Osborne v. Dannatt

167 Iowa 615
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 167 Iowa 615 (Osborne v. Dannatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborne v. Dannatt, 167 Iowa 615 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

Witi-irow, J.

I. This action was commenced in the district court in the name of R. F. Osborne, plaintiff.' Answer was filed, and trial had, but before decision the cause was continued on plaintiff’s motion, and leave was granted to file an amended and substituted petition, which was done. This petition was brought in the name of the plaintiffs as they appear on this appeal, and contained four counts, stating the same cause of action in different ways. A demurrer to counts 1 and 2 was sustained, and count í was stricken as being substantial repetition of count 3. To these rulings exceptions were taken. Answer was filed to count 3, and the cause was tried by the court, resulting in a judgment for the defendant.

1. pleadings: waiver of. c*-6: .ieetion. A motion to dismiss this appeal is before us on the ground that, since the commencement of the action, there has been a change in its title. The motion does not require extended consideration. Without objection the change in the title of the cause was made the lower court, the petition so entitled was made the object of demurrer and motion, and issue taken on one count. By proceeding to trial the parties adopted the case as it was then entitled, by such act waiving any objections which might have been made on that account, and it is now too late to question it.

2. Real propbrtv : commisSion contract. II. The action was to recover a broker’s commission in effecting a trade of real estate. The first count was upon an alleged written contract to pay 2 per cent, commission on the value of four farms, in ease sale was made. ..... ... That which it is claimed constitutes the written contract consists of a postal card, which was in substance but an advertisement and descrip[617]*617tion of the land, with terms bearing the printed signature of the defendant, sent to R. F. Osborne, and to which, upon receipt of it, the plaintiff: caused to be affixed the signature of the Ainsworth Land Company. The law of Nebraska requires brokers’ contracts for the sale of real estate to be in writing and signed by both parties; and that which is claimed as its execution was done by plaintiff in that state, in which was the residence and place of business of the plaintiffs. The evidence does not show that defendant was ever advised that the plaintiffs had signed the card, nor do we think it shows that it was sent to Osborne to be signed as a contract, but only as a description of the land, and terms of sale, at the most to be used as data from which a written contract might be prepared, and such was not done.

The telegrams pleaded and relied upon as showing ratification of the printed signature do not do so; nor could they be construed as so doing, in the absence of averment that the defendant was advised that the plaintiffs had signed the alleged contracts, even were such signing sufficient to bind the defendant in an offer made to R. F. Osborne. That which would govern as to ordinary contracts, or even such as come within the provisions of the statute of frauds, which requires only the signature of the party to be charged, cannot apply when a statute, which is governing upon the parties as a matter of public policy, requires that both shall sign the contract.

3 same- pleadinssThe ruling upon the demurrer was correct as to that ground, and as to count 1 for the further good reason that performance within sixty days, as provided, was not averred, nor matter pleaded which relieved against such provision.

The motion assailed count 4 of the amended and substituted petition on the ground that it was but repetition of count 3, It was sustained. While exception was taken, we find no error assigned on that ground.

[618]*6184 real peopsion^ contract^" validity. [617]*617III. The cause was tried on the issues raised by count 3 [618]*618of the petition and the answer, with judgment against plaintiffs. In that count it is averred that prior to September 1, 1910, the plaintiffs acted as agent for Dannátt, and that the defendant agreed with the plaintiffs that, on account of his large business, the plaintiffs should receive a commission of 2 per cent, on the purchase price on all lands sold by the defendant or purchased by him; that this oral agreement was made in Nebraska, and with reference to Iowa lands belonging to the defendant; and that it was contemplated by both parties, and so understood between them, that the performance of such service should be in Iowa, and that the contract was an Iowa contract, and to be governed by the laws of this state. They state that on or about September 1st they received a postal card offering the Iowa lands of defendant for sale and a commission of 2 per cent, to any person who would sell the same, and later they received another card making like offers, vdth slight changes in the prices.

Plaintiffs say that in pursuance of the contract they procured a purchaser, who paid part in cash and part in trade, and took over all the lands described on the postal card, and the valuation as agreed upon was $91,000. Commission of $1,820 is claime.d to have been earned, and judgment for that amount is asked. By amendment to the petition it is pleaded: That plaintiffs brought the defendant and Flopping Bros, together on a deal, and they failed to make a trade. That upon such failure the defendant handed to one of the plaintiffs a postal card, designated as Exhibit B, being one of the cards to which we have referred, and told him to “go after the Flappings, get them to come back, and we will make a deal.”

The answer of defendant denies an agreement to pay plaintiffs the commission, pleads the statute of Nebraska, which requires the contract between broker and owner to be in writing, subscribed by both, and avers that, whatever the talk or agreement between the parties, it was void under the [619]*619laws of the state where the alleged-contract was made, and could not be made valid by an oral statement made in Iowa. Defendant pleads that plaintiffs did not sell the real estate or make an exchange thereof on the terms and conditions offered by the defendant, but the sale and exchange was made on entirely different terms and with the express understanding that no commission was to be paid.

IY. The evidence, which, as we understand from the record, was that which was introduced upon the first trial, is in substance: That R. F. Osborne, a member of the plaintiff partnership, is a real estate dealer residing at Ainsworth, Neb. That he had a conversation with defendant in Nebraska in 1909 as to the sale of real estate. That defendant said he would pay 2 per cent, on anything plaintiffs bought or sold for him. That plaintiffs wanted a written contract, and that defendant said that when he returned to his home in Sioux City he would send the price numbers on a card. His price was $110 per acre for seven hundred and eighty acres. Later defendant sent the postal card. That plaintiff R. F. Osborne took up the matter of a sale or trade with Flopping Bros., the owners of a 2,800-acre ranch in Cherry county, Neb., upon the direction of defendant in a letter which has been lost, directing him to ‘ ‘ get busy and see if you cannot sell or trade this land for some good ranch land.” Following this was correspondence between the parties, and in February Dannatt went with Osborne to see the Flopping land. Negotiations continued, and in May they again visited the land.

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Bluebook (online)
167 Iowa 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-dannatt-iowa-1914.