Sills v. Burge

124 S.W. 605, 141 Mo. App. 148, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 57
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 605 (Sills v. Burge) 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
Sills v. Burge, 124 S.W. 605, 141 Mo. App. 148, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 57 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiffs, real estate agents in Kansas City, brought this action to recover a commission of $4,500, alleged to be due them on account of the sale of certain real estate in Kansas City belonging to defendants. A trial to a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendants. Numerous errors are assigned by plaintiffs, who bring the case here by appeal. These assignments relate either to the instructions or to rulings on the admission or rejection of evidence. . The issue of the employment of plaintiffs as agents to sell the property was warmly contested, as was also the issue of whether or not their efforts were the procuring [151]*151cause of the sale. Both parties adduced substantial evidence in support of their respective contentions. Material facts disclosed by the evidence of plaintiffs thus may be stated:

Defendants Burge and Mary E. Long, brother and sister, inherited two tracts of land in Kansas City, one of forty acres, the other of eighty acres. Defendant, Robert J. Long, is the husband of Mary. In 1899, defendants gave an option to purchase the land to a Mr. Gui-ón and he enlisted the services of plaintiffs to aid him in making an advantageous sale. He failed to accomplish his purpose and the option expired. Plaintiff Sills states that acting on behalf of his firm, he wrote a letter to defendant, Robert J. Long, in February, 1900, about the sale of the land and that a few days later David Long, son of Robert and Mary, called on him in response to the letter. Sills testified: “He (David) says that his father received a letter from us in reference to the sale of the property. I told him that I wanted a price on both the forty and eighty acres. He said he would see his father and Mr. Rnrs-e and let me know in a day or two. . . . He came in in a day or two and gave me a price. ... of $1,500 per acre for the eighty acres and $2,000 per acre for the forty acres. He asked me previous to this what the commission would be. I told him two and one-half per cent.”

The letter which plaintiffs claim initiated the transaction was'dated February 18, 1900, and was addressed to defendant, Robert J. Long. Its contents were as follows: “We would like to talk to you about some of your acre property as soon as you can find it convenient to call at our office, 820 Walnut St. We have parties in view who have some money to invest, and we might be able to sell them some of your property.”

Plaintiffs made strenuous and repeated but unsuccessful attempts to introduce this letter in evidence, and the refusal of the court to admit it constitutes one <?f [152]*152tbe principal errors assigned. Tbe original letter was not produced, but plaintiffs bad a copy and endeavored to lay tbe foundation for its admission. Mr. Sills testified that be dictated tbe letter to bis stenographer and claims that in tbe usual course of tbe business of bis office, it must have been mailed, but be cannot state that be mailed it and no witness testified to having mailed it. Tbe parties to whom tbe letter referred as prospective purchasers composed a syndicate that afterward was incorporated under the name of tbe Abington Land Company.- After David Long bad given plaintiffs a price on tbe land, Sills obtained an offer of $100,000 for tbe eighty-acre tract from one of tbe syndicate — George D. Ford — and went to tbe borne of defendant, Long, where he saw Mr. Long and told him of the offer. Sills testified : “Mr. Long said that be would see — be first ashed me what our commission would be. I told him two and one-balf per cent. I also stated to him before I made that offer that bis son David Long bad left tbe property with me for sale. He said, ‘Yes, I know be has.’ Then be asked me what our commission would be. I told him two and one-balf per cent. He said £I will see Mr. Burge and talk with Mrs. Long and let you know soon.’ A short time after this conversation, David Long called on Sills and told him that defendants would not take less than $1,500 per acre for tbe tract. Sills communicated this information to tbe syndicate. Afterward tbe syndicate purchased both tracts from defendants for $1,500 per acre. The sale was consummated without tbe intervention of plaintiffs and. defendants rejected tbe claim of plaintiffs to tbe commission. This suit followed.

Defendant Long denies that be received tbe letter plaintiffs claim to have sent him; that be sent bis son to see plaintiffs in response to tbe letter; that be employed or authorized, bis son to employ plaintiffs; that be acknowledged to Sills that be bad authorized bis son, David, to employ plaintiffs; that be asked Sills what [153]*153bis commission would be, or in any way treated bim as tbe agent of defendants or that plaintiffs bad anything - to do Avitb selling tbe property. In fine, be denies tbe whole story of plaintiff Sills except the fact that Sills called at bis house and offered bim $100,000 for the eighty-acre tract. David Long, likewise, repudiates in to to bis connection with tbe transaction as detailed by plaintiffs. Defendants all admit that nothing was done by any of them in relation to tbe sale of tbe land without tbe knowledge and consent of tbe others, but they say that tbe sale was brought about through tbe services of a Mr. Johnson, a stonemason, who operated a quarry on tbe land, and that to bim they paid a commission of one and one-quarter per cent.

We have stated only those facts which give a general view of tbe issues. Tbe record is voluminous and teems with circumstances of more or less importance. Tbe burden which plaintiffs labored bard to sustain 'was to show, first, that defendants employed them, and, second, that their services were tbe procuring cause of tbe sale. A careful reading of tbe record leaves us in tbe situation of being unable to form an opinion on tbe subject of which side has succeeded in tipping tbe evidential scale with tbe greater weight of tbe evidence. Tbe conclusion urged by plaintiffs that they were employed to sell tbe property, did sell it, and are being deprived of their reward under tbe specious pretexts that they were not emplpyed and that a stonemason made tbe sale, is just as permissible under tbe evidence — but no more so — than tbe insistence of defendants that plaintiffs are mere interlopers.

With tbe evidence in this condition, we are constrained to say that if tbe trial court committed substantial error against plaintiffs in tbe rulings on tbe evidence, such error must be deemed prejudicial, since we must assume that with evidence so evenly balanced, a little weight added to either side would give tbe preponderance to that side. Consequently, should we find [154]*154that the court improperly excluded the letter plaintiffs claim they sent defendant Long on February 13, 1900, we must hold the error prejudicial. Reasonably construed, that letter was an application for employment. It was the initiatory act that resulted in the relation of principal and agent between the parties and its exclusion by the court could not fail to impress the jury with the idea that plaintiffs were lame in their proof, and that in the mind of the court, they could not lay the foundation stone on which the superstructure of their case must rest. The fact that the letter had been mailed to Mr. Long and received by him could be proved in two ways: First, that the letter properly addressed and stamped had been deposited in the United States mails.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 605, 141 Mo. App. 148, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sills-v-burge-moctapp-1910.