Gregg v. Loomis

22 Neb. 174
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 Neb. 174 (Gregg v. Loomis) 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
Gregg v. Loomis, 22 Neb. 174 (Neb. 1887).

Opinion

Maxwell, Ch. J.

This action was’begun in the county court of Lancaster county, wherein, on March 20, 1886, judgment was rendered in favor of Loomis for $87.50 and costs of suit.

The cause was appealed by Gregg to the district court of Lancaster county.

For cause of action the plaintiff below alleges in his petition that he was, during all the transactions hereinafter set forth, a real estate broker engaged in selling real estate upon a commission. That about January 1st, 1886, defendant Gregg employed plaintiff Loomis to solicit and find a purchaser for lot 6 in block 125, Lincoln, at the sum of $2,500, and therefor promised to pay plaintiff a usual and reasonable fee and reward.

' This plaintiff entered upon said employment and solicited one Smith to purchase said property, and exhibited said property to said Smith, and brought said Smith and said Gregg' into negotiation, and such negotiation was finally, on or about the 1st day of March, a.d. 1886, consummated in the sale and conveyance of said premises to said Smith, whereby said Gregg became indebted to plaintiff Loomis in the sum of $87.50, the reasonable and usual rate of commission.

[176]*176Payment has often been demanded and refused. Wherefore Loomis, the plaintiff, prays judgment against defendant Gregg for $87.50. The defendant in his answer admits he has paid nothing, and denies each and every allegation of said petition.

In November, 1886, the cause was tried in the district, court of Lancaster county, a jury being waived, and the court thereupon found for defendant in error and rendered judgment against plaintiff in error for forty dollars and costs of suit. The plaintiff in .error thereupon filed a motion for new trial, assigning as causes therefor:

1st. Error in the amount of the recovery, being ton large a sum. 2d. That the decision is not sustained by sufficient evidence. 3d. That the decision is contrary to law. 4th. That the decision is erroneous in not being in favor of defendants. 5th. That the decision is erroneous in finding any sum due the plaintiff. • The motion was overruled, to which plaintiff in error duly excepted. Defendant in error also filed his motion for a new trial on the ground of error in the assessment of the recovery in that the amount recovered was too small, for that upon the evidence he was entitled to recover $87.50 and interest from the 9th day of March, 1886, and error of law duly excepted to at the time occurring at the trial of the cause. This motion was overruled, to which he duly excepted.

On the trial of the cause the plaintiff below testified: My business is and was, during February and March, 1886, that of real estate, renting houses and selling real estate on commission. Gregg employed me in the first place. I sold Gregg lots five and six in the block 125, I believe for $2,300. I then told them the lots were worth $4,000, and that I would sell them for him at that price if he would let me do so. He said if I could get $4,500' I might sell them; he wanted that net. I said I did not sell lots that way; if he would make me a price and stand [177]*177by it, I would sell tbe lots. So he made the price $4,600; he said he would stand by that price and not interfere with my customers. It ran along probably a month or six weeks; I showed them to different ones, and finally I got a party to take them. I went and informed him what the customer said, that he only wanted one, but I had an idea that I could get them to take them both. He said, sell them, stick them to it, I said that he had got to stick to it if they came to him; he said, I will not do it, I will have nothing to do with them. It worked and worked along till I saw Gregg again and finally told him who the men were, gave their names, the Smith boys. I met them again in a short time and I said, they want only one lot, will you divide ? He said, yes, and we will make the corner lot $2,700, so the other will not be more than $2,500; I said that is too much, there is no use in talking about it. He said he would sell it in that way. I said, that is too much, I can get $2,500. He said he would sell it at $2,500, and I said, will you stand by that? he said, I won’t have a word to say ; you sell it, they will have to deal with you. He left me, and got fifteen feet about, and said, you had better hurry up, other parties are working with the Smith boys for that lot. I said it don’t make any difference, you know he is my customer; I have worked it up, and it is mine. After that he left, and I saw the Smith boys again, but could not get an offer of over $2,500. I could not sell for $2,600; I would not let them go at all, but finally the thing hung fire and he thought he could sell, so he closed the sale, and it’s over here; he sold at $2,500. I showed and introduced these buyers, Smith Brothers, to the lot; they drove by the lots twice in one day and noticed them. That day I seen them and impressed on their minds that they were the best lots they had seen, and asked them if they had seen these lots, and they said no.”

On cross-examination ho testified : I was a witness ins [178]*178this case on the trial in the county court; I rather think I was. On that trial I will swear I did not say that the only conversation I had with reference to this one lot was at the corner of O and Eleventh streets, when Mr. Gregg came along and I spoke to him about his price on one lot, whereupon he named $2,700, and I told him that was too high, that he then said it must net him $2,600; that then starting away, I said to him, I did not do business without a commission, and that was all that was said in relation to sale of one lot.

“On that trial I did not swear that I never had any conversation with .either of the Smith boys about the sale of one lot, after the conversation I have spoken of, at the corner of O and 11th streets. I insisted all the time on the two .lots all the time, till I asked Mr. Gregg if he would divide; then when he said he would divide, I went to the boys and talked one lot for $2,600.”

F. E. Gregg testified: “I am the defendant; Mr. Beecher was the owner of lots five and six, block 125, and McMurtry came to our office to sell them, and Mr. Keyser and myself purchased them jointly some time in December, 1885. Shortly after we bought the lots Mr. Loomis came to us and said: . Don’t you want to sell those lots ? Our reply was, that we had bought and our intention was to build on them. We didn’t know whether we wanted to sell them or not.. He said, I can, I believe, sell them for $4,500, possibly $4,600. I .had never been in Loomis’ office, and when he again came, I said: If you bring us (I believe it was $4,600 net) to us without expense, I don’t think that I said we would make a warranty deed; any way, we would make a deed. He kept at it some time; finally I bought out Mr. Keyser’s interest in the corner lot, and sold him my interest in the other; that passed to me the title of lot six, the corner one. Then my recollection of Mr. Loomis speaking about a single lot after-wards, was the time he spoke on the córner of Eleventh [179]*179and O streets ; I never went to his office ; he saw me on the street and called to me. He said : Will you sell that lot singly, referring to lot six on the corner. I said I did not know ; my wife talked of building on it. He said: What will you take for it? I said, I don’t know, I might take $2,700; that must be net to me. He said that was too high.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Neb. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregg-v-loomis-neb-1887.