Meyer v. Keating

159 N.W. 1091, 135 Minn. 25, 1916 Minn. LEXIS 491
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 1, 1916
DocketNos. 19,937—(89)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 N.W. 1091 (Meyer v. Keating) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyer v. Keating, 159 N.W. 1091, 135 Minn. 25, 1916 Minn. LEXIS 491 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Holt, J.

Action for commission upon a sale of real estate. The employment was admitted, but the defense was that plaintiff, by misrepresenting the financial ability of the purchaser, induced the defendant company to make the contract, and that the purchaser was unable to perform, wherefore the contract was canceled by mutual consent of the parties thereto. Plaintiff had. a verdict and defendants appeal from the order denying a new trial.

There are two defendants, M. C. Keating and Keating Land & Mortgage Company, a corporation. All the dealings herein referred to on the part of the company were carried on solely by M. C. Keating, its president and manager. The company owned or had the right to sell 2,397 acres, of farm land in the counties of Big Stone and Stevens, and agreed with plaintiff that he might have all in excess of $35 per acre which might be obtained on their sale. Plaintiff found as a purchaser one Paul Wagner and brought him to the company. On September 7, 1909, the company and Wagner entered into a valid written contract to convey all of the land for $116,500; $1,000 whereof was then paid; $23,000 was to be paid in 30 days, when deeds were to be received; $62,500 on time, secured by purchase money mortgage; and $30,000 was to be allowed for two sections of land in Texas, which Wagner was to convey ostensibly to the company, but which plaintiff agreed to take upon his commission on the basis of $30,000. Plaintiff claims that some time thereafter Wagner and the company orally modified the terms of the $23,000 payment and the condition that the Texas land should be conveyed clear. In the first part of October, 1909, Wagner came to Minnesota and took possession. On the twenty-third of the same month the company and Wagner signed a writing canceling the contract of September 7. The writing recited that it was impossible for Wagner to make the payments. Three days later, a more formal contract of cancelation, prepared by the attorney of the company, was executed by the parties. With reference to this cancelation [27]*27plaintiff offered testimony, tending to show that after Wagner had taken possession of the farms, and was prepared to close the deal in accordance with the modification orally agreed upon, the company suggested a cancelation of the contract; but, as a condition, insisted that Wagner purchase at $50 per acre section 11 of the lands embraced in the contract, claimed to have been owned by a son of the defendant M. C. Keating at the time the contract was made, and 40 acres of section 12. Wagner claims to have been coerced into the proposed purchase, and that this was the real consideration sought and obtained by the company for the cancelation. This, of course, is denied by defendants.

The law governing this case was clearly announced on the former appeal herein (Meyer v. Keating L. & M. Co. 126 Minn. 409, 148 N. W. 452), and the facts are there stated in a more concise form, perhaps, than here.

It is conceded that plaintiff was to have the two sections of Texas lands and $2,605, if the executory contract of September 7 between the company and Wagner could be enforced against the latter, for Wagner did not consent to its cancelation. Defendants attempted to prove that it was not enforceable because of Wagner’s inability to perform. It is very questionable whether under the doctrine of Gransbury v. Saterbak, 116 Minn. 339, 133 N. W. 851, and Horan v. Stevens, infra, p. 43, this defense had any standing under the facts of this case. Another available defense, if established, was that through plaintiff’s fraud the company was induced to enter the contract, and when this fraud was discovered it canceled and rescinded the deal. The court submitted these defenses to the jury. The jury found them not proven. The verdict is assailed as not sustained by the evidence. Under this head appellants insist it appears from the evidence that Wagner was not financially able to perform; that the company was induced to enter the sale contract through plaintiff’s fraud; that no personal responsibility devolved on the company if Wagner failed to perform; that Wagner did not perform and there is no evidence that he was able to perform the contract according to the terms therein expressed; and that, to plaintiff’s knowledge, defendants did not own section 11 included in the contract. Some of these propositions are readily disposed of. The evidence is ample to sustain the finding that plaintiff made no false or fraudulent representations to defendants as to Wagner’s financial ability to carry out the contract. [28]*28Defendants admitted of record that the company at all times since September 7, 1909, could furnish title to section 11 according to the terms of the contract. Under the evidence, as we read it, assuming now that all was properly admitted, the jury could find ability on the part of Wagner to carry out the contract and that he could have been compelled to perform according to the terms therein expressed. The jury having found upon sufficient evidence that the defendant company made an enforceable contract in fact, and one not rescindable for fraud, with the purchaser produced by plaintiff, the latter was entitled to recover the commission agreed upon if the company, without his consent, canceled the contract. Under such circumstances plaintiff’s position must be viewed from the same standpoint as if there had been a performance by the purchaser. This is not opposed to what was held in Martinson v. Hensler, 132 Minn. 437, 157 N. W. 714, as defendants seem to claim. The Chief Justice in that opinion stated that the facts therein were distinguishable, from the facts controlling in Meyer v. Keating L. & M. Co. supra. We cannot hold that the verdict is without support in the record on this branch of the case. There was no such change in the testimony adduced at the last trial that the law‘announced on the former appeal should not apply and become the law of the case.

Defendants also assign errors at the trial. One relates to the showing of an alleged modification of the terms of the contract of September 7. Over objection, evidence was received that, shortly after the contract was made when Keating visited Wagner at his home in Knoxville, Iowa, it was mutually agreed between them that Wagner should give his note for $7,000 so as to make the cash payment, on delivery of the deeds, $16,000 instead of $23,000, and should also give his note to the company for $8,888 to balance the amount due on the Texas lands; that there were some flaws to be corrected in the titles proffered by the company, and that these notes were executed together with a cheek for $16,000 by Wagner and left in escrow to be turned over to the company when the titles it tendered were perfected. Error is also predicated on the court’s refusal to strike out this evidence and upon the submission thereof to the jury. In the charge the jury were specifically instructed that the evidence just mentioned could be considered only for its possible bearing upon Wagner’s ability to perform the contract as written. The jury were not permitted [29]*29to pass upon Wagner’s ability to perforin the contract according to the claimed oral modification. So limited the evidence must have favored rather than harmed defendant. No doubt the parties to a written contract, falling within the statute of frauds, may by parol modify its terms and carry out the contract as modified. Plaintiff was not a party to the instrument nor a privy to either party, but his rights are predicated upon or grow out of it so that Current v. Muir, 99 Minn. 1, 108 N. W. 870, is applicable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 N.W. 1091, 135 Minn. 25, 1916 Minn. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-keating-minn-1916.