Cranke v. Trinity Gravel Co.

272 S.W. 604, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 421
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1925
DocketNo. 9345.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 272 S.W. 604 (Cranke v. Trinity Gravel Co.) 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
Cranke v. Trinity Gravel Co., 272 S.W. 604, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 421 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

LOONEY, J.

J. P. Cranke, appellant, , sued Dan S. Harston, L. S.' Brotherton, D. G. Smith, C. B. Van Deman, M. F. Smith, and the Trinity Gravel Company, an unincorporated association composed of the individuals above named, to recover judgment for the sum of $3,875, compensation claimed for procuring a purchaser for and assisting in making the sale of 471 acres of land situated near Arlington, in Tarrant county, Tex. Appellant alleged his- cause of action in two counts — one based on an express' agreement by appellees to pay 5 per cent, commission upon the price at which the land should be sold; the other based on a quantum meruit for the reasonable value of services performed in procuring a purchaser and in assisting in the sale of the land. The case was tried without the intervention of a jury; judgment was rendered in favor of appellees, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

The evidence, in our opinion, justifies these conclusions: Mr. Harston, acting for himself and associates, the other appellees, listed the 471 acres of gravel land for sale with appellant, a real estate broker of Dallas, to be sold at $200 per acre, and agreed to pay him a commission of 5 per cent, of the sale price; that appellant procured the services of G. R. .Chamblin, an engineer and gravel expert, had him examine the land with the view of ascertaining the extent it would produce gravel, and also to assist appellant in procuring a purchaser; that appellant, Mr. Chamblin and Mr. Harston, visited and inspected the land, with the result that, from the information obtained by inspection and from conversations with Mr. Harston, Chamblin was favorably impressed with the land as a gravel proposition, and authorized appellant to so quote him; that Cranke and Chamblin both interviewed W. E. Callahan, who was connected with the Callahan Construction Company, with the view of interesting him in the purchase of this land, and succeeded in so doing, introduced him to Harston, induced him to have the land tested for gravel, with favorable results, and, after bringing Callahan and Harston together, as the result of negotiations thus set on foot, a sale of the land was agreed on between appellees and Callahan, which comprehended the formation of a corporation styled Harston Sand & Gravel Company.

This corporation was formed for the pur *605 pose of taking title to the land and developing it for the production and sale of gravel. The consideration agreed on between ap-pellees and Callahan, or the company organized by Callahan to take title was $77,600, as follows: $10,000 cash, and equivalent, the assumption .of. an indebtedness against the land of $22,500, and stock in the Hars-ton Sand & Gravel Company to the amount of $45,000. The company was chartered with an authorized capital stock of $120,000, and the land conveyed to it by appellees about January 1, 1923, on the terms and for the consideration named above.

Appellant’s agreement of employment was made with Mr. Harston. In all acts, conversations, and negotiations with appellant, and with Chamblin and Callahan, Harston acted for himself and the other appellees; they were advised of the employment of appellant, the progress of the negotiations, and acquiesced therein.

Under the undisputed facts of this case, we find that appellant was the efficient procuring cause of the sale of the land, on terms satisfactory to appellees, and that the evidence justifies a recovery under either count of his petition.

According to our view, it is wholly immaterial that the land was ultimately sold at a less pricé and on different terms from) those stipulated by Mr. Harston when the land was listed with appellant, but the material facts that are decisive of the case are that, while his contract of employment was in force, appellant produced and introduced Callahan to Harston, as a prospective purchaser, to whom, after negotiations, a sale of the land was made on terms satisfactory to appellees, though different from those limited to appellant. The idea here advanced is sustained by the Supreme Court in Goodwin v. Gunter, 109 Tex. 56, 185 S. W. 295, in the following language by Chief Justice Phillips, to wit:

“It is no answer in such a case to say that a purchaser has not been produced by the broker ready, able, and willing to buy upon the terms limited by the contract, and the owner is therefore free to deal with the buyer, though produced by the broker, without any liability to the latter. That becomes unimportant in the face of the outstanding fact that it is by the broker the buyer is produced, and, before his negotiation is concluded, a sale is made, as the result of his effort, which is presumably just as satisfactory to the owner. The owner will therefore be deemed, in such a case, 'to have waived the terms to which the broker was confined, and the law declares him liable for the commissions fixed by the contract, for the reason that, except as to such waived provision, the broker’s part of the contract has been fully performed. The decisions of this court cleárly affirm this principle. It is recognized, generally, elsewhere; and nothing else could well be the law.”

To the same effect is West Bros. v. Thompson & Greer, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 362, 106 S. W. 1134; Hancock v. Stacy, 103 Tex. 219, 125 S. W. 884; Bellis v. Hahn & Kendall (Tex. Civ. App.) 157 S. W. 427; Webb v. Harding (Tex. Com. App.) 211 S. W. 927; Keener v. Cleveland (Tex. Com. App.) 250 S. W. 151.

Nor is i,t an answer to appellant’s demand for compensation to say that the land was conveyed to a corporation organized by Callahan, instead of to Callahan in person. The organization of the corporation evolved from negotiations set on foot by appellant, and was simply a means to the end desired. The language of the Supreme Court of Nevada, in Page v. Sutton, 45 Nev. 395, 204 P. 881, 207 P. 1102, is quite to the point. The court said:

“Conceding that a company was organized after Mr. Page had been employed to procure a purchaser for the property, and that the property was in fact transferred to the corporation and the stock in the company sold to Loring instead of the property itself, to hold that the plaintiff could not recover because of this fact would be to put a premium upon, chicanery. To approve such a theory would enable a seller of property through an agent to defeat a claim for commission in every instance. All the principal would have to do would be to organize a corporation to take over the property and then transfer the stock. No such transaction can be looked upon with tolerance by a court of justice.”

The case of Fouke v. Jordy, 289 F. 220, from the Circuit Court of Appeals (Fifth Circuit) is very similar to the case under consideration. As the result of negotiations, between the purchasers produced by the broker and the owners of the property, a corporation was organized to which the properties were conveyed by the owners in consideration of a cash payment, the assumption of an indebtedness, and stock in a newly formed corporation.

The court held that this was a sale within the meaning of the contract between the broker and the owners, using the following language:

“We are of opinion that the transactions between defendants and the parties produced to him by the plaintiff constituted a sale. The title was conveyed to a corporation organized and financed by the parties, whom the plaintiff interested as prospective purchasers.”

Mr.

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Related

McDonald & Company v. Kemper
386 S.W.2d 215 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1965)
Hard v. Hall
318 S.W.2d 108 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1958)
Trinity Gravel Co. v. Cranke
282 S.W. 798 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1926)

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272 S.W. 604, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cranke-v-trinity-gravel-co-texapp-1925.