Fox v. Rouse
This text of 11 N.W. 384 (Fox v. Rouse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This action was commenced by Eouse to recover a five per cent, commission which he claimed to have earned in selling, or finding parties willing to purchase, a section of land owned by Fox for the sum of $12,800— $5000 to be paid in cash and the balance in one or two years. There was no question raised on the trial but that Eouse was employed by Fox for such purpose; that he made efforts to find purchasers; that on September 19th he received a proposition' for the purchase of two eighties of this land, which he communicated by letter of that date to his principal.
There was testimony tending to show that he had on the afternoon of the same day a farther conversation with the same parties, about their purchasing the' entire section, and that on the 23d of September an oral agreement was made for the purchase of the entire tract at the price already stated, but the method of payment was not agreed upon until a later date. It farther appeared that the owner of these lands had another agent employed to sell them and that he, on the 22d of September, made a sale and entered into a written contract in his principal’s name for a sale at $10,000. This fact it appears became known to Eouse on the 23d, after his parties had agreed to purchase, and considerable effort was afterwards made by the parties to this suit to evade the contract of September 22d and carry out the oral agreement made by Eouse, but in this they failed. There seems to have been no question made but that the [560]*560parties with whom Bouse had been negotiating were able and willing to carry out the agreement on their part, and that the owner of the lands was anxious to accept their terms and convey to them if he could.
It seems to me that this case is fully covered by the decision of this court in McCreery v. Green 38 Mich. 184. Bouse had found purchasers who were willing, ready and in a situation to take these lands on terms satisfactory to his. principal, and the latter by a sale made to other parties, through another agent alone prevented a completed sale. Bouse had fully performed on his part; he was not expected or authorized to make a written agreement, or bind his principal; he had authority to find a purchaser who would purchase at a price satisfactory to his principal, and this he did. Fox may have been unfortunate in employing more than one agent, but this was a matter of his own choosing, and until the authority given was revoked, they each had a right to find purchasers and earn their commissions.
I think the judgment should be affirmed with costs.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
11 N.W. 384, 47 Mich. 558, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-rouse-mich-1882.