Fessenden v. Doane

89 Ill. App. 229, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 654
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 Ill. App. 229 (Fessenden v. Doane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fessenden v. Doane, 89 Ill. App. 229, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 654 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

He. Justice Shepabd

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit brought by the appellants to recover from the appellee a commission of two and one-half per cent, or $11,625, for their alleged services as real estate brokers in the matter of a sale of real estate. The jury returned a verdict for defendant, appellee, and judgment was rendered accordingly.

We do not observe any contention but that if appellants are entitled to recover anything they should have the full amount claimed by them. The appellee wanted to sell a certain property, and finally did so for the price of $465,000, although at first he asked much more for it. He first offered it to McCormick, the purchaser, through a broker named Doherty, about September 1,1896, and it was through this same broker that the sale to McCormick was finally consummated about the end of December of that year, at á price nearly $200,000 less than that at which it was at first offered to him.

Along in October or November of the same year, while the negotiations between Doherty and McCormick were languishing, if not quite suspended, the appellants applied to the appellee to offer the property to the same McCormick, and obtained his consent to their doing so. The divergence between the parties has its commencement in the terms then agreed upon. Appellants claim that the effect of the agreement was that if they should do their best to make a sale to McCormick for $527,000, appellee would pay them a commission of two and one-half per cent on whatever sum McCormick should afterward pay for the property, irrespective of whether the sale to him should be effected by appellants or not.

It can not be successfully contended but that appellants were informed by appellee at that time that Doherty had already been in negotiation with McCormick; and it is not claimed that appellants effected the sale that was made.

By their briefs appellants epitomize their right to recover upon either one of two theories set forth in their declaration:

(a) Upon the ground that by their special agreement with Doane, they were entitled to commissions upon rendering such services as they could to induce McCormick to buy, if he bought, whether they were the procuring cause of the sale to him or not.

(b) Assuming the contract to be the usual one, requiring the broker to be the procuring cause of the sale, in order that his commissions may be earned, Doane wrongfully interfered with appellants’ negotiations with McCormick, and so prevented them from earning the stipulated commission.

Appellants did not ask an instruction upon the last named theory. The only instruction requested by them, except one that the law will imply a reasonable time within which an agreement may be completed where no specific time is mentioned, had reference to the first named theory.

That instruction, in its material part, was as follows :

“If you find from the evidence that plaintiff had in view a possible customer for defendant’s property, and that defendant agreed that if plaintiffs would disclose to him the name of such customer and act as his brokers in attempting to effect a sale of said property to said prospective purchaser at a price acceptable to defendant, and that if said person should thereafter become a purchaser of said property from defendant, at a price satisfactory to defendant, that defendant would pay to plaintiffs for their said services two and one-half per cent of said purchase price; and if you further believe from the evidence that after the making by defendant of said agreement plaintiffs did disclose to defendant, as the possible purchaser, one McCormick, and plaintiffs thereafter acted as defendant’s brokers in attempting to induce said McCormick to become a purchaser of said property and in all respects complied with their part of said contract, and that thereafter said McCormick did in fact purchase from defendant said property for the sum of $465,000, then you are instructed that the plaintiffs are entitled to a verclict for two and one-half per cent of said $465,000.”

This instruction was in harmony with appellants’ proposition laid down in their brief, that there was an express agreement between the parties as to the extent of services to be rendered by appellants, and that if they performed their part in that regard they should receive as compensation for such service a percentage of two and one-half per cent of the purchase price—whatever it might be—in case the property should thereafter be sold to McCormick, regardless of-whether appellants effected or were instrumental in effecting the sale or not.

And there was evidence that tended to support the theory that such was the agreement entered into.

The only plea of the defendant (appellee) was the general issue, and his theory of defense, as developed by the evidence, was not a denial that a contract relationship existed at one time between appellants and himself with reference to a sale of the property to McCormick, but was a denial of the special terms of contract contended for by appellants, and that whatever it may have been at one time it had entirely terminated.

Perhaps the theory of the' defense can not be better stated than is done in the first, fifth, sixth and seventh instructions to the jury given at appellee’s instance, as follows:

“ 1. The jury are instructed that the plaintiff’s cause of action in this case is a claim made by them as brokers for compensation, by way of commissions, upon a sale of certain property, situated in the city of Chicago, known as the Atlas Block, made by the defendant to Leander J. McCormick in the latter-part of December, 1896, and that to entitle them to recover such, or any compensation on account of said sale, the jury must believe from the evidence in the case that the plaintiffs were employed by the defendant in and about the business of making said sale, and that their services were instrumental in accomplishing it.
A promise by the defendant to pay the plaintiffs for services independently rendered by a third person in no way associated with the plaintiffs, would be a promise without consideration, upon which no action could be maintained by the plaintiffs.”
“ 5. If the jury believe from the evidence that upon their own request and solicitations the plaintiffs were authorized by the defendant to offer his property, known as the Atlas Block, to Leander J. McCormick for the sum of $527,000, and upon no other terras, and that they offered the said property to said McCormick at that price, which offer was declined by said McCormick, and that fact was reported by the plaintiffs to the defendant, and no authority was given by the defendant to the plaintiffs to offer said property to said McCormick or any other person at any less or different price, then and in that case the jury are instructed that the defendant was fully justified in regarding and treating the authority given by him to the plaintiffs as ended, and the plaintiffs under such circumstances would be entitled to no compensation for the time and labor expended bjr them in their endeavor to make sale of said property to said McCormick.

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Bluebook (online)
89 Ill. App. 229, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fessenden-v-doane-illappct-1900.