Miller Cattle Co. v. Chambers

285 P. 277, 36 Ariz. 282, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 180
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1930
DocketCivil No. 2833.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 285 P. 277 (Miller Cattle Co. v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller Cattle Co. v. Chambers, 285 P. 277, 36 Ariz. 282, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 180 (Ark. 1930).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

Plaintiff, Chambers, brought this action for brokerage commissions for selling feed and *283 pasturage belonging to tbe defendant, Miller Cattle Company, to Campbell-Francis Sheep Company. The defense is that Chambers had no contract and was not the proximate or procuring cause of such sale.

The case was tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

The contract of employment was not in writing and the evidence of it is conflicting. The conflict was by the jury resolved by their verdict in favor of the existence of the contract, and that we shall regard as settled, as under the evidence a verdict for either side would be sustained.

The plaintiff testified that late in July or early August, 1927, he met S. C. Miller, president of the defendant company, in the Commercial Hotel in Flagstaff, who told him he had been trying for some days to sell his feed and pasturage to sheepmen, but that he had not been successful; that he could feed on defendant’s premises 6,000 head of sheep, and that his price was seventy-five cents per head per month for the first three months and ninety cents per head per month for any longer time the feed and pasturage was used. Plaintiff testified that, after Miller had stated prices, “I told Mr. Miller . . . that I thought I could place it for him and would try my best to do so for the 5% commissions that I had always gotten for those transactions, and he told me to do it and I did it.” At another place, explaining the contract with defendant, he testified: “He (Miller) gave me authority to sell it . and he would give me this commission if I could sell it at that price.” That under the agreement his commissions were to become due and payable as and when the purchase price was paid; that Miller said to him he was going home (Phoenix) that day or *284 next, and if lie found a buyer to call him before he came down or sent anyone, because he was not there all the time. He testified he found a buyer and telephoned Miller. The buyer referred to was a sheep owner of the name of Nathan Bankhead living at that time at Nevins, about fourteen miles west- of Flagstaff. Plaintiff testified that after his conversation with Miller he drove to Bankhead’s home and presented to him the Miller offer, and that Bankhead stated that if the Miller feed and pasturage was as represented he would take it; that thereafter by telephone and telegraph he advised Miller that Bank-head would come to Phoenix on a day named and see him.

It is unquestioned that on August 16th or 17th Bankhead, Dan Francis, Jack Duerson and Miguel Chivarria, all sheepmen in quest -of winter feed and pasturage, came to Phoenix in Bankhead’s automobile, where Miller joined them and went to the defendant’s -ranch at Buckeye, about thirty-five miles west of Phoenix. Bankhead did not buy the Miller feed and pasturage, but on the day following the visit to the Miller ranch Dan Francis, as the surviving partner of the Campbell-Francis Sheep Company, did purchase the feed and pasturage of defendant, and thereafter and before the bringing of this suit paid therefor the sum of $18,000.

Bankhead, testifying in behalf of plaintiff, was permitted to state what he said to plaintiff Chambers when the latter told him of the defendant’s offer, as follows: “I will go down and see Mr. Miller and if it is that way I will get the feed and take somebody else to take it from me. ... I told Mr. Chambers if the price was as he represented it we would go down to look at the feed, and if we would accept it, if I couldn’t handle it myself I would get somebody else to help me.” Bankhead also stated that he would *285 have taken the Miller offer if it had not been taken by the Campbell-Francis Sheep Company.

As above indicated, it appears from the evidence that three sheep outfits were represented by the men who went from Flagstaff to Phoenix and with Miller to the Miller ranch. They were all looking for winter feed for their flocks. Bankhead wanted feed and pasturage for 4,000, Campbell-Francis Sheep Company for 8,000, and Chivarria for - head. The Miller feed and pasturage would care for 6,000 head. It was more than Bankhead wanted or needed, and although he had assured plaintiff, as he says, he would take it if he found it as represented and if he couldn’t handle it himself would get someone else to help him, the fact is he did not take it nor make an offer to take it and did not with the assistance of anyone else take it. Bankhead got other feed and pasturage at Arlington, ten or twelve miles south of Buckeye. Campbell-Francis Sheep Company, through the co-operation of S. C. Miller, president of defendant, arranged with two other ranch owners in the neighborhood of the Miller ranch to buy feed and pasturage, which together with the Miller feed and pasturage met their needs, and they thereupon bought the Miller feed and pasturage.

Stripped of detail, the ultimate facts are the plaintiff brought to the attention of Bankhead the Miller feed and pasturage and made an appointment with S. C. Miller, president of defendant, for Bankhead to see the latter about a purchase thereof. Bank-head went from Flagstaff to Phoenix to meet such appointment and took with him representatives of two other sheep outfits, one . of which bought the feed and pasturage. The purchaser, however, had not been introduced to the defendant by the plaintiff, and the plaintiff knew nothing of such purchase or purchaser until some time after the consummation of *286 the sale. There is nothing- in the evidence showing or indicating that plaintiff had anything- to do with or knew that Bankhead intended or would take any prospective purchasers of the Miller feed and pasturage with him to see Miller about such feed and pasturage. No notice of that kind was sent to Miller. Neither does it appear that Bankhead before leaving Flagstaff or on the way to Phoenix told Campbell-Francis Sheep Company of the Miller feed and pasturage or mentioned the price at which it had been quoted to him by Chambers. If he said or did anything prior or subsequent to their meeting Miller to interest the Campbell-Francis Sheep Company in the Miller feed and pasturage, it is not reflected in the evidence. So far as the record shows, Bankhead’s act in furnishing transportation was voluntary and’ for the accommodation of the other sheepmen who accompanied him.

At the close of the case, one of the requests of defendant was that the jury be instructed to return a verdict for defendant, and the refusal to give this instruction is assigned as error. It is claimed the evidence fails to show that plaintiff was the efficient and procuring cause of the sale to the Campbell-Francis Sheep Company and, such being the case, the request should have been granted. It is just as essential that the broker prove that the sale made was made through his personal efforts or by means employed by him, as that he was engaged by the owner to make the sale. Proof of employment and that a sale was made will not entitle a broker to commissions. He must go further and show that he was in fact the procuring cause of the sale.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 P. 277, 36 Ariz. 282, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-cattle-co-v-chambers-ariz-1930.