Morgan v. Wheeler

113 P.2d 165, 153 Kan. 695, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 191
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 10, 1941
DocketNo. 35,162
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 113 P.2d 165 (Morgan v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. Wheeler, 113 P.2d 165, 153 Kan. 695, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 191 (kan 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This was an action as on quantum meruit to recover for services rendered by plaintiff in connection with a lease on real estate. Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants on their motion for judgment on the pleadings, and plaintiff appeals.

Insofar as this action is concerned, the interests of the defendants, EL Y. Wheeler and The Midland Building Company, are the same, and hereafter reference will be made to Wheeler only.

Plainitff’s petition alleged that early in 1937 Wheeler requested plaintiff to obtain a lease or leases for him from Sears, Roebuck & Co., or others, on certain real estate in Wichita, Kan.; that defendant desired to construct a building or buildings on the site providing he could find a lessee therefor, and asked plaintiff to obtain a lessee; that plaintiff has been in the occupation of obtaining leases and was well acquainted with the officials of Sears, Roebuck & Co., and in order to procure a lease on defendant’s property he informed the company of defendant’s desires, and proceeded, as set out in detail in the petition, to bring the parties together, resulting in a [696]*696lease dated July 13, 1938, for a building 55 by 147 feet, two stories in height, at a monthly rental of $900, plus a bonus if the sales exceeded a certain amount per annum. It was further alleged that shortly thereafter an additional building 35 by 147 feet, was erected, of such nature as to make one building 90 by 147 feet, and on July 13, 1939, the lease was modified so as to expire November 1, 1954, rentals being increased to $2,125 per month, with a further payment if sales exceeded a stipulated amount, the total rent being $390,600, exclusive of the additional payments on account of sales. It was further alleged that the lease and the lease as modified and extended were entered into by reason of plaintiff's procuring the company as a lessee, and that plaintiff performed the work at the special instance and request of Wheeler; that after plaintiff brought the parties together, defendant and the lessee executed the first lease on the 55-foot building and the next or modified lease covering the 35-foot building upon terms agreeable to them, leases being signed and delivered at a time and place plaintiff could not designate, as he was not notified, but that the leases were satisfactory to the parties, the buildings had been fully completed and were occupied by the lessee. We need not detail the allegations setting up plaintiff’s claim of reasonable value of his services, totaling $7,947.50, for which he sought recovery.

Wheeler’s answer set up three alleged defenses and had attached to it a number of exhibits. Each defense as stated made preceding defenses part thereof. Briefly stated, the first defense admitted defendant’s ownership of the real estate and the execution of the first lease, but neither admitted nor specifically denied that plaintiff was the procuring cause of its execution. He alleged that as early as 1935 he attempted to interest Sears, Roebuck & Co. in leasing all or a portion of his particular real estate and that he employed a real-estate broker in Kansas City to carry on negotiations for a three-story building for a term of thirty years at a rental of approximately $30,000 per year; that in the latter part of January, 1937, plaintiff represented to defendant that he could successfully consummate the contemplated lease and on that date was employed in writing for that purpose; that thereafter the contract was mutually terminated by the parties, and about July 29, 1937, at a time when no written or oral agreement as to employment or compensation existed between plaintiff and defendant, defendant met representatives of Sears, Roebuck & Co. and discussed proposals for a lease, subject to [697]*697approval by officers of the company, for a building three stories high, 90 by 147 feet, for a thirty-year term, at an annual rental of $31,000; that thereafter plaintiff and defendant discussed the commission to be paid plaintiff if the proposed lease should be consummated, and pursuant thereto executed an agreement, dated July 30, 1937, which provided that defendant should be liable to plaintiff for a commission “under the conditions herein stated and not otherwise” in the sum of $10,000 payable as specified. Defendant’s liability was—

“Contingent upon the following conditions: That the lease now in negotiation shall actually be consummated, signed, executed and delivered by the parties, and if said lease is not so executed, whether it be the fault of either the lessor or the lessee, no commission or liability for commission shall exist on the part of said 'owner’ (defendant) . . . The ‘broker’ (plaintiff) accepts the conditions of this agreement in lieu of and in full compensation for his services in connection with said lease . .

(It may here be said this agreement was previously before this court and is set out in full in Morgan v. Wheeler, 150 Kan. 667, 669, 95 P. 2d 320.) It was further alleged that it was the understanding of the parties to the above contract that plaintiff should be paid only in the event the lease then being negotiated should be actually consummated, and if not so consummated, no commission whatever should be due to plaintiff; that the lease then in negotiation was never signed, executed and delivered, the transaction was never consummated, and no lease was ever executed between the company and the defendant which embraced the terms, conditions and provisions of the lease which the parties had in contemplation when the contract of employment was executed.

For his second defense defendant alleged that plaintiff had brought two certain actions in the district court of Sedgwick county, Kansas, against the defendant in the present action to recover commissions allegedly due on the contract for compensation above referred to; that those actions were tried together, at which trial the defendant endeavored to compel plaintiff to elect whether he sued on the written contract or as on quantum meruit; that at such trial the trail court had made certain findings of fact and of law from which the plaintiff had not appealed; that plaintiff had litigated his alleged rights in the two actions, and having relied upon performance of a written contract, may not now abandon such claims, but is bound thereby and not now entitled to recover in an action as on implied contract or as on quantum meruit or otherwise; that plain[698]*698tiff did not perform the contract sued on, and the lease then in negotiation was never consummated; that after judgment was rendered in the district court defendant appealed to the supreme court, in which court plaintiff contended he had performed his contract; that plaintiff relied upon the written contract; that the appeal was disposed of in the supreme court by decision in Morgan v. Wheeler, 150 Kan. 667, 95 P. 2d 320, and in the case it was determined plaintiff’s action was founded upon and he had elected to rely upon a written contract; that he had failed to perform and was not entitled to recover. Copies of pleadings, findings, etc., were attached as exhibits.

The third defense was that the matter was res judicata, and that plaintiff should not be permitted to shift his position and to rely upon a theory of recovery as on implied contract or as on quantum meruit, etc. There being no contention that the reply put in issue any matter hereafter discussed, the reply will not be noticed.

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Related

Valley, Inc. v. Ward Parkway Building Co.
590 P.2d 1100 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1979)
Hanson v. Schletzbaum
387 P.2d 176 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 P.2d 165, 153 Kan. 695, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-wheeler-kan-1941.