Glade v. Ford

111 S.W. 135, 131 Mo. App. 164, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 416
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 135 (Glade v. Ford) 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
Glade v. Ford, 111 S.W. 135, 131 Mo. App. 164, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 416 (Mo. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiffs, real estate agents, sued to recover a commission alleged to be due them from defendant. A jury being waived by the parties, trial before the court resulted in a judgment for defendant on the finding that the action was begun prematurely. Plaintiffs appealed.

There is no dispute over the fact that defendant employed plaintiffs to procure a purchaser for a mine he owned in Jasper county at the price of $30,000, and agreed to pay them a commission of $2,000 for such services. Nor is it denied that plaintiffs found purchasers in the persons of a Mr. -Bruner and a Mr. Hedrick to whom defendant sold and conveyed the property on February 25, 1903, for $30,000; that defendant accepted a doAvn payment on the purchase price of $15,000 and the unsecured promissory notes of Bruner and Hedrick for the remainder, due in four, five and six months, and that none of those notes nor any part of them has been paid. And it is agreed that the following written instrument was signed by plaintiffs and delivered to defendant:

“Joplin, Mo., Feb. 25th, 1903.
“Received of A. P. Ford Otoe Thousand ($1,000) Dollars on account ,of commission in sale of Tennessee mine, balance one thousand ($1,000). Dollars to be paid as follows: $333.33 in four months upon the payment [167]*167of a certain note of $5,000 from Bruner & Hedrick to A. P. Ford and $333.33 in five months when another note of same amount as above is paid, and $333.33 in six months when another $5,000 note is paid. In the event of the payment of the above notes before maturity then the commission is due and payable. One-half of the above amounts to J. E. Tedford and onethalf to Geo. H. Glade.”

Plaintiffs admit the payment of $1,000 recited in the instrument and this suit is for the recovery of the three deferred payments mentioned therein which aggregate $1,000 and are still unpaid.

The facts in controversy thus may be stated: It is the contention of plaintiffs, supported by evidence, that by the terms of their contract of employment with defendant, they, were entitled to receive the whole of the commission when the sale was closed, regardless of whether or not defendant sold the property partly on the credit of the purchasers; that they agreed to defer the payment of half of their commission as a matter of accommodation to defendant who requested it as a favor to him, and that the agreement was made and the instrument we have copied was signed and delivered after the sale had been fully consummated. Further, plaintiffs say that their evidence shows defendant negligently omitted to force the collection of the Bruner and Hedrick notes after they fell due, but they failed to introduce any evidence to the effect that Bruner and Hedrick were solvent or that efforts to collect the notes would have availed anything. From these facts, plaintiffs argue, first, that the agreement for the extension of time for the payment of half their commission is void for the reason that it is unsupported by a consideration and, second, that should the agreement be held to be free from this objection, nevertheless, plaintiffs are entitled to recover b cause of the fact that reasonable dili[168]*168gence was not employed by defendant to collect tbe Bruner and Hedrick notes.

On tbe part of defendant, tbe evidence is to the effect that when informed during the negotiations preceding the sale that the purchasers required time in which to pay half of the purchase price and would do nothing more than to give their unsecured promissory notes for the deferred payments, defendant refused to deal on such terms and did not consent to go on. with the transaction until assured by plaintiffs that the purchasers were responsible and that plaintiffs’ right to receive, payment of more than one-half of the agreed commission would be made dependent on the collection of the purchase price notes. Defendant testified: “Mr. Tedford, he was with us when the sale was made, and I Avanted to retain a lien on the mine, Bruner would not do it; he said he Avas good, worth $85,000 and his partner was worth ever so much. I was going to back out and I took Mr. Tedford out in the hall of W. B. McAntire’s office and I asked Mr. Tedford if Bruner was good, and he said yes he Avas, could be no question about it. I says, 'Here, if I let this go without any lien you don’t get your commission until I get my money.’ He says, 'I am perfectly Avilling; I am very Avilling.’ I says, 'All right, I’ll let the trade go through and take Bruner’s notes.’ ”

On the issue of defendant’s negligence in failing to use reasonable diligence to collect the purchase price notes, it is shown that defendant refrained from bringing suit on them until about tw'o years after the sale was made and long after the notes had matured. But the evidence shoAvs that shortly after the sale was made, defendant was sued by attachment on a demand of $4,500, and Bruner and Hedrick were brought into that action as garnishees and that the suit Avas compromised and settled in September, 1905, at about the same time defendant caused suit to be brought against Bru[169]*169ner and Hedrick on their notes. The charge of negligence rests on the ground that in omitting to make any effort to dissolve the attachment or to give a forthcoming bond, defendant negligently suffered himself to remain in a position where he could not proceed against the garnishees, his debtors. Defendant answers this by adducing evidence from which it appears that plaintiffs were kept informed fully and promptly of the proceedings in the attachment suit; that no step was taken therein by defendant except with their knowledge and approval and that they acknowledged on different occasions that they were not entitled to their unpaid commission until the purchase price notes should be collected and expressed an anxious desire that the attachment suit might be pushed to a conclusion as speedily as possible in order that the way might be opened for defendant to begin action against Bruner and Hedrick.

Plaintiffs say in their brief “the court found the issues in favor of the defendant and rendered judgment to the effect that the suit was prematurely brought by plaintiffs for the reason that there was no evidence offered or given by either party to show that from and after said notes became due that Bruner and Hedrick were solvent and on this ground and this alone, the court held that the suit was prematurely brought.”

The declarations of law given at the request of plaintiffs very clearly presented as issues to go to the court as a jury all of the facts involved in controversy and in giving them and then finding for defendant, the court necessarily must have resolved all of the contested facts against the contention of plaintiffs. Findings of fact made by the trial court in a law case tried without a' jury are the equivalent of a verdict of a jury and if supported by substantial evidence must be accepted as final by the appellate court. Therefore, we treat as a verity the version of the transaction [170]*170given in the evidence introduced by defendant which, as to all disputed facts, we find to be substantial. As an inducement to defendant to make the sale on the terms proposed by the purchasers^ plaintiffs agreed to defer the payment of one-half of their commission until defendant should collect the purchase price notes and further agreed that payment of that part of their commission should not be made at all in the event defendant was unable to collect the purchaser’s notes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 135, 131 Mo. App. 164, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glade-v-ford-moctapp-1908.