McKinney v. Thedford

166 S.W. 443, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 701
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1914
DocketNo. 7884.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 443 (McKinney v. Thedford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKinney v. Thedford, 166 S.W. 443, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 701 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

J. G. McKinney has appealed from a judgment in favor of G. C. Thedford and R. H. Chancellor for the sum Of $125, as commissions earned for sale by plaintiffs, as real estate brokers and agents for McKinney, of land belonging to him; the sale being by way of an exchange of defendant’s land for other property. The suit was not upon quantum meruit, but upon an alleged contract of defendant to pay 2% per cent, commission on a valuation of the property at $5,000.

The evidence shows that McKinney exchanged his land for a tract of land in the state of Missouri owned by one Tull, who, in the negotiations for the exchange, was represented by another broker named W. G. Reddin; that prior to the exchange defendant went to Missouri and inspected Tull’s land, and after inspection, and while in Missouri, agreed with Tull to make the exchange, the agreement of Tull being conditioned upon a subsequent inspection of defendant’s land.

[1] Appellant insists that a peremptory instruction should have been given in his favor as requested by him. The assignment of error complaining of the refusal of such an instruction is based upon two grounds: First, the lack of evidence to show that plaintiffs were authorized by the defendant to make the exchange; and, second, the lack of evidence to show that they performed any service under the alleged contract. By a *445 proposition submitted under tbe assignment, the scope of the assignment is limited to the first ground stated, namely, that there was no evidence to show any contract by the defendant with plaintiffs authorizing them to sell the land. In view of the testimony of plaintiff Thedford that defendant listed the land for sale with plaintiffs, who were engaged as real estate brokers, and that he informed defendant in answer to the latter’s inquiry that a charge would be made of 2% per cent, commission on a valuation of the property at $5,000, and the further testimony of the witness Reddin in effect that, after defendant agreed with Tull for an exchange of properties, defendant told witness that he would pay plaintiffs a commission, this assignment must be overruled.

[2] By the third and fourth assignments it is insisted that the court erred in the first and second paragraphs of the charge given to the jury. The assignments present several grounds of objection to those instructions, but they are limited by the proposition submitted under . those assignments to the single criticism that the evidence showed conclusively that the purchaser bought defendant’s land solely upon his own information after negotiating with defendant, and was not influenced by any efforts made by the plaintiffs to bring about the sale. The evidence shows that Tull lived in Missouri, and that plaintiffs had no communication with him whatsoever, but according to Thedford’s testimony he (Thedford) first told Reddin of plaintiffs’ property, and later used considerable persuasion to induce defendant to make the exchange, consisting of recommendations of the Missouri land, all of which occurred before defendant went to Missouri to inspect the land. In view of this testimony and Reddin’s testimony already noted in effect that while in Missouri, and after the exchange had been agreed on between defendant and Tull, defendant told Reddin that he expected to pay plaintiffs a commission, these two assignments must be overruled.

[3-5] One paragraph of the court’s charge reads as follows: “Where a broker was the procuring cause of a sale of real estate, it is immaterial to his right to a commission that he did not personally conduct the negotiations, was not present when the bargain was closed, or that the principal at the time did not know that the purchaser was found by the broker.” This instruction is criticised as being inapplicable to any of the facts in the case, upon the weight of the evidence strongly implying that plaintiffs were the procuring cause of the sale, and calculated to lead the jury to believe that plaintiffs could recover, in the absence of any contract of employment by the defendant and without performing any service for him. We do not think the instruction subject to any of the criticisms made. We think it presents a sound proposition of law, and, -in view of the fact that plaintiffs . did not personally negotiate with Tull for the sale of defendant’s land and were not present when the agreement of exchange was made in Missouri, the instruction cannot be said to be inapplicable to any of the facts in the case. Nor do we think that the instruction is upon the weight of the evidence; the same being an abstract proposition of law, and not applying directly and specifically to any issue in the case. The instruction was one of several abstract statements of law which in the charge preceded the instructions to guide the jury in determining whether or not a verdict should be rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, and in which the questions whether or not plaintiffs were employed by defendant to act as his agents in the sale of the land, as alleged in plaintiffs’ petition, and whether or not their efforts were the procuring cause of the exchange that was made with Tull, were submitted as disputed issues of fact.

[6] Another one of the abstract statements of law contained in the charge reads as follows: “In an action on an implied contract, it is only necessary for the plaintiff to show that he performed acts as the agent and broker of the seller; the latter adopted his acts and accepted his agency.” Criticisms are presented to this instruction as follows: That it authorized a recovery without proof of any contract of employment of plaintiffs, and that it strongly implies that defendant did adopt the acts of plaintiffs and did accept their agency, and that therefore it was upon the weight of the evidence. This assignment is overruled for the same reasons given for overruling the last preceding assignment.

[7] Error has been assigned to this instruction: “An agent may be created by an express or an implied agreement, and when by an implied agreement the acts and conduct of the parties must be looked to in determining if there is an agency, and, if one party accepts the work and benefits arising from the efforts of a second party in a land deal, he makes the second party his agent by an implied contract. Therefore if you find from the preponderance of the evidence before you that there was either an 'express or an implied contract between the parties for the sale of the land in question, and that Thedford and Chancellor acted either as the direct or implied agents of ■ McKinney and procured for him a buyer for his land, either through themselves or their agent Reddin, then you will find for the plaintiff in the sum of $125, but, if you do not so find, then you will find for the defendant.” In the assignment many criticisms are addressed to this instruction, but, as in other assignments already noted, it is limited by the following proposition, which is the only proposition submitted under the assignment: “An agent cannot delegate the authority given him by'his principal without the principal’s consent, and an agent can *446 not act for both vendor and vendee without the consent of both.” Following this proposition is a quotation from the testimony of the witness Reddin as follows: “X made a trade for Brother McKinney through Brother Thedford. X had no interest in the commission down here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 443, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinney-v-thedford-texapp-1914.