Earls and Golladay v. Alsup

176 S.W.2d 830, 237 Mo. App. 819, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 171
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 6, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 S.W.2d 830 (Earls and Golladay v. Alsup) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earls and Golladay v. Alsup, 176 S.W.2d 830, 237 Mo. App. 819, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 171 (Mo. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*821 FULBRIGHT, J.

This is a suit for a commission for the sale of land. The petition stated in substance that defendant employed plaintiffs to find and produce a purchaser for his farm for a consideration of $11,000 net to the defendant, plaintiffs to receive as commission all above that amount for their services. The answer admits that the farm was sold for $12,000 to A. Guiling, but denies that defendant employed plaintiffs to sell the same and denies that they made the sale. There was a trial by jury and a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs in the amount of $250, from which judgment plaintiffs duly appeal.

The evidence discloses the following facts: Mr. Golladay, one of the plaintiffs, called Mr. Alsup, the defendant, by telephone and asked him to meet him at Puxico. Mr. Golladay testified: “He met-me there, the date was March 2, 1942, and in our conversation Mr. Alsup said he would like to sell his farm for $100 an acre or $11,000 net to him and he said ‘you can get your commission above that amount, but I must have $11,000 net.’ And he gave me the crop acreage and taxes and anything I needed to show in connection with making a sale. He said, ‘Go ahead and sell the land . . . ;’ that he would like to sell it and use the money.” Mr. Golladay made a memorandum in a book of the information given by.Mr. Alsup. He *822 stated: “I entered them and he sat there and watched me.” The memorandum follows:

‘ ‘ Rufus Alsup:
110 acres—
Loan $4,700.00 — Ohio National Life Insurance Company.
$11,000.00 — Net.
January 1, 1943.
Taxes — $100.00.-
Earnest Money — $1,000.00.
‘Balance Dec. 1st 7 Dee. 15.
Corn 30 Acres.
Cotton 7 Acres.
Wheat 15 Acres.
Balance General Crops.
Gov’t. Pay — $300.00.”
“We had to get our commission above this price of $11,000 and I told him I would price it at $12,000. . . . He said he wouldn’t accept less than $1,000 for the contract and the deal be closed around the first of the year or December 1 or 15th. ”

Mr. Golladay stated that he saw Mr. Guiling the next day and told him he had the Alsup Farm for sale; that the farm would go' well with his. He informed him as to the price, amount of the loan, the crop allotment; and he (Guiling) stated that it was a little high but in the future he might let him know more about it; that he had just bought land at the time and wasn’t interested just then.

Mr. Gollaway later met Mr. Alsup in Sikeston and after talking with him saw Mr. Guiling and offered the farm for $11,500 to try and get the deal through. Mr. Guiling refused to buy at the time and Mr. Golladay returned and gave this information to Mr. Alsup, and told him, “Leave the price at $12,000 and I will show it to enough men to sell it for $12,000 and he said ‘Alright’.”

Four or five weeks later Mr. Golladay heard that Mr. Guiling had bought the farm and when he next saw him asked him about it. Guiling stated: “I have already bought it. ... I gave> $12,000. . . . I bought it and signed a contract but, we haven’t closed the deal but we put up the earnest money.”

On cross-examination Mr. Golladay testified that at the time the contract was entered into at Puxico with the defendant he mentioned Guiling and Welter and a number of others as prospects; that he talked to Mr. Welter about' the farm as well as several others; that it was not confined to Mr. Welter; that Mr. Alsup “wanted to' sell the farm to any one he could sell it to. We mentioned Mr. Welter and Mr. Guiling, but Mr. Guiling was the first man. . . . Mr. Guiling showed quite a bit of interest but he wanted to see his crop further along before he took on the obligation. I told him about the farm being by his land and how it adjoined it and he first said, ‘what do they want for it?’ And I said $).2,000, and he said ‘How much is the *823 loan’, and I told him and he wanted to know about crop allotment and taxes and he said, ‘Where is the man that owns it?’ And I gave him his name and address at Puxieo and he said, ‘It seems high. . . . I am not interested now but I might 'be when the crops get further along.’ ”

A. T. Earls, a partner of Golladay and one of the plaintiffs stated that he “talked to Mr. Guiling about the farm and insisted he buy it. ... I quoted him the price . . . but he told me that he had been talking to Mr. Golladay about the deal. ’ ’

Mr. Alsup, the defendant, testified that he talked to Mr. Golladay about selling his farm in the Spring of 1942; that Golladay called him up by telephone and he met him in Puxieo. Golladay wanted to know if he would sell his farm. Alsup stated: “I told Mr. Golladay that I couldn’t tell him that he could sell the place and he says he merely wanted to see what he could do, that he thought this man would buy the place, this man Ben Welter in the barber shop and there was not any other man brought into the picture at that time. Mr. Golladay listed the farm there.....I told him . . . if he wanted to see what he could do he could come back after he found a buyer and see me and wife both. ... No name spoken but the name of. Ben Welter. ... I next saw Mr. Golladay on the street in Sikeston. . . . Q. When you saw Mr. Golladay on the street did you have any conversation with him relative to' the matter of selling your farm ? A. Yes, sir. . Mr. Golladay then brought in Mr. Guiling at that time, the first time he said anything about Mr. Guiling. He said he wanted to see Mr. Guiling and that he believed Mr. Guiling might buy it and I told him that we didn’t know whether he wanted to sell it or not, but land was advancing and we had plenty of time to sell it and get our price and I didn’t see any hurry about selling it at that time. . . . I never talked to' him again about selling the farm until I came back and I met him at the mail box on the Rock Road. I couldn’t just exactly recall when it was but after I had sold it to Mr. Guiling. ... I did no't go to see Mr. Guiling to see if he would buy my farm. He came to my house, him and his son-in-law; that was where the selling of the farm to Mr. Guiling was effected.” On being asked if he told Mr. Guiling that “if he would wait awhile the contract with Mr. Golladay would be out and you would sell it to him, ’ ’ he replied: “No,' sir. I never had a conversation with him at all.” He later said that he had discussed the matter of selling the farm with Mr. Guiling before he talked to Mr. Golladay the first time.

On cross-examination he stated: “I told him (Golladay) at that time (March 2, 1942) if the place was sold I would give possession January 1, 1943.” lie could not recall whether he told Golladay that he wanted $1000 as earnest money or not; nor could he recall that he told him that he wanted the balance payable on the first December or the 15th of December following. On being asked if he gave Golladay the information contained in the memorandum in the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 S.W.2d 830, 237 Mo. App. 819, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earls-and-golladay-v-alsup-moctapp-1944.