Prugh v. Tyrrell

235 S.W. 143, 208 Mo. App. 582, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 131
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 235 S.W. 143 (Prugh v. Tyrrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prugh v. Tyrrell, 235 S.W. 143, 208 Mo. App. 582, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 131 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

COX, P. J.

— Action for commission as real estate agent for services in selling a farm for defendant in which $625 is demanded. A verdict for $25 was rendered for plaintiff and he has appealed.

The defendant, who lived in Oklahoma, owned some land in Shannon County, Missouri, and by letter author *586 ized plaintiff to sell what was called the home place. The material part of this letter is as follows: “I do not want to bind myself or the land there in any contract to sell bnt if you can sell the home place, 800 acres, for $12,500 I will give you five per cent, commission. With the home place, I would want one-third down, balance reasonable time eight per cent.” Acting under authority granted by this letter plaintiff sold the land to one Eugene W. Townsend and a contract in writing was executed December 4, 1919, in which the price was fixed at $12,500, one-third of which was to be paid when abstract showing merchantable title was furnished and balance on reasonable terms at reasonable rate of interest, the deferred payments to be secured by first deed of trust on the land sold. The seller was to execute warranty deed and by another clause in the contract, required to furnish abstract showing merchantable title. Possession was to be delivered to purchaser not later than March 1,1920. Five Hundred Dollars was placed in a bank as earnest money.

While the contract' of purchase was executed by Mr. Townsend alone he was in fact acting for himself, his brother-in-law, Mr. Smith, and his father-in-law, Mr. Richards. Townsend, Smith and Richards all lived in Nebraska at the time. Afterward, in February, 1920, Townsend and Smith came to Missouri and met Mr. Tyrrell, the defendant. At this time the abstract of title had been furnished and upon an examination of it by Townsend’s attorney, the title was pronounced defective and it was found that a suit in court would be necessary to perfect it. By reason of that fact, the deed and deed of trust called for by the contract were not executed and delivered nor the first payment made, but a supplemental contract was drawn up and signed by Townsend and-the defendant in which it was agreed that the title should be rperfected by suit and when perfected $3000 in addition to the $500 earnest money should be paid and the deed to the land and deed of trust to secure the balance of the purchase money executed. The balance of $9000 was to be paid in four installments in two, three, four, and five *587 years with 7 per cent interest. Possession of the farm was delivered and suit brought to perfect the title, which resulted in a decree that was satisfactory to the parties. At the time the title was perfected, the parties that were interested with Townsend as purchasers declined to assist him and he was not then able, without their assistance, to make the required payment and hold the land. He gave up the land and forfeited the $500 paid as earnest money. Defendant was willing to pay plaintiff’s five per cent, commission on the $500 amounting to $25. Plaintiff contended that he was entitled to commission on $12,500 amounting to $625 and sued for that amount.

Mr. Townsend testified at the trial that Smith and Richards were interested with Jum and that he was representing them as well as himself in making the purchase in the first instance. After he had so testified, plaintiff offered to show the financial standing of these two men. This testimony was excluded for the reason that they had not signed the contract of purchase and were therefore, not legally bound. Ordinarily the agent who sells real estate for his principal is not required to see that all the interested parties or any of them enter into a binding contract. He has performed his contract and earned his commission when he produces to the owner a party who is ready, able, and willing to purchase at the price fixed by the owner or at a price which the owner accepts. In this ease, however, the owner was not present at the sale but was represented by plaintiff as his agent in the execution of the contract and since the agent permitted the contract to be executed by Townsend alone, then in a suit for commission the burden was on him to show that Townsend was ready, able, and willing to purchase on the terms provided in the owner’s instructions to him. Under these circumstances, we hold that the financial standing of Smith and Richards was immaterial and the evidence relating thereto was properly excluded.

Townsend also testified that when he came hack in February after the execution of the first contract and at the time it was discovered that the title was so defec *588 tive that a suit would be necessary to perfect it, he was then able to make the first payment as required by the defendant and had the title been satisfactory, the payment would have been made and deed of trust executed and the deal closed. His ability to pay at that time depended in part upon assistance to be furnished him by Smith and Richards and it is now contended by respondent that since Townsend did not have the money of his own to make the payment, he was not able to make the purchase in a sense that would entitle plaintiff to his commission. With that contention we do not agree. The contract executed by Townsend and by plaintiff as agent for defendant (which contract defendant testified he ratified so all question of plaintiff’s authority to make it was eliminated) provided that one-third of the purchase price should be paid at the time the title papers were executed and payment of the balance of the purchase price was to be secured by a trust deed on the land sold. These were the terms specified in the letter of defendant to plaintiff in which he authorized plaintiff to make the sale. By that letter and by his correspondence relative to the contract executed for him by plaintiff, he had fixed the standard by which the ability of the purchaser to meet his terms' was to be judged. He had thereby said to plaintiff, you find a purchaser willing to pay the price and if he is able to and will pay one-third cash, I will take the farm as security for the balance.and close the deal. If the purchaser were able to pay one-third cash, it would in law be wholly immaterial to defendant how he became able. If he paid the money to defendant, it could make no difference whether it was money he had of his own or money he borrowed from some one else or whether, as seems to have been the case here, he had an understanding with some other person that he was to furnish part of the money and have an interest in the land purchased. The defendant had no legal interest in how Townsend was to get the money to make the first payment. , If Townsend had met or tendered the payment and executed a deed of trust to *589 secure the balance, the terms of sale fixed by defendant would have been fully complied with and he could not have refused to accept it on the ground that Townsend had secured he]p from some one else in providing the money for the first payment.

In correspondence between plaintiff and defendant prior to the sale, plaintiff had stated to defendant that the parties negotiating the purchase could pay $4000 cash and were all young energetic men with considerable capital behind them. Defendant testified that he relied on the statements of plaintiff and made no investigation as to the financial ability of the purchaser.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 S.W. 143, 208 Mo. App. 582, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prugh-v-tyrrell-moctapp-1921.