Schmelzel v. Leecy

178 N.W. 267, 104 Neb. 672, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 227
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1920
DocketNo. 21068
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 178 N.W. 267 (Schmelzel v. Leecy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmelzel v. Leecy, 178 N.W. 267, 104 Neb. 672, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 227 (Neb. 1920).

Opinion

Dorset, C.

This is an action by a broker to recover a commission for the sale of land. The court directed a verdict for the [673]*673defendant, and from the judgment dismissing his action the plaintiff appeals. The action is founded upon a written contract authorizing the plaintiff to sell the land for $125 an acre, and providing that, if the plaintiff should sell the land or furnish the defendant a purchaser. therefor, he should he entitled to a commission of $250.

Shortly after the contract was executed, the plaintiff, who was a real estate agent in Falls City, Nebraska, spoke to J. W. Neeld about the defendant’s land and took him out to see it. The next day the defendant and the plaintiff met Neeld at the plaintiff’s office and talked with him about buying the place. In this conversation the defendant expressed his willingness to accept $23,000, instead of $23,125, at which the land was listed, and the plaintiff agreed to reduce the commission specified in the contract to $200. Mr. Neeld, however, stated' that he wanted to look around before concluding the deal, and it was agreed that he might have a few days’ time within which to make up his mind. A contract embodying the terms tentatively agreed upon was left by the defendant in a local bank, with directions to turn it oyer to Mr. Neeld, upon his making the first payment provided therein. Along with the contract the defendant deposited his check for $200, to be delivered to the plaintiff when the deal should be closed and the contract taken up hy Mr. Neeld.

A few days later the defendant inquired of the plaintiff, hy telephone, whether Neeld had concluded to buy the land, and the plaintiff replied that he had not, and that he was still looking around. With regard to this telephone conversation occurs the principal conflict in the testimony. The. plaintiff testified that the defendant, when advised that Mr. Neeld had not yet decided to buy, said that thereafter he would not sell the land for less than $125 an acre. The defendant, on the other hand, testified that he told the plaintiff that the [674]*674deal was off, intending not only to withdraw his offer to reduce the price, but to terminate all further negotiations. Whatever may have been the purport of this conversation, the plaintiff informed Neeld that it would take $125 an acre to buy the land, and continued his effort's to induce him to make the deal. In the meantime the defendant decided to lease the land for the ensuing year, and entered into negotiations to rent it to one Zimmerman.

About three weeks, we infer, after the making of the contract sued upon, the defendant and Zimmerman went to the office of I. B. Whitaker, a real estate agent in Palls City, to have a lease drawn up. Mr. Neeld was in Whitaker’s office, inquiring about farms for sale, when they came in. Having no one in the office to operate the typewriter, Whitaker suggested that the defendant go to another office to have the lease drawn up. After he left the office, Whitaker remarked to Neeld that he had made a mistake not to buy that farm, and Neeld told Whitaker to call the defendant back and see if it could not be bought. Whitaker, accordingly, went after the defendant, found that he was willing to sell, and came back and told Neeld the farm could be bought. A contract was immediately drawn up, and the land sold to Neeld for $125 an acre. The defendant paid Whitaker a commission for making the sale.

The plaintiff’s contract was that he should sell or furnish the defendant a purchaser for the land. In order to entitle him to the compensation provided in the contract, he must show performance on his part; in other words, that he was the efficient, procuring cause of the sale. The trial court took the view that the evidence fails utterly to support that hypothesis, and that it shows, as a matter- of law, that the plaintiff was not such procuring cause.

The peremptory instruction in favor of the defendant can be upheld only upon' the theory that, if the case had been submitted to the jury, and the jury had adopted [675]*675the plaintiff’s view of every controverted issue of fact, and had drawn every inference favorable to the plaintiff that reasonably could be deduced from the facts in evidence, proof of some essential element of the plaintiff’s cause of action would still be wanting. In this case, accordingly, the jury, if they had adopted the plaintiff’s version of the facts, might have found that he had a valid contract of employment as agent to sell or to find a purchaser for the property; that he introduced to the defendant the man who finally bought the property; that the plaintiff at no time abandoned the employment, or gave up trying to induce the purchaser to buy, but continued his exertions down to the very day of the sale; that, with full knowledge of the plaintiff’s efforts, the defendant did not revoke or terminate his authority, although, after he was informed in the telephone conversation that Neeld had not yet decided to buy, he insisted that he should have $125 an acre for the land; and that, until Whitaker mentioned the land to Neeld on the day it was sold, no agent other than the plaintiff had approached him on the subject.

Viewing the evidence from the plaintiff’s standpoint, the jury might have concluded that, after the plaintiff’s efforts had created a favorable disposition in Neeld’s mind, the sale was finally made, not through the influence of Whitaker, but as the result of the accidental circumstance that Neeld happened to overhear the defendant speaking about leasing the land in Whitaker’s office, and .saw that he must act at once or lose his chance to buy the land.

The controlling question, therefore, is whether, under that state of facts, the plaintiff’s right to his commission will, as a matter of law, be defeated by the fact that another agent, through a fortuitous circumstance arising without design or effort on. his part, was enabled to intervene and effect the sale. Counsel for the defendant ..rely-upon Higinbotham v. McKenzie, 88 Neb. 323, .in which this court, in the syllabus, has said: “When the [676]*676owner of real estate authorized several respective brokers or agents to sell or exchange the same, but givefe neither an exclusive agency, the agent or broker who actually effects the sale or exchange is entitled to the commissions. The agent under such contract who negotiates with a purchaser,, but does not effect a sale, cannot recover commissions.”

In that case the land had been listed by the owner with several brokers, among them the plaintiffs and another firm to which the defendant had paid the commission for making the sale. The plaintiffs sued the owner, claiming that the exchange of properties had been effected through their efforts. The issue was submitted to the jury, who returned a. verdict for the defendant owner.

It is contended by counsel that the language of the syllabus, “The agent or broker who actually effects the sale, or exchange is entitled .to the commissions,” and that the agent “who negotiates with a purchaser, but does not effect a sale, cannot recover commissions,” means that, regardless of any preliminary efforts put forth by an agent, or of the influence of such efforts in the chain of causation leading to the final consummation, of the sale, he is not entitled to his commission, unless he participates in the act or contract by which the sale is finally evidenced, and that if, as did Whitaker in this case, another agent, intervenes and consummates the sale, the latter is to be conclusively regarded, in law, as the procuring cause.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 N.W. 267, 104 Neb. 672, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmelzel-v-leecy-neb-1920.