Leonard v. Dougherty

296 S.W. 263, 221 Mo. App. 1056
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 296 S.W. 263 (Leonard v. Dougherty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leonard v. Dougherty, 296 S.W. 263, 221 Mo. App. 1056 (Mo. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

Plaintiff filed in the court below a bill of interpleader stating that he owed a real estate broker’s commission growing out of a trade of certain real estate owned by him; that said commission was being claimed by the defendants and asked the court to determine who was entitled to it. Defendant, Brady, disclaimed any interest in the commission except through the defendant Collins and the cause has been dismissed as to the former. The contest was, therefore, between Collins and Dougherty, Collins claiming to be entitled *1057 to one-half of the commission and Dougherty to the whole thereof. The court found that Collins was the procuring cause of the contract of exchange in question and entitled to the agreed commission, and further found that Dougherty was a sub-agent of Collins and entitled to one-half of the commission and rendered* judgment accordingly. Dougherty has appealed.

The controversy is over a commission earned by reason of the procurement of a contract of exchange of plaintiff’s apartment and residence property in Kansas City, Missouri, for a farm in Carroll county. This contract was entered into upon November 2, 1925, between plaintiff and one R. M. Sloan, the owner of the Carroll county farm. Collins had nothing whatever to do with the procuring of this contract of exchange, which was afterwards rescinded by the parties, and admitted as much at the trial, not being even acquainted with the owner of the farm and knowing nothing about the trade until November 9th or 10th, 1925, seven or eight days after the contract was consummated, but claims that he is entitled to one-half of the commission because, using his own language, “I put the two men together” (plaintiff and Dougherty.)

Plaintiff learned of the Carroll county farm about a week before the contract was executed when he was called by telephone by Dougherty, a real estate broker in Kansas City, who worked up the trade. The evidence shows that there was no agreement between plaintiff and Dougherty at the time the contract of exchange was entered into by them as to what the commission should be, but plaintiff testified that after the contract was .drawn up and in the hall of the hotel where it was signed, and during the same evening,-Dougherty and himself agreed upon the commission; that afterwards there was 'a disagreement about what was agreed upon and a few days subsequently the matter was settled by an agreement between the two that the commission should be $1000, to be paid by a note owned by plaintiff' upon wdiich there was an unpaid balance and if this balance did not amount to $1000, the difference between it and said sum of $1000 was to be paid by plaintiff in cash.

The history of the relationship existing between plaintiff, Collins and Dougherty is as follows: In the spring of 1924 Collins, a real estate broker in Kansas .City, was a customer of plaintiff who was in the grocery business in that city, andlearned.that plaintiff had the apartment and residence property in question which he desired to trade for a farm and plaintiff listed his said property with Collins for the purpose of procuring such a trade. He did not give Collins an exclusive .agency but at ño time did he list his property with any other person. Collins testified that in,October, 1924, he got in touch, with a Mr. Miller .of Lee’s Summit and a Mr. Bird of Harrisonville, real estate brokers, who represented a Mr. Coats, the owner of a *1058 farm in Cass county: that Miller referred the witness to Dougherty who told him ‘ ‘ about the land that he had down in Cass county, that they would trade for buildings here in town;” that negotiations were started for the trade of plaintiff’s property for the farm, plaintiff being represented by the witness and Coats by Miller, Bird and Dougherty; that finally a contract was drawn (there was other evidence that this contract was signed by plaintiff but was never signed by Coats); that negotiations for the trade continued until February or March, 1925, when they were abandoned; that during the negotiations Dougherty found out who was the owner of the city property and where it was located; that when it was concluded that the trade for the Coats farm could not be made the witness told Dougherty to “look up something else;” that Dougherty “would state he would do so;” that in March, 1925, Dougherty “put up” a 400-acre farm .near Freeman, Missouri. It seem that Miller was also an agent for the owner of this farm. Plaintiff testified that negotiations were carried on in reference to this farm,, looking to a trade between plaintiff and the owner of the farm, Collins representing plaintiff and Dougherty “represented Miller” and Bird. These negotiations likewise fell through.

Collins testified that after this “Mr. Dougherty put me up a number of farms, ’ ’ one in Jackson county, Missouri, and one below Belton, Missouri; that the witness “put them up” to plaintiff but neither one of them suited the latter; that in August or September, 1925, Dougherty spoke to him about a farm in Clay county and Collins attempted to interest plaintiff in this farm without success; that in “this transaction” he represented plaintiff and'Dougherty represented “the man that owned the farm.” That these negotiations for the various farms mentioned continued up to about three of four months before the trade with Sloan; Collins testified—

“Q. And during all that time they (the negotiations) were continuous and not interrupted. You continued to represent Mr. Leonard? A. I represented Mr. Leonard and he (Dougherty) represented the farm that he put up to me.”

That the witness never introduced Dougherty to plaintiff and thought that they did not meet until after the Coats deal fell through.

On direct examination Collins testified, “I listed the property with Mr. Dougherty” without explaining what he meant by the use of the ■word “listed.” On cross-examination he testified—

“Q. What did you do with respect to putting it in his (Dougherty’s) hands? A. I told him what I had and he told me what he had in the way of a farm, and I told him what I had in the way of property of Mr. Leonard’s.
“Q. Did you ever sign any written listing with Mr. Dougherty? A. No, sir, I did not. ’ ’

*1059 Unless this evidence on cross-examination shows a “listing”'of the property by Collins to Dougherty, there are no facts testified to, as' far as the record discloses, showing any such listing*. Collins further testified on cross-examination that during the time he was negotiating with Dougherty no one else offered any deals to him for plaintiff’s property; that he talked to one other man about it, a Mr. Thompson, “on different deals;” that he talked to Dougherty twenty or more times in reference to the various farms during their negotiations and that Dougherty would tell him “what the farm was, talked it over and told me what kind of a farm it was ... I told him about the property (plaintiff’s) and he gave me a list of the farms that he had to put to Mr. Leonard. ’ ’

Collins testified that he had nothing whatever to do with bringing plaintiff and Sloan together in making the deal in which the commission was earned; that Dougherty never told him anything about the deal and that he was not present at any time during the negotiations1—

“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
296 S.W. 263, 221 Mo. App. 1056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-dougherty-moctapp-1927.