Johnson v. Doubravsky

181 Iowa 77
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 20, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 Iowa 77 (Johnson v. Doubravsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Doubravsky, 181 Iowa 77 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

I. The petition alleges that, on or about September 26, 1911, plaintiff entered into oral contract wherein it was agreed plaintiff should undertake to find a purchaser for a certain 12-acre tract of land belonging to defendant, and located near Cedar Rapids; that, if he' found one, defendant would pay a commission; that thereupon plaintiff saw one Leibold, went to said tract with him, showed all of it to him, told him the price asked by defendant, undertook to close the sale with him and made further appointments with him in continuance of these negotiations; that Leibold went direct to defendant and they effected a sale and purchase to Leibold for $4,150; that the reasonable commission for the services rendered by plaintiff is $128.75, and it has not been paid.

The answer denies all not admitted; admits Leibold went to defendant and that he sold the tract to him for $4,150; avers the sale was made without assistance from plaintiff, and that plaintiff tried to prevent the sale by word and act, has thereby waived any right to commission, and is barred and estopped to claim one.

In the sustained motion to direct verdict, defendant asserted and he now asserts that the following matters are established by the evidence introduced by plaintiff:

' (a) There was no contract between the parties wherein plaintiff was employed by defendant to sell the property in question.

[79]*79(b) Plaintiff was not the procuring cause of the sale, and the purchaser was procured and the sale made wholly by and through the efforts of defendant.

(c) If a contract was made it was to sell at a price fixed therein, and plaintiff had no buyer who was ready, willing and able to pay that price.

(d) Plaintiff, instead of furthering the sale, tried to prevent it.

(e) He was not the agent of defendant, but of Lei-bold, who bought of plaintiff, and so acted in the interest of the buyer as that he may not have a commission from defendant, because of bad faith.

(f) If there was ever a contract, plaintiff revoked it and rescinded same three or four days before any sale was consummated; and that no contract existed at the time defendant made sale. Further, it was and is claimed that there is no competent evidence to show what the claimed services are reasonably worth, and hence nothing upon which a recovery of plaintiff conld be based.

It appears in evidence that plaintiff saw an advertisement of defendant offering certain property of the defend-' ant for sale and asking intending purchasers to call at the office of the Star Printing Company; that thereupon plaintiff called on defendant and asked him the price of the advertised tract; that the upshot of the talk was defendant advised plaintiff that a Mr. Russell might examine the property at any time and that plaintiff should bring on a buyer whom plaintiff claimed he might induce to buy, and as quick as he could; that plaintiff answered he would get word to this buyer as quick as he could; that thereupon plaintiff went to look at the property and then induced one Leibold, who finally bought, to come and have dinner with plaintiff, and arranged with him that after dinner he would take Leibold out to see the property of defendant; that after dinner he showed him some lands for sale, but Leibold [80]*80declined to purchase; that thereupon plaintiff showed Lei-bold the land owned by defendant. It seems that while the defendant’s tract was being inspected Leibold saw a sign, tacked to a telephone pole, which made the same offer found in the advertisement of the defendant which originally led defendant to see plaintiff, and Leibold remarked to the plaintiff that this was the piece which had been in the morning paper. Leibold was well satisfied with the land owned by defendant except as to price, which he thought “was a little steep,” and plaintiff said to him not to be discouraged at the price; that, when they went to the owner and talked to him, he would, make the price right to Leibold. Leibold and the plaintiff then made an appointment to meet in the Globe Hotel the next morning and go from there. It seems Leibold, too, had seen said advertisement in a newspaper, and before this arranged-for meeting took place, he went to the office of the Star Printing Company to see the owner, but the office was closed, and he saw no one. But it seems he saw this newspaper when the parties met in the hotel. When plaintiff and Leibold met at the hotel Leibold informed plaintiff that he had seen the owner and had asked him about the price, had told the owner he had seen the place, had not told him defendant had taken him there; and that he had told the owner if he would sell for $4,000, he, Leibold, might talk about it. The price stated in the advertisement was $4,500, but the owner told Leibold he would take $4,200 if Leibold took the property quick. After this, Leibold told the owner that Leibold had a friend whom he had agreed to meet, and thereupon he went to see the plaintiff at the hotel in accordance with the appointment made the day before. After the interview at the hotel, Leibold and plaintiff called on defendant, who told the plaintiff that Leibold had been to see plaintiff about that tract of land which had been spoken of between plaintiff and defendant, and the owner answered that Leibold didn’t say [81]*81anything about that, and that if he had, he would have asked him more for his land, to which plaintiff responded that he couldn’t help that; that he was his customer; that he did take him out and had showed him the land. The deal was not closed until Leibold again looked over the property. And Leibold says plaintiff did not inform him he was agent, nor indicate he had defendant’s property for sale, and that Leibold.was under impression he didn’t have

1. Brokers : commission: procuring cause of sale: conclusion of witness. It is true Leibold states by way of conclusion that he did not enter into the contract which he finally made with the owner by reason of anything that plaintiff said or did, but for the purpose of determining whether there was a jury question on the efficient cause of the' sale, we cannot- be bound by such a conclusion if the facts stated by the witness are such that a jury might reasonably draw the opposite conclusion..

If there were not a quite general custom to sustain motions to direct verdict in their entirety, when sustained at all, we feel sure the trial court would not be before us in the position of holding a jury might not find from the evidence the plaintiff was employed by defendant to find a purchaser, that he found one, that plaintiff sold to the purchaser found, and that plaintiff is in no position to complain that the sale was not made on the terms that he fixed when he employed the defendant. We think there was suf-’ ficient evidence upon which a jury could find for plaintiff upon these points, though we are unable to see that Fenton v. Miller, 153 Iowa 747, Jones v. Ford, 154 Iowa 549, Lieuwen v. Kline, 142 Iowa 14, and Gilbert v. McCullough, 146 Iowa 333, which appellant cites, afford his claims any aid. We think, also, that most of the objections made against this being a jury question are met and the contentions [82]*82of the appellee overruled in Rounds v. Alee, 116 Iowa 345; Kelly v. Stone, 94 Iowa 316; Hubachek v. Hazzard, (Minn.) 86 N. W. 426; Welch v. Young, (Iowa) 79 N. W. 59 (not officially reported) ; Blodgett v. Sioux City & St. P. R. Co., 63 Iowa 606; Ryan v. Page, 134 Iowa 60;

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Related

Donahoe v. Denman
275 N.W. 154 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1937)
Patterson v. Johnson
187 Iowa 633 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1919)

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181 Iowa 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-doubravsky-iowa-1917.