Hopkins v. Settles

1915 OK 329, 149 P. 890, 46 Okla. 801, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1255
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 18, 1915
Docket3852
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1915 OK 329 (Hopkins v. Settles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. Settles, 1915 OK 329, 149 P. 890, 46 Okla. 801, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1255 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

BREWER, C.

Plaintiff in error, Hopkins, a real estate agent, 'brought this suit in the court below to recover from defendant, Settles, the sum' of $500, alleged to be due as commission or compensation for his services in -connection with the sale of defendant’s half section of land ánd certain rights in an Indian lease, together with 80 acres of growing corn. At a trial of the case the jury returned a verdict for defendant, and plaintiff brings this proceeding in error.

Whatever conversation or understanding had between these parties relative to the sale of the farm was oral. It seems to be plaintiff’s contention that he was employed by defendant to find a purchaser for the land; that he was to be paid as compensation or commission for his services for bringing the parties together and -consummating a v-alid agreement of sale all over .and above the sum of $16,500; that he could get a purchaser to agree to pay for the property; that he did find a purchaser who entered into a valid written costract with defendant, in which it was agreed that he was to pay $17,000 for the property, $1,000 of said sum to be paid as earnest money, $1,000 more in 20 days, .another $1,000 by the 1st of September, and $7,000 on the 1st of October, -at which time a mortgage was to be executed by the purchaser to defendant for the remainder of the purchase price; and that, since he brought the parties together in an enforceable contract for the sale -of the land, he *803 was entitled to the $500 embraced within the terms of said contract.

The contention of defendant is that he merely made' to plaintiff a price upon his land that would he satisfactory to him; that he did not employ plaintiff to find a purchaser, and did not agree to pay or become liable in any way to pay any commission, brokerage, or compensation in the matter; that he had told plaintiff, if he brought about a sale and he got $16,500 for his property, plaintiff could have as his own any additional sum he might get out of the purchaser; that, while the additional sum of $500 was added to the agreed purchase price in the contract, yet the agreement was that this sum would merely he turned over to plaintiff in case the sale was completed and went through; that the sale did not go through;- that none of the deferred payments were made; that the purchaser became discouraged, and would not carry out his contract to ’buy the land, and did not do so.

Some attempt is made to show that -the purchaser went to the bank at the time one of the later payments was to he made and asked if the deeds had been deposited, and was told that they had not. Evidence both for and against the idea that defendant breached his contract to convey is presented; hut from a careful reading of the- evidence there is nothing to the contention. It is clearly manifest that the purchaser had abandoned all intention of taking and paying for the farm, and that defendant was not only willing, but would have been very glad, had he taken the land.

1. The first proposition presented for reversal is based on the claim that the verdict is not sufficiently -supported by the evidence. We will examine this point first. As to some phases of the matter as between plaintiff and defendant there is little conflict in the evidence. As to other phases -there is much conflict; and, when the record is carefully studied, it gets down *804 to tire point as to the agreement between the parties relative ■to when there would be any obligation upon defendant’s part to pay the $500. In other words, was it -the agreement that plaintiff’s money would be earned when he brought the parties ■together in a contract of sale and incorporated his fee in the amount named, or was he entitled to the fee only when the sale went through, that is, when defendant had parted with his land and received satisfactory consideration in money and notes for it? On this point the evidence is in conflict. Plaintiff, testifying in his own behalf and at length as to just what he did in bringing the parties together and .getting them to sign the contract, made, as relating to the payment of his fee, the following statement:

“It was also agreed between Settles, the defendant, and me, that as soon as that $1,000 was paid to Settles by Van Meter, the first payment on the land, that then I should get my $500.”

Defendant, testifying in his own behalf, was asked:

“Did you agree with Mr.. Hopkins that you would pay him a commission of $500 for getting a signature to this contract, regardless of whether the deed and mortgages were exchanged or not? A. No, sir; I never agreed to pay Hopkins a cent in my life for nothing, only this $500 that he sold the place for; that he told me he had sold it for over and above any price, and I told him that I would turn it over to him when Van Meter paid it to me. Q. Do you mean when he paid the first $1,000? ,A. No, sir; when Van Meter paid me for the place, I was to turn over the difference to Hopkins.”

Settles further testified as. to just what was said about the $500 fee as follows:

“He says, ‘We will just go ahead and close up< this deal, and when Van Meter pays for the place, why you can give me a check for the $500.’ That is what he had sold it for, over and above my price; and I fold him that would be all right, and whenever Van Meter paid me, of course, he would get his *805 money, whatever was coming to* him. That is all that ever passed between Hopkins and I about these commissions from first to the last.”

As will be seen -from the quotations from the evidence, there was a wide misunderstanding between the parties as to this, which seems to have been the vital point in the case. The jury accepted defendant’s version of the matter, and, as he had not been paid t for the place, as the sale had not gone through, he was relieved of any obligation to pay plaintiffs fee. We have no right to disturb the verdict.

Some complaint is made relative to the court’s instructions to the jury, both as to two or three of the instructions given and some that were' refused. Perhaps the most earnest objection goes to instruction No. 6, which is as follows:

“You are further instructed that in this case defendant claims or contends that he was only to pay commission in case the sale1went through. If you can find by a preponderance of the evidence that the bargain agreed upon between the plaintiff and defendant was that commission was only to be paid in case the whole transaction went through, as provided by the terms of the contract of sale, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and it will be your duty to find for the defendant.”

In the light of the contentions of the parties and the evidence introduced in relation thereto, this instruction was substantially correct; in fact, while many instructions were given, fairly covering plaintiffs theory of the cáse, this is the one special instruction that submitted to the jury the defendant’s theory. If defendant’s theory was correct, he was under no obligation to pay plaintiff the ■ amount claimed, and this instruction merely tells the jury so. While the case of Scully v. Williamson, 26 Okla. 19, 108 Pac. 395, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1089, Ann. Cas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 329, 149 P. 890, 46 Okla. 801, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-settles-okla-1915.