Clay v. Cummins
This text of 91 So. 790 (Clay v. Cummins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This appeal results from a second trial of the cause, following a reversal of the judgment rendered in fa *108 vor of the appellee oil a former trial. Clay v. Cummins, 201 Ala. 34, 77 South. 328.
On the former appeal no decision was made as to the rulings of the trial court on the demurrer to defendant’s plea No. 3, and to plaintiffs replication thereto, the reversal of the judgment being based upon the giving of the affirmative charge for defendant, and upon a holding by this court that on the whole evidence the plaintiff was entitled to recover a commission of 5 per cent., amounting to $900.
The theory upon which the latter conclusion was reached was that defendant’s provisional ratification of the sale made by plaintiff, and his offer to pay plaintiff a commission of 5 per cent., under the terms of the original contract between them, followed by his execution of the contract of sale as made, reinstated the obligations of the original contract, although plaintiff may, by concealment and bad faith, as charged in the pleas, have forfeited his right to compensation thereunder.
On the former trial there was no plea setting up plaintiff’s rejection of defendant’s provisional offer to proceed under the original contract and to compensate him for making the sale according to the terms therein specified; and, though the evidence then was the same as it is now, including plaintiff’s alleged letter of rejection, neither the fact of such a rejection nor its legal effect was considered by this court on the former appeal.
From these principles it seems clear that the effect of such a waiver is merely an af-firmance of the principal’s original obligation to pay his agent for the service rendered by him, and not to make a new and independent contract.
Plea 3, as amended, sets up plaintiff’s breach of duty in that he was guilty of bad faith in not informing defendant of the fact that the purchaser he had found was willing to pay, and had offered to pay, $37.50 per acre for the land. This part of the plea was clearly sustained by the undisputed evidence in the case. The plea further shows that defendant provisionally waived his right to refuse any compensation to plaintiff, after he was informed of the facts, but avers that the waiver was not effective because the | condition upon which it was made was rejected by plaintiff. This averment rests upon the correspondence between the parties, and more particularly upon the meaning and effect of plaintiff’s letter of July 15th.
The demurrer challenges: (1) The sufficiency of the plea to show a rejection by plaintiff of defendant’s conditional waiver; and (2) the efficacy of such a rejection to nullify the waiver made by defendant, or to defeat plaintiff’s claim for compensation under the original contract.
We are further of the opinion that on the evidence adduced, including the fact that plaintiff has claimed in this suit the right to recover outside of the terms of his original contract with defendant, the trial judge properly submitted the issue of plaintiff’s ac-. ceptance or rejection of defendant’s proposal for determination by the jury, in his oral instructions to them, and properly stated that upon that question plaintiff’s right to recover would depend.
We think the material issues in the case ■were properly submitted to the jury, and we find no error in the record to justify a reversal of the judgment based upon their findings.
The judgment will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.
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91 So. 790, 207 Ala. 105, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-v-cummins-ala-1921.