Putnam Investment Co. v. King

150 P. 559, 96 Kan. 109, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 10, 1915
DocketNo. 19,141
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 150 P. 559 (Putnam Investment Co. v. King) 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
Putnam Investment Co. v. King, 150 P. 559, 96 Kan. 109, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 323 (kan 1915).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

This was an action by The Putnam Investment Company, a corporation engaged in the real-estate brokerage business, against H. C. King for the recovery of a commission. From a judgment in favor of the plaintiff King appeals.

The case has been here twice before (Putnam v. King, 82 Kan. 216, 107 Pac. 559; 87 Kan. 842, 126 Pac. 1093), and in the former of these appeals the principal facts involved are con[110]*110cisely stated. King owned 2720 acres of land and in connection with this land he used 160 acres of government land upon which his son had filed. He verbally agreed with the manager of the plaintiff to the effect that plaintiff should find a purchaser for the land and retain all over $8000 as commission. A party able and willing to purchase the interest which King had in the land for $10,800 was found by the plaintiff, and King then declined to make a conveyance. After several trials in the Pottawatomie district court a change of venue was granted and the case was tried in Jackson county, resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff. Defendant’s demurrer to the evidence of plaintiff was overruled as was also his motion for a new trial.

It is first insisted that the plaintiff can not recover because the contract made by plaintiff in behalf of defendant included the sale of government land. It sufficiently appears that no one contemplated a sale or purchase of public land. When the contract was made between plaintiff and defendant it was mentioned that 2720 acres was subject to sale and that 160 acres used in connection with the larger tract was. government land upon which the defendant’s son had a filing. Of course, any attempt to sell or mortgage government land is contrary to statute as well as public policy and would be without effect. While this quarter section of land was spoken of as a part of the ranch it was understood that it was government land and therefore not subject to sale. It was equally well known that improvements as well as certain preferences of one having a filing upon government land were subject to be transferred. It has been said that:

“Under the laws of the United States, and the rules of the land department, the- entryman is entitled to commutation in several forms, and to certain preference rights, and may also relinquish and sell his improvements and equities in the.homestead to another. The relinquishment must, of course, be made to the United States; but under the rules and practice of the land department it may be made so as to fully protect the transferee, if he be a qualified person, to the same right which his vendor enjoyed.” (B. K. & S. W. Rld. Co. v. Johnson, 38 Kan. 142, 151, 16 Pac. 125; James S. Moore v. Daniel M. McIntosh, 6 Kan. 39; Bell v. Parks, 18 Kan. 152; Lapham v. Head, 21 Kan. 332; Hardesty v. Service, 45 Kan. 614, 26 Pac. 29.)

There was some talk between the parties about the son perfecting his title or giving a relinquishment if it was not per[111]*111fected, but the evidence of the plaintiff was that the purchaser was to get just such interest as the defendant could give, and if he had no interest in the tract the purchaser would get nothing. When the plaintiff bargained with the proposed purchaser a writing was made which purported to include 2880 acres, and the plaintiff attached the defendant’s name to the writing without authority. This writing was, of course, invalid in that it included the 160-acre tract of government land, but that writing is not the basis of this action. The action brought rests upon the agreement that plaintiff was to find a purchaser for the four and a quarter sections of land and such interest as the defendant might have in the other quarter, together with the compliance by the plaintiff with the terms of that agreement. The plaintiff and the purchaser soon discovered that the writing as drawn was invalid, and it was never brought to the attention of defendant nor did he learn of the existence of the writing until after the litigation had been begun. Besides, the agreement actually made with Shellabarger, the purchaser, did not undertake to sell government land nor to make a transfer of it in contravention of the federal laws. It may also be said that defendant did not decline to carry out his agreement nor to transfer the land to the purchaser on account of the terms of this writing, and he could not well have based his refusal on that ground as he admitted that he did not see the contract until the first trial of this case.

The next contention of the defendant is that the plaintiff did not procure a purchaser for the land who was ready and willing to buy on the terms agreed upon. There is no substantial dispute that the plaintiff was empowered by defendant to find a purchaser for the land and very little as to the terms of the agreement made between them when the land was listed with plaintiff. The defendant prescribed several plans on which a sale might be made, one of which was that if sold for cash he would take $8000 net, the plaintiff to have any additional sum that it could procure as commission. In a letter written about four months later the defendant repeated the statement and said to the plaintiff, “You can have all you get over $8000.” The plaintiff found a purchaser who offered to pay $10,800 for the land, and who then made a payment of $1000 to the plaintiff as the agent of the defendant. When the defendant was notified that a purchaser had been procured on [112]*112the prescribed terms he raised a number of objections and indicated a purpose to avoid compliance with the contract. He first raised a question as to the description and extent of the tract that he had .for sale, saying that plaintiff had either sold land which had never been given it for sale or had made an error in the description of the land offered to the proposed purchaser. He also said that he had given an option to a party on his 2720 acres. Defendant insists that while plaintiff had found one who was willing to take the land at the specified price the purchaser had made a requirement that defendant should furnish an abstract of title and should execute a warranty deed to the land, and that neither of these conditions had ever been agreed to by the defendant. In the first place the defendant did not refuse to complete the sale on either of these grounds. •He never mentioned them when plaintiff notified him that a purchaser had been found and when the request was made that he completé the sale. His refusal was based upon the grounds that more land was sold than he owned and that he had given an option to another upon the land listed with the plaintiff. Having put his refusal on these grounds he, in effect, waived any defense based on the requirement of an abstract or of the form of-the conveyance to be executed. As said in Sandefur v. Hines, 69 Kan. 168, 76 Pac. 444 :

“It is not becoming in him to place his refusal on one ground, and, when the plaintiff has been driven into litigation to enforce the contract, to defend his refusal on another and wholly different ground.” (p. 171.)

In a later case it was said:

“If this had been a reason for refusing to complete the sale he should have so stated at the time, so that the other party might know what was lacking and possibly correct it.” (Stanton v. Barnes, 72 Kan. 541, 544, 84 Pac. 116.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 P. 559, 96 Kan. 109, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-investment-co-v-king-kan-1915.