Gillette & English v. Carroll & Hogan

248 S.W. 900, 157 Ark. 492, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 12, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 900 (Gillette & English v. Carroll & Hogan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gillette & English v. Carroll & Hogan, 248 S.W. 900, 157 Ark. 492, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 189 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Gillette and English owned a ranch in the State of Oklahoma, with certain personal propertv thereon, which they decided to sell or exchange, and with that purpose in view they prepared a circular letter descriptive of their property, which they mailed to a large number of real estate agents. One of these letters was received by Carroll and Hogan, partners as Carroll & Hogan, residing at 'Bentonville, in this State, and engaged. there in the real estate business.

Gillette represented himself and English in the transaction out of which this litigation arose, and Carroll represented himself and Hogan.

Carroll testified that he and Gillette met and discussed the letter, and Gillette listed the ranch with him to be sold or exchanged, and he told Gillette that he would list the ranch with-a number of subagents' who were cooperating with him in selling and in exchanging lands, and that if he, or any of those subagents, negotiated a sale or an exchange of the ranch, he would expect a commission of two and one-half per cent., and Gillette assented and agreed to pay the commission.

Among the other real estate brokers notified by Carroll of this arrangement was R. O. Leeper, of Spring-dale, Arkansas, who agreed to find a purchaser or some one with whom an exchange could be made, and Carroll accompanied Gillette to Springdale and introduced him to Leeper as a man who would negotiate a sale or exchange, and some time thereafter, and pursuant to this understanding, Leeper found one McClinton, with whom Gillette made an exchange for the property of McClinton, and a commission is claimed, on the theory that, by virtue of the introduction of Gillette to Leeper, Carroll & Hogan thereby became the procuring cause of any sale or exchange of the ranch to any customer Leeper might find and himself represent in making a purchase or exchange for the ranch, although Carroll & Hogan might have nothing else to do towards bringing about the sale or exchange. The theory of the case was that Leeper could be, and was to be, the agent of Carroll & Hogan to procure a purchaser for Gillette, and also to be the agent of such purchaser in making an exchange with Gillette.

Shortly before the consummation of the exchange with McClinton, Carroll wrote to Gillette that.if he (Gillette) traded with McClinton, a commission would be expected on the theory stated above. The deal with McClinton was closed, and Gillette refused to pay a commission, and this suit was brought to recover it, and there was a judgment as prayed, from which is this appeal.

Carroll did not claim to have an exclusive agency, or any agency for any given time, and the right of Gillette to make the sale was not questioned. The insistence is that Gillette promised to pay a commission if Carroll & Hogan themselves, or if they, through one of their sub-agents, negotiated a sale or an exchange; and this latter thing they did through Leeper.

The court submitted the case to the jury under instructions to find for the plaintiffs if the facts were found to be as contended by Carroll, and we think no error was committed in so doing, as one may agree to pay commissions for services of almost any character. At least, there is no legal objection to his doing so. It is insisted, however, that the instructions did not properly present the theory of Gillette’s defense, and we think that contention is well taken.

The testimony shows that Carroll accompanied Gillette to Springdale and introduced Leeper and Gillette, and Carroll endeavored to exchange the ranch for a hotel owned by a customer of Leeper, but this deal failed, and thereafter Carroll admittedly did nothing further towards selling or exchanging the ranch, except in so far as Leeper represented the firm of which C'arroll was a member.

Leeper testified on behalf of the plaintiffs, and it is quite obvious from a reading of his testimony that he was highly friendly to the plaintiffs. He testified that he told Gillette that Carroll would expect a commission if the McClinton deal was consummated, yet he admitted that in all his negotiations with Gillette he was representing McClinton, and that Gillette was without representaion. .He further testified that the MeClinton deal hung fire for a period of several months, and finally MeClinton himself took charge of the negotiations, and thereafter no one acted for either Gillette or MeClinton, but when the exchange between them was closed MeClinton paid him the agent’s commission agreed upon.

Gillette testified that Carroll was never at any time his agent, and had no more right to claim a commission than any one of the other hundred or more real estate brokers to whom he sent his circular letter, which was nothing more than an inquiry whether any of the persons to whom the circular was sent had a customer who might become interested in purchasing or trading for the ranch. He testified that, for a period of several months, negotiations proceeded between himself and Leeper, and, so far from ever being advised that Leeper was his ag-ent and was attempting to procure him a purchaser, he at all times regarded Leeper as his adversary, with .whom he was trading at arm’s length. He denied that Leeper told him that Carroll was expecting a commission if the McClinton deal went through. He admitted receiving the letter from Carroll & Hogan in which they stated they would expect a commission if the MeClinton deal was made, but he dismissed it from consideration on the ground that there was no agreement to support the claim.

An instruction numbered 2 was asked by the defendants, which, in our opinion, should have been given, but which the court refused. It reads as follows:

“If you find from the evidence that defendants mailed a description of their property to plaintiffs for sale or exchange, and that the plaintiffs thereupon made out copies of such description and mailed them to other real estate agents in Benton County and other counties, and, among others, R. C.

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Related

Blankenship v. McDaniel
261 S.W. 316 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 900, 157 Ark. 492, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillette-english-v-carroll-hogan-ark-1923.