Jaekel v. Caldwell

26 A. 1063, 156 Pa. 266, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 1339
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 19, 1893
DocketAppeal, No. 373
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 26 A. 1063 (Jaekel v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jaekel v. Caldwell, 26 A. 1063, 156 Pa. 266, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 1339 (Pa. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justicte Thompson,

The question raised in this ease is whether the appellant was entitled to recover upon a quantum meruit. The solution of it will, be found in the pleadings and the evidence. The original statement filed in 1888 contained common counts for goods sold and delivered, for work and labor done, for money advanced and laid out, for money bad and received for use of appellant, and for money due on an account stated. An amendment was filed, and set forth that in 1881 J udge Dean and appellee were joint owners of a tract of coal land consisting of 3168 acres, and desiring to sell this tract they employed appellant to act as agent for negotiating a sale, and for his compensation for the work and labor of effecting the sale, agreed to give him any sum above the price of $200,000 for which he might sell it. That this agreement, together with one amending it as to certain timber on tbe lands and increasing tbe price to $215,000, was signed by Judge Dean for himself and appellee. That upon the faith of this agreement ho expended money and advertised tbe same; that in order to make a market be projected a railroad to the tract, and expended large sums of money in its organization and in raising money to build it; that while he was thus actively engaged in making a sale, with every prospect of success, the appellee and his co-owner, without notice to appellant, sold the lands to a coal company for a sum exceeding $815,000; that Judge Dean paid to appellant his share of the compensation due to him, amounting to $26,000, and that appellee has refused to pay his share of such compensation. Subsequently he filed another amended statement in which he avers that appellee received for the land an amount exceeding $838,333.10 for his share ; that previous to the revocation of the authority to sell he had procured a purchaser at the price of $350,000, and avers his damages to be tbe one half difference between $215,000 and the $350,000, or if the court be of opinion that tbe price at which the purchaser was to take the lands is not the measure of damages, he then avers his damages to be computed for his time, trouble, and expense, and specifying the length of time and the amount he has expended.

Upon the trial the appellant elected to go to trial upon tbe last amended statement, and offered “ to prove by the witness [272]*272on the stand that in order to sell this land it became necessary to construct a railroad to the land, that the defendant encouraged him to interest himself in having such a railroad built, that he did interest himself in having such a railroad built, that his time and expenses in having this railroad built aggregated the sum of 120,000, and that he was encouraged by the defendant and Judge Dean to promote the construction of the railroad with a view of enabling a more ready sale of this land.” The offer was refused upon the ground that it was not alleged in appellant’s statement as a ground of recovery.

The learned judge refused to charge as follows: “ If after Mr. Jaekel’s first effort to sell, it was found impossible, without exposing the coal bjr shafts and drifts, and he was encouraged by his employers to engage miners for the purpose and spent thirteen months in such work, and expended his money therein and labor in the supervision of the work, and if then, finding that a sale could not be effected until a railroad was made, he was again encouraged by his employers to devote his time, efforts, and money for that purpose in order that he might effect a sale after its construction, he would still be entitled to a reasonable time thereafter to make a sale, and if they then, believing it more advantageous for them to form a coal and coke company and convey to it, revoked his authority within the limit of such reasonable time, he would be entitled to recover the amount of his reasonable expenditures and the reasonable value of his services.” “ Because it attempts to establish a basis for a recovery not set forth in the plaintiff’s statement of his claim.”

After the trial, at the suggestion of the court, by agreement, appellant was allowed to amend his statement nunc pro tunc, and the amendment made was as follows, viz.: “ And now, to wit, February 9,1893, at the suggestion of the court, it is agreed that the plaintiff shall be permitted to amend his statement, nunc pro tunc, as of March 24, 1892, by alleging the several matters hypothetically stated in the point submitted by the plaintiff’s counsel, at the trial. And it is further agreed, the court assenting, that the refusal of the said point shall not be considered as resting on the reason assigned therefor, by the court, at the trial, but shall be deemed to be based solely on the other reasons set forth in the opinion this day filed, overruling the motion for a new trial, namely, that the facts hypothetically [273]*273set forth in said point were unsustained by evidence. The purpose of this agreement is to enable the plaintiff, if lie so desire, to have the case fully reviewed in the Supreme Court, on all its alleged and real merits.”

As the court refused a new trial it is manifest that, fpr the purpose of this case, assuming the pleadings as amended contained a sufficient averment, a refusal of the point was intended. With the pleadings so amended this was error. If these facts had been found by a jury, and there was evidence from which they might so have found, under these pleadings the appellant would have been entitled to a recovery. The owners of the property employed appellant to sell their lands. J udge Dean testified: “ The first one employed to sell the land was appellant; it was a verbal arrangement, and they gave appellant authority to dispose of the land; that he demanded a paper because as he alleged parties doubted his authority to sell, and what had existed in parol before that was reduced to writing after consultation with 'Mr. Caldwell, the appelLee.” The appellant testified: “ That Judge Dean wanted him to sell the land and that he went to New York to do so, and upon his return he went to Judge Dean and said to him: ‘I can’t do anything down there, I have nothing to show that I am authorized to sell the land,’ and the reply was, ‘ We will remedy that right straight,’ and the agreement was given.” This agreement, dated August 20,1881, first recites: “ We agree that appellant shall sell our coal lands,” and is distinctly an authority to sell, aird “he is to pay to us the sum of $200,000 without regard to the price he sells for; on payment of such sum we are to execute a good and sufficient deed.”

It is clear he was employed to sell the lands, and the measure of his compensation was to be any sum in excess of that mentioned. It was an agreement making him an agent with full authority to sell, and fixing the basis of compensation. No time was fixed for the consummation of the sale, and the appellant began to devote his entire time to his employment, going back and forth from New York, and advertising in different papers. That up to April, 1886, whenever appellant was at home, which was at least once a month, appellee called upon him to inquire what appellant was doing in regard to the sale. Appellant employed men to open the mine, and on one occasion took ap[274]*274■pellee to see the work. That in order to make a market for ■the land he organized a railroad company. This railroad was ■begun in 1884 and was completed in 1886. That in that year be took some miners to the land and cleaned out the mines, with a view to an examination by experts. In July, 1886, he says he made an agreement to sell the lands to John Fulton.

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Bluebook (online)
26 A. 1063, 156 Pa. 266, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 1339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaekel-v-caldwell-pa-1893.