Grimes v. Emery

141 P. 1002, 92 Kan. 911, 1914 Kan. LEXIS 341
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 7, 1914
DocketNo. 18,946
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 141 P. 1002 (Grimes v. Emery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grimes v. Emery, 141 P. 1002, 92 Kan. 911, 1914 Kan. LEXIS 341 (kan 1914).

Opinion

The opinion of the -court was delivered by

Smith, J. :•

Prior to April 12, 1912, the appellant was the owner of 220 acres of land in Ottawa county, Kansas,'and the appellee was a real-estate agent doing business at Minneapolis in that county. In the fall of 1911 the appellant employed the appellee to find a purchaser for the land at $75 per acre and agreed to pay him five per cent on the first $1000 received and two and one-half per cent on the remainder. Grimes went to. see one-John Kline, who afterwards bought the land, about selling.the land to him. Kline lived about fourteen miles from Minneapolis, and near Ada. Grimes talked with Kline about the land and gave him the location of the land and the name of the owner, and the appellee went a second time to see Kline. Thereafter the appellant sold sixty acres of the land, leaving 160 acres. After this sale the appellee and the appellant [912]*912met and had the following conversation, as appears by the evidence of the appellee and is not disputed:

“Q. Repeat the conversation? A. I said to Mr. Emery T note you have sold a part of your land’ and he said ‘yes’ and now I says, T believe I can bring a man from north of Ada that can handle that land at this time, I think you have got it down to where he can handle it,’ and I said ‘Would you do any better than $75.00 an acre on this land?’ and he said ‘if you could sell this land right away, he would do some better than that’ and I told Mr. Emery that I would go right out and see the party within a day or two, as soon as I could get away, I told him if he thought we could make satisfactory terms, and he said he thought he could.
“Q. Were the terms revised at that time? A. No.
“Q. What, if anything, did you do after that with reference to that land? A. On the' 15th of February I went to see Mr. Kline and I saw him and told him that Mr. Emery had sold 60 acres of this land, leaving 160, and that Mr. Emery told me that if he could sell it right away, he would do a little bit better than $75.00 an acre, and I told Mr. Kline that I couldn’t give him the definite price, that the price that was given to me was $75.00 per acre, but I told him what Mr. Emery had said.
“Q. What did you tell him? A. I told him that Mr. Emery had said that he would do a little bit better if he sold it .soon, and I told him that Mr. Emery had said that the terms would be made so that he could handle it.
“Q. And what did Mr. Kline say? A. Mr. Kline told me that he w'as going to look at some land first before he did anything here.
“Q. How far did this land lay from where Mr. Kline lived at that time? A. About 10 or 11 miles I think.
“Q. Did you ever give Mr. Kline the description of this piece of property? A. No sir, nothing more than I told him where it was, I didn’t give the legal numbers.
“Q. How many conversations did you have with Mr. Kline about this land between November and the following April when he bought? A. I think I was there on five different occasions that I talked to him about the place.
[913]*913“Q. And this last trip you say, was on the 15th of February? A. Yes sir, that was especially to see him.
“A. I told Mr. Emery in the conversation about the 13th of February that I had a party I thought I could sell to, a young man north of Ada.
“Q. You didn’t tell him who it was? A. No sir.
“Q. You never did at any time tell him who your customer was? A. No sir, we don’t tell those things.
“Q. And on the 13th you told him you thought you had a young man that would take his farm? A. Yes sir.”

There seems to be no contradictions of this evidence except that the purchaser, Kline, testified that appellee was at his place twice, while Grimes says that he was at Kline’s place five different occasions, and talked with him about the place.

Grimes also testified:

“Q. You did n’t even get Kline to go and look at the farm ? A. I tried.
“Q. Did you ever obtain his consent to go with you to the farm and look at it? . . . A. He promised me one time that he would come and look at the farm.
“Q. Did he make a date when he would ever come and look at it? A. No sir, it was impossible to get a date with him because he was feeding cattle.
“Q. Did you ever at any time take him over there and' show him the farm ? A. No sir.
“Q. Did you ever get any contract from Mr. Kline of any kind by which he agreed to take this farm on any terms? A. No sir.
“Q. Did you ever get any promise at any time that he would go and take it upon any terms? A. No sir, but he agreed to go and look at it.
“Q. You don’t know at any time whether he was ever ready to purchase the farm at $75 an acre? A He had n’t seen it.
“Q. You don’t know whether he was at any time ever ready to purchase it at any price, so far as you were concerned? A. I don’t suppose he was until he saw it.”

[914]*914Mr. Kline testified as follows:

“Well the way I happened to go down to it, Mr. Sedilick of Ada had a farm over west three miles from the place I bought, and he told me to go and look at it, and one time in April I told him I was going over to see it and Mr. Sedilick came along and took me over there, and it did n’t suit me and we came back, we were on this side of the farm and inquired of Mr. Harris if he knew of any land for sale, and he said that he had some land for sale, and Mr. Sedilick, Mr. Harris and I drove over it and it did n’t suit me, and we took dinner with Mr. Harris, and then we came down to where Mr. Goff lives and we asked him if there was any land for sale that he knew of, and he told us about the Rolla Emery farm was for sale, so we came on down then at another place and inquired if that was for sale, so then we came down to look over the Rolla Emery place, and then we came down to see Mr. Emery, and that is the way I got down there.
“I talked to Emery about place and he finally said he would take $11,200.00; I then went home and brought my wife down and again looked over farm, we then come to Minneapolis and closed deal.”

The pffect of the instructions given in the case is that if the appellee was the procuring cause of Kline’s going to see the land and buying it of the owner that the appellee was entitled to recover his commission at the rate agreed upon, on the amount received by appellant for the land.

The appellant contends that under the evidence in this case the appellee did not bring the seller and the purchaser together or institute a contract between them and hence did not earn any commission.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 P. 1002, 92 Kan. 911, 1914 Kan. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimes-v-emery-kan-1914.