Donahoe v. Denman

275 N.W. 154, 223 Iowa 1273
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 28, 1937
DocketNo. 43940.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 275 N.W. 154 (Donahoe v. Denman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donahoe v. Denman, 275 N.W. 154, 223 Iowa 1273 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Donegan, J.

This case involves the claim of plaintiff against the defendant for a commission for the sale of real estate. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant moved the court to direct a verdict in his favor, and this motion was overruled. Evidence was thereupon introduced by the defendant and, at the close of all the evidence, the defendant again moved for a directed verdict and this motion was sustained. From this ruling of the court sustaining the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, the plaintiff appealed.

The only ground of error upon which plaintiff seeks a reversal is that, “The court erred in sustaining defendant’s motion for a directed verdict and in not submitting the case to the jury, to determine if plaintiff was the efficient and procuring cause of the sale of defendant’s property. ’ ’ In order to reach a decision on the question thus submitted, it is necessary to consider the state of the evidence at the time the motion for a directed verdict was made.

In passing upon this motion the trial court had before it evidence introduced by plaintiff showing the following facts: The defendant and his sister owned a house and lot on 37th street in the city of Des Moines, Iowa, which they desired to sell. The plaintiff, E. J. Donahoe, conducted a real estate agency in Des Moines, and called upon the defendant about the first of May, *1275 1935, in regard to selling this property, and was told by the defendant that he oould try to procure a purchaser. The plaintiff was directed to ask $25,000 for the property, but it was understood that it might be sold for less. About May 10, 1935, .John Donahoe, the son and agent of the plaintiff, called upon the defendant, at his office, discussed the property with him, and obtained his permission to go to the property and examine it. Pursuant to this permission, John Donahoe went through the property, and on May 14, 1935, wrote letters containing a detailed description of the property to four persons, including James H. Windsor, advising them that the plaintiff had the property for sale, that the asking price was $25,000, and that should they be interested the plaintiff would be glad to show the property at their convenience. On the same day a letter was sent to the defendant, advising him that plaintiff had submitted the property to the parties named in the letter above referred to. About the first of July, 1935, John Donahoe called on James H. Windsor at his office for the purpose of trying to interest him in the purchase of the defendant’s said property, and spent about one-half to three-quarters of an hour pointing out the desirable features of the property and the attractive price at which it could probably be purchased. About the 15th of July, John Donahoe told defendant that he was working on Bernard Kurtz and the other prospects, and defendant told him to continue his efforts. Some time in November, 1935, plaintiff had a conversation with defendant over-telephone, in which the defendant told him that the house had been sold, but refused to reveal the name of the purchaser. In a later conversation over the telephone defendant told plaintiff that Mr. Windsor had bought the property.

The plaintiff’s evidence did not show any communication or conversation between the plaintiff or his agent and the purchaser, Windsor, other than the letter of May 14, 1935, and the conversation between John Donahoe and Windsor about July 1, 1935 ; it did not show when the negotiations that resulted in the purchase of the property from the defendant by Windsor first began, and it did not show directly that such negotiations resulted from anything said or done by the plaintiff.

The testimony introduced by the defendant as to the matters covered by the plaintiff’s evidence was substantially as stated by plaintiff’s witnesses. The defendant introduced the evidence of Mr. Kauffman, president of the Bankers Trust Company of Des *1276 Moines, Iowa, who testified that he had known the defendant all his life; that he was also well acquainted with James H. Windsor, who was a nephew of the witness’ wife; that he was a trustee of property owned by Windsor, and had advised him in his financial affairs; that in the middle or late fall of 1935, Windsor consulted him about buying a property in the country; that witness went into a complete analysis of the extra items of cost Windsor would be put to if he built or bought a home in the country, his disadvantage in sending his children to school, and the possibility that, if he built a house in the country, the bids would- be pro- - hibitive; and that, after discussing different locations in the country that he might be able to secure for Windsor, he suggested that Windsor consider the purchase of the Denman house, which he was satisfied could.be bought at a small fraction of its cost. He further testified that, in order to purchase any property, he knew Windsor would have to secure a federal loan on the property purchased in addition to a personal loan, and that these loans would have to be secured through the bank of which Kauffman was president; that, as a result of this conversation, Windsor authorized him, Kauffman, to find out what price the Den-man house could be purchased for and what arrangements for loans could be made; that Kauffman.finally obtained an offer from Denman to sell the house for $14,000; that arrangements were made through Mr. Kauffman’s bank for a first mortgage loan of $11,200 on the house under the provisions of the FHA, and for a personal loan to Windsor of $3,000, and the sale was thus consummated.

The purchaser, Windsor, testified that the Denman family and his family were close friends; that he had known the defendant all his life, went around in the same social set with him, and had been in the house in question a good many years back; that his offices were in the same building as those of Mr. Denman and that he frequently saw him during 1933, 1934 and 1935; that he had known that the Denman house was for sale since February or March, 1934, after the death of the defendant’s father, whose home it had been; that about that time one Joe Chamberlain, a member of the Chamberlain-Kirk brokerage firm, had tried to interest him in buying it; that at the time John Donahoe called upon him and talked with him about the Denman house, he was not interested in it, and neither Donahoe’s letter nor his conversation had any influence upon him in the ultimate purchase of *1277 the house; that he had no thought of purchasing it prior to his conversation with Mr. Kauffman in November, 1935; that prior to that conversation he had begun thinking about a house in the country and was interested in buying or building a home in the country until his conversation with Mr. Kauffman; that when Mr. Kauffman suggested the undesirability of a country home and the possibility of securing the necessary loans and purchasing the Denman home it was the first time that he had given the purchase of the Denman home any consideration.

This was the status of the evidence when the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was presented. Although stated in different ways, the substance of the motion was that, “there is no evidence and no assumption or presumption or inference from any evidence that would be sufficient or competent to sustain a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, which must as a matter of law be based upon the theory that the plaintiff was the efficient and procuring cause of the sale to Windsor. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
275 N.W. 154, 223 Iowa 1273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donahoe-v-denman-iowa-1937.