Gibbons v. Sherwin

44 N.W. 99, 28 Neb. 146, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 328
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 N.W. 99 (Gibbons v. Sherwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbons v. Sherwin, 44 N.W. 99, 28 Neb. 146, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 328 (Neb. 1889).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This cause was brought on error to review the judgment of the district court of Lancaster county.

The plaintiffs below, Harlan P. Sherwin, Frank Sherwin, and James H. Pinkerton, partners under the name of Sherwin, Sherwin & Co., doing business as real estate agents at Lincoln, Nebraska, complained of J. P. Gibbons, defendant, that on April 1, 1887, the defendant placed with them as agents certain real estate, to-wit: Ten acres of land out of the southwest quarter of section 18, town 10, range 7, in said county, with instructions to sell the same on the following terms: $15,000; $500 cash, $1,750 in fifteen days, $1,000 in thirty days, $1,500 in sixty days, $1,500 in ninety days, $2,000 in four months, and the balance to remain as a deferred payment on the land. The [148]*148plaintiffs sold the same in the early part of April, 1887, upon the terms authorized, and became entitled to receive $400 as. commission for their services, which they demanded, and which the defendant i’efused to pay, and they pray judgment for the amount with interest.

The defendant answered and denied each and every allegation in the petition contained; and, for a second defense, set up that on April 1, 1887, he placed the premises for sale with the plaintiffs at other and different terms than those stated by plaintiffs, calling for much larger cash payments than therein alleged; that on the 3d or 4th day of April plaintiffs, by telegraph, falsely stated to the defendant that they had sold said premises under the terms fixed by defendant, and called him to Lincoln from the county of Saunders, and informed him that Mrs. L. W. Colby, and Isabel Bond were in treaty jointly to purchase the premises, but on different terms than stated, with a small cash payment of only $500 on a sale at $15,000, and on the representations of the plaintiffs respecting the ability of Colby and Bond to perform their • contract, he authorized the plaintiffs to make a sale to them, if the same were done on their proposal, and he informed thereof by 12 M., April 6, 1887; that afterwards Colby receded from her proposal, and refused to join with Bond in the purchase, and the plaintiffs, without authority, then attempted to perfect the transaction on such special terms with Bond alone as the purchaser. Nor did they inform defendant of such attempted sale by noon of- April 6, following, but later in the day informed defendant that the terms, specially by him made, had been accepted, and transmitted a draft for $500, as paid by the purchasers, inducing defendant to come to Lincoln and complete the transaction, and, when defendant arrived at Lincoln and ascertained the true state, he refused to consummate or accept the proposal to sell the premises on such terms to Isabel Bond alone, and wholly terminated the plaintiffs’ agency, and returned [149]*149to Bond her draft, which she accepted, by which no commissions were ever earned or due to plaintiffs.

And for a third defense, and for affirmative relief, the defendant says that on April 3, 1887, the plaintiffs, being their agents to sell certain real estate of defendant according to the terms to them given, falsely informed defendant that said premises had been sold under their agency, and requested defendant to come to Lincoln to consummate such sale, which defendant at great expensé, on the faith of such false reports from them, did, and afterwards on April 6, 1887, in violation of instructions to them, they pretended to sell said premises to Isabel Bond, and again falsely informed defendant that they had sold the premises in accordance with instructions under a proposal communicated to him under their first false report aforesaid; and thereby again induced the defendant to come to Lincoln, at great expense, and on his arrival found that plaintiffs, without authority, had signed his name to a contract for sale of said premises to Isabel Bond, and finding his affairs so meddlesomely complicated by the action of plaintiffs, he had to have recourse to legal counsel, and was put to great expense in getting advice, and the loss of time in extricating himself, to his damage $40.

. The plaintiffs moved to strike out the third defense of the answer of defendant, for the reasons that the same was not set up in the court below, and was different and new matter of defense, which motion was sustained and the third defense was stricken out.

There was a trial to a jury with a verdict for the plaintiffs of $452.89.

The defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and having taken exceptions on the record the case is brought by the plaintiff in error to review the judgment of the court below on the following assignments of error:

1. The court erred in excluding the evidence of the pend-ency of negotiation by defendant to enter into another [150]*150business that required him to determine on that day of the transaction in controversy.

2. In giving the eighth instruction on its own motion.

3. In giving the seventh instruction on its own motion.

4. In refusing the instructions requested by defendant, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9.

5. In overruling the motion for a new trial.

6. The verdict is contrary to the evidence and the instructions of the court.

There were two principal questions submitted to the jury: First, whether the instructions of the plaintiff in error to Sherwin and company constituted an authority to make the sale in controversy to the parties to whom the sale was afterwards claimed to have been made, or whether that authority restricted them to a sale to Bond and Colby. There was conflicting evidence upon this point, which it is not deemed necessary to set out at length. It appears from the bill of exceptions that Gibbons had left the sale of the ten acres of land in question in the hands of the Sherwin Co., as real estate agents, under certain verbal instructions not stated in the evidence. On April 1, 1887, he wrote the Sherwins instructing them to keep the land on the market at the price of. $15,000 and on the following terms of payment: Cash $2,250, in thirty days $1,000, in sixty days $1,500, in ninety days $1,500, in four months $2,000, and the balance, $6,700, to be secured by mortgage on the property, due January 5, 1889, at eight per cent interest, the mortgagee to receipt for payments in sums not less than $500, at any time when tendered before due, and to release on such lots as are selected by the mortgagor in proportion to the amount of mortgage. Subsequently, and prior to the 4th of April following, the Sherwins received'an offer of purchase for the land from Mrs. Isabel Bond, of $15,000, on payments in a manner somewhat different from the terms of Gibbons; precisely what that difference was does not fully appear, [151]*151but it does appear that the cash payment \vas to have been less, and consequently the time payments correspondingly more than that of Gibbons. This offer was accepted by the Sherwins conditional of its being approved by Gibbons; and on the 4th of April they telegraphed Gibbons that the property was sold, and for him to come up to-morrow. On the next day, April 5, Gibbons was at the office of Sherwin & Co., and learned from them the acts stated. "What these facts were, and what Sherwin & Co. then informed Gibbons, as to the party, or parties who had made the proposition to purchase, which had been conditionally accepted, are involved in a considerable degree of uncertainty.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.W. 99, 28 Neb. 146, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbons-v-sherwin-neb-1889.