property was sold during the second year of the contract to the city of Blackfoot, with which appellant had been in correspondence or had opened negotiations. There is no claim that respondent, through its officers, had, before the contract was made with appellant, opened negotiations or been in correspondence with the city in an effort to sell the waterworks to the city; or that they were sold through previous negotiations opened by other real estate brokers. The only issue of fact in the case, and consequently the only question for the determination of the jury, was whether the Clarke Realty Company had “been in correspondence” or had “opened negotiations” with the city of Blackfoot with respect to the purchase of the waterworks. This one issue was submitted to the jury under the following instruction, to which no objection is made:

*310

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Bluebook (online)
228 P. 326, 39 Idaho 304, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-blackfoot-water-works-ltd-idaho-1924.