Hieatt Brothers, Incorporated v. Morgan

272 S.W. 895, 209 Ky. 387, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 508
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 272 S.W. 895 (Hieatt Brothers, Incorporated v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hieatt Brothers, Incorporated v. Morgan, 272 S.W. 895, 209 Ky. 387, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 508 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Reversing.

In a general way this action grows out of the same transactions this day considered in Hieatt Bros., incorporated v. Kirwan.

*388 Appellee brought his equitable action against Hieatt Bros., incorporated alleging in substance that in August, 1922, he employed appellant, a corporation engaged in the real estate business, to .buy for him á home in Louisville, and while it was so éngaged and employed by him as his agent, it falsely and fraudulently represented to him that a certain home which it bought for him as his agent could not be .bought for less than $8,500.00, and relying upon same he paid that amount therefor, whereas in truth at the time defendant knew the property could be bought for $6,500.00, whereby it as .his agent defrauded him of $2,000.00, for which he prayed judgment.

These averments were put in issue, including the allegation of agency.

After full preparation the chancellor entered a judgment for plaintiff for the $2,000.00 less a commission, from which action this appeal results.

The action is bottomed upon the existence of the relationship of principal and agent,- and the duties of appellant growing out of that relation; and it is essential at the outset to determine from the evidence whether plaintiff has established its existence, for if he has not his action necessarily fails under the rule laid down in Ripy v. Cronan, 131 Ky. 631.

The allegation in an amendment after the evidence was all taken is, that on August 5th, 1922, plaintiff employed the defendant to buy for him a home in Louisville, and that defendant accepted said employment, and on that date introduced him to one Harmon, its agent, and told him that Harmon would show to .him the house he specifically had in mind, and other houses so as he might 'find a house that would suit him.

The plaintiff himself is the- only witness relied upon to establish this allegation, and in undertaking to do so he relates conversations had between him and. G. Y. Hieatt, vice president of appellant, on the 5th of August, 1922, and conversations had between him and O. M. Harmon, agent of appellant, on the 5th and 9th of August, 1922.

He states that early in August he saw on a house at 15th and Jefferson streets an advertisement saying it was for sale by Hieatt Bros., and on the 5th of August he went to its place of business where he met a man whom he was informed was G. Y. Hieatt, and “I told him I wanted-’to buy a house,” although he later appends to that statement that he told him “he wanted them to buy *389 a house for me;” that Hieatt then told a young man to take him back to Mr. Harmon, and the young man did so, and told Harmon that “I wanted to go look at a house,” whereupon Harmon got up and went with him to the house which he had mentioned, and showed it to him; that after they had looked at the house he concluded he did not want it, and Harmon told him that Hieatt Bros, had other houses, but he declined to look at them on that day. He says that in the progress of that conversation he told Harmon he had a farm in Nelson county he was going to sell, and Harmon suggested to him that he let Hieatt Bros, sell it at auction, and in the progress of the conversation Harmon told him Hieatt Bros, “would charge ten per cent for selling the land out in the country, and would charge me five per cent for buying in the city,” but he does not state specifically that he and Harmon entered into any agreement as to the rendition of any service to him by Hieatt Bros, so as it might earn either commission.

That the conversation with Hieatt on the 5th of August did not create the relationship of principal and agent is plain, for Morgan does not claim that Hieatt himself entered into any contract with him, but only directed that he go to Mr. Harmon; and that the casual reference in the subsequent conversation between Morgan and Harmon to the commissions which Hieatt Bros, charged for selling country property and buying city property was not intended to be the completion of an agreement by which that corporation should act for him in buying a house seems to be conclusive from the fact that subsequently when he made up his mind to sell his farm.in the country, he went to Hieatt Bros., place of business, and there entered into a specific written contract with it as to the selling of his farm, the compensation and all details. If he regarded the conversation between him and Harmon as to the commissions an agreement by which Hieatt Bros, were to buy him a home, why did he not likewise regard it as an agreement by which they were to sell for him his country property?

Morgan and Harmon only looked at the one house on the 5th of August, the one upon which Morgan had seen the sign of Hieatt Bros., and when they separated there was no distinct agreement as to the looking at other houses. Later in his evidence Morgan states that on the 9th of August he went again to Hieatt Bros.’ and that on *390 that day Harmon again went with him and showed him two or more other houses listed with them for sale, and finally took him. to the Kirwan honse on Jacob street. That house.had previously been listed for sale with Hieatt Bros, but had been withdrawn and Harmon took him to see and look at it, nevertheless, which they did with the permission of Kirwan’s wife. While they were looking at that house Harmon told him that Kirwan wanted $8,500.00 for it (and that was the price at which it had been listed with Hieatt Bros.) whereupon Morgan said he thought it was too much, and no conclusion was reached, Morgan telling Harmon he would have to study about it a week or two, and could then make him no answer.

That night Harmon knowing the Kirwan house was not then listed with Hieatt Bros., went to Kirwan’s house and tried to get him to place a price upon it, or to again list it with Hieatt Bros. This Kirwan expressly declined to do, and positively refused to fix'any price, but said he would consider a written proposition, and either reject or accept it.

Between the 9th of August and the 12th of August, so far'as the record discloses, there was no communication between Morgan and Harmon, or between Morgan and’ anybody connected with Hieatt Bros.; and on that date Harmon in his own name submitted a written proposition to Kirwan to give him $6,500:00 for his Jacob street property, and that proposition was accepted in writing by Kirwan and wife with the provision that they should pay no commissions.

On the 15th of August Morgan .again went to the place of business of Hieatt Bros, and there on that day entered into a written contract with it by which it was employed to sell at public auction his farm in Nelson county, and although lie now claims that through his conversations with Gr. Y. Hieatt and Harmon there was a contract that Hieatt Bros, should act as his agent ip the purchase of a home in Louisville, he admits that on the 15th of August when he was making the other written contract there was not only no reference of any kind in the written contract about the farm- land to any other contract between him and Hieatt Bros., but nothing was said about or any reference made to the existing contract about the purchase of a home. Not only so, that written contract fixed á different commission from that he says Harmon 'fixed.

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Bluebook (online)
272 S.W. 895, 209 Ky. 387, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hieatt-brothers-incorporated-v-morgan-kyctapphigh-1925.