Combes v. Ayres

262 S.W. 180, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 498
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 16, 1924
DocketNo. 8517.
StatusPublished

This text of 262 S.W. 180 (Combes v. Ayres) 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
Combes v. Ayres, 262 S.W. 180, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 498 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

LANE, J.

This suit was brought by ap-pellee, J. K-. Ayres, against appellant, S. M. Combes, to recover $525 alleged to be due him by Combes as a broker’s commission for procuring a purchaser for the timber situated on three tracts of land owned by Combes in San Jacinto county, Tex.

The plaintiff alleged that Combes had agreed with him that if he would procure a purchaser ready, willing, and able to purchase, and who would purchase said timber at $2.50 per thousand feet, Combes would pay plaintiff a commission of 5 per cent, of the purchase price therefor; that he was a timber estimater, and that after said agreement was made he made an estimate of said timber, estimating it to be 4,790,000 feet; that after making such estimate he called upon the Foster Dumber Company, a corporation, and offered to sell them said timber at $2.50 per thousand* feet; and that, pending his negotiations with said company, Combes sold said timber to said company for $10,500, and is now refusing to pay him his commission.

The defendant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and by special plea to the effect that at the time he authorized the plaintiff to find a purchaser for his lands; he advised plaintiff that he was at that time himself negotiating with the Foster Dumber Company, and had been trying to sell said company his timber on said lands for some two years or more, and was continuing such negotiations, and that said company was his customer, and that plaintiff should not undertake to sell to said company, and that no commission would be allowed plaintiff on any sale made to it, that the sale finally made to the Foster Dumber Company was made by himself as the result solely of the long period of negotiations between himself and said company, and that said sale was not in any way, manner, or degree expedited nor assisted by anything done by the plaintiff.

The case was tried before a jury upon special issues, in answer to which they found:

(1) That at the time S. M. Combes authorized J. K. Ayres to sell the timber on his lands he did not tell Ayres that he was not to undertake to sell said timber to the Foster Dumber Company. (2) That J. K. Ayres was the procuring and inducing cause of the sale of the timber to the Foster Dumber Company.

In connection with the issues submitted, the court instructed the jury as follows:

“In connection with special issue No. 2, you are instructed that, under the agency agreement testified to in this case, the defendant would have the right to sell, his timber to any *181 purchaser -whom he might find and induce to purchase the same, and if you should find from the evidence that the defendant himself was the procuring and inducing cause of the sale that was made of his timber to Foster Lumber Company, you will answer said special issue No. 2 ‘No.’ ”

Upon the verdict of the jury and the evidence, the court rendered judgrdent in favor of J. K. Ayres for the sum of $525, the same being 5 per cent, commission on the sum of $10,500, for which said sum the timber was sold. From the judgment so rendered S. M. Combes has appealed.

Appellant contends that the judgment rendered against him has no support in the evidence, and that, since the case was fully developed, such judgment should be reversed, and judgment here rendered for him. ne insists that, there was no evidence to support the Ending of the jury that appellee, Ayres, was the procuring or inducing cause of the sale of his 'timber.

After a careful review of the entire statement of facts, we feel constrained to sustain appellant’s contention.

Before appellee would be entitled to the recovery sought, it must be shown that through his efforts or services the Foster Lumber Company was procured or induced to purchase appellant’s timber. It follows, therefore, if there was no such showing the judgment rendered should be reversed, it being conceded that appellee had no exclusive right to make sale of appellant’s timber to the booster Lumber Company, or to any one else, hut, to the contrary, appellant reserved the right to make such sale himself, or to have agents other than appellee to make the same.

It is shown that in April, 1920, appellant, Combes, began negotiations with the Foster Lumber Company, through its manager, F. •J. Womack, to sell to it some of his timber, for the sale of which appellee, Ayres, is claiming a commission in this suit. The negotiations thus begun continued by correspondence and otherwise from April, 1920, to November, 1921, resulting in the parties having come so near to agreement that appellant, Combes, construed it as a contract of sale to the Foster Number Company, but Mr. Womack insisted that the contract had not in fact been closed, and the negotiations between the parties were temporarily broken off. After this disagreement, and, with the matter standing. as above indicated, appellant, Combes, returned to Houston from his home in Ohio, and while in Houston he saw appellee, Ayres, at the Rice Hotel, and after telling' him of his efforts to sell his timber to the Foster Lumber Company and his failure to make such sale Eé authorized appellee, Ayres, to find a purchaser for said timber. This conversation at the Rice Hotel took place along in January or February, 1922. Appellant, Combes, testified that at the time he authorized appellee to sell his timber he told him that he had been negotiating with the Foster Lumber Company in an effort to sell it his timber and that Ayres should not try to sell to said company. Ayres denied that Combes reserved the Foster Lumber Company as his prospective purchaser, but admitted that he was told or know • of the negotiations which had been going on between Combes and Womack relative to the timber. After Ayres had been authorized to sell said timber, he went upon the lands of Combes and made an estimate of the timber thereon, estimating it to be 4,700,000 feet. In two or three months after he had been authorized to sell the timber, Ayres called on F. J. Womack, manager for the Foster Lumber Company, and offered to sell said ccfcn-pany the timber at $2.50 per thousand feet, based upon his estimate of 4.700.000 feet. Replying to said offer, Womack told Ayres that they would not deal with him looking to the purchase of the timber; that they had made an estimate of the timber, estimating it at 3,000,000 feet, and had offered Combes $3 per thousand feet therefor on the estimate as made, and that if Combes cared to accept such offer he could do so. In the conversation Ayres told Womack that he had a man at the Rice Hotel who would purchase the timber on his estimate at $2.50 per thousand feet, and Womack told him to go sell it to this man.' There was nothing more said by either party with reference to the sale of the timber. This effort on the part of Ayres to s,ell to the Foster- Lumber Company was the end of his negotiations with Womack or any other agent of the Foster Lumber Company.

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Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 180, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/combes-v-ayres-texapp-1924.