Jefferson v. Burhans

85 F. 949, 29 C.C.A. 481, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2230
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1898
DocketNo. 1,004
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 85 F. 949 (Jefferson v. Burhans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson v. Burhans, 85 F. 949, 29 C.C.A. 481, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2230 (8th Cir. 1898).

Opinion

THAYER, Circuit Judge,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

The record in this case does not contain the court’s charge to the jury, nor all of the evidence. Tin; only questions, therefore, which are presented for our consideration, are those relating to ihe admissibility of certain evidence, and these will be considered in their order.

It is urged at considerable length by counsel for the plaintiff in error that the trial court erred in refusing to permit his client to answer the following question, “Do you know what the usual commission for real-estate agents who handle and sell property is?” and in refusing to allow counsel to show the usual commissions charged for the sale of real property at (lie city of Superior, Wis., and elsewhere1. Concerning this exception, it is to be observed that tin; suit was founded upon an express contract, whereby, as the plaintiff below claimed, the defendant had agreed to pay him 80 per cent, of the proceeds received from the sale of certain real property, in consideration of certain services to be rendered by the plaintiff, which consisted, not only in negotiating sales of the property in question, but in removing clouds, liens, and incumbrances therefrom, so as to render the property marketable. The offer of proof which was made was not an offer to show that at the city of Superior, at the time of the transaction in question, it was customary for real-estate agents to charge a certain commission for such services as the plaintiff had agreed to perform and had in fact rendered; but the offer was, on the contrary, to show the customary charge for selling property. Even if we were prepared to concede that, in a suit upon an express contract to pay a given compensation for certain services, it is competent for a defendant to show that the compensation alleged to have been promised for the services in question was in excess of the usual charge, for the purpose of creating a probability or a presumption that no such rate of compensation was in fact promised, nevertheless that concession would not establish the admissibility of such evidence as -#as offered in the case at bar. The offer, in any event, should have been to prove the existence of a standard rate of compensation for such services as the plainüff had rendered, and what such rate was. The proof which was offered had no legitimate1 tendency to create a presumption that the plaintiff’s version of the contract was erroneous, especially as Both parties agreed that the contract between them contemplated the payment of an unusually large commission, amounting to 80 per cent. The evidence under consideration, as we think, was properly rejected.

An exception was saved to the action of the trial court in refusing to permit the defendant below to show that the plaintiff had discounted at a bank in West Superior, Wis., certain notes that had been [952]*952received by Mm on account of the sale of some of the real property in controversy. We are not able to admit, however, that prejudicial error can be predicated of such action. The contract alleged in the complaint simply bound the plaintiff to turn over the proceeds of all sales to the defendant, “at the earliest time practicable.” No complaint was made by the defendant that he had not received the proceeds of all sales that had been made by the plaintiff, and if, in some instances, notes had been received and discounted, and the proceeds thereof paid to the defendant, such action would seem to have inured to the defendant’s advantage, rather than to his disadvantage. If, at the time this offer of proof was made, anything had occurred during the progress of the trial which rendered the proof relevant or competent, such fact is not disclosed by the present record.

It is further assigned for error that the trial court erred in rejecting the depositions of two witnesses, to wit, Joseph McQueen and John McQueen, wMch were offered in behalf of the defendant. These depositions had a tendency to establish, in substance, the following facts: That the property to which this controversy relates, in September, 1889, and for some years prior thereto, belonged to the heirs of one John McQueen, deceased, who resided in the state of Alabama; that in the year 1887 the law firm of Burhans & Perkins, of which the plaintiff below was a member, had been employed to act as agent of said heirs to make an abstract of the title to said property, to pay the taxes thereon, and to oversee the same generally; that in September, 1889, two of said heirs, being the witnesses above named, came to the city of Superior for the purpose of negotiating a sale of the property for cash; that they conferred with the plaintiff, Burhans, relative to its value, and were advised that it could possibly be sold for from eighteen to twenty thousand dollars on long time, for small annual payments; that said Burhans advised them that R. C. Jefferson, the defendant below, was at the time buying land in and around Superior as an investment, and that he would see said Jefferson, and propose to him to purchase the property; that an interview was accordingly arranged between the said witnesses and said Jefferson on the succeeding day, at which interview Jefferson offered to buy the property for the sum of $15,000 in cash; that, before accepting said offer, they conferred with the plaintiff, Burhans, and inquired of him whether the price offered was the reasonable value of the property; that, in reply to such inquiry, they were advised by said Burhans that $15,000 in cash was, in his opinion, a reasonable price for the property, and all that it could probably be sold for, for cash; that, in reliance on such statement, the property was eventually sold by the McQueens to the defendant on the terms proposed; and that, for negotiating the sale in question, they paid the plaintiff a commission amounting to some $700, and were not aware, that he was interested to any extent with the defendant, Jefferson, in the purchase of the property. The contention is that these depositions, should have been admitted .in evidence for the purpose of showing that the contract in suit was illegal and void, although no plea to that effect was contained in the defendant’s answer.

[953]*953It is doubtless true dial: when the contract upon which a plain- ■ iff sues, as alleged in his complaint or as proven on the trial, appears to be either immoral, illegal, or opposed to public policy, it will not be enforced, allhough the defendant fails to object to its enforcement on those grounds either by plea, demurrer, or otherwise. No court' will lend if si aid to enforce an agreement which, as pleaded, appears to be immoral or illegal, or which is shown to be of that character by evidence which is properly introduced in the course of the trial, in support of any issue that is raised by the pleadings. But if it appears from the terms of a contract, as set forth in a pleading, that it is an agreement such as the parties thereto had a perfect right to make;, then it is necessary to plead the existence of such extrinsic facts as the defendant may intend to rely upon for the purpose of establishing that the contract is tainted with illegality, and is for that reason void. When the validity of an agreement has not been challenged by a proper plea, and, as pleaded, it is open to no objections on the ground of public policy or otherwise, and the fact that such objections exist is not disclosed by the evidence offered either to prove or disprove the making of the agreement, then the defendant should not be allowed to prove extraneous facts for the sole purpose of impeaching it.

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Bluebook (online)
85 F. 949, 29 C.C.A. 481, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-v-burhans-ca8-1898.