Taylor v. Jay

43 So. 993, 119 La. 163, 1907 La. LEXIS 453
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 13, 1907
DocketNo. 16,385
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 So. 993 (Taylor v. Jay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Jay, 43 So. 993, 119 La. 163, 1907 La. LEXIS 453 (La. 1907).

Opinion

PROYOSTY, J.

Plaintiff’s suit is based upon an alleged contract under which he claims to be entitled to a commission for having procured a purchaser for defendant’s property. The amount claimed is $2,500, being 5 per cent, on the amount of the sale. The property was a sawmill plant, consisting of a sawmill, with large tracts of timber lands, railroad, and equipment, houses, barges, tugs, etc., situated in the parish of St. Tammany. The date of the sale was October, 1905. Plaintiff is a real estate broker engaged in the sale of such property. The contract alleged in the petition reads as follows :

“October 13, 1904.
“W. R. Taylor, Esq., City — Dear Sir: Being advised by you that you have a purchaser for the lumber plant of Mr. W. T. Jay, at Madison-ville, La., including his timber interest — in fact, all the property which he owns in the parishes of St. Tammany, Washington, and Tangipahoa — for 'the sum of six hundred thousand dollars, I am authorized by Mi’. Jay to say that, in the event of your consummating a sale of this property, he will pay you a commission of 5 per cent, of the amount of the purchase price thereof. This authorization, though, is based upon the following understanding:
“There are other people who have approached Mr. Jay in regard to the purchase of this property, and one particularly; and, should it develop that your purchaser is the same party who has already approached Mr. Jay through other channels, of course, Mr. Jay under no circumstances is to be called upon to pay two commissions; it being understood that the party who has already brought Mr. Jay in touch with this party is to receive the commission, should he become a purchaser.
“It is not intended, under any circumstances, to convey to you or to any one else a right of option on the property of the plant of Mr. Jay, and, in making this agreement, it is done with full power and authority in Mr. Jay to withdraw his plant from the market if he chooses so to do, or to sell to any one else he may deem proper to negotiate with. However, every facility will be afforded your party to verify the correctness of the facts and figures which Mr. [165]*165Jay has represented, and, after examination, if the parties are in earnest and desire to purchase this property, and require a limited time to make financial arrangements, upon the deposit of a sufficient amount of cash to justify the conclusion that- they are in earnest in a bank in the city of New Orleans, to be forfeited in the event of their failure to carry through the deal, Mr. Jay will extend to them an exclusive privilege for a period of thirty days.
“It is, or course, necessary that Mr. Jay should be advised at once of the name or names of the party or parties that you represent in the matter, in order that there may be no possible conflict as to commissions; and, in the event of the person or persons that you represent not being the one or ones who have already approached Mr. Jay, should your parties determine to make a purchase of his property, you will alone receive the commission.
“Yours very truly,
“[Signed] Sam Henderson, Jr.
“I approve the contents of this letter.
“[Signed] W. J. Jay.”

On the day after this contract was signed plaintiff wrote to defendant the following letter :

“October 14, 1904.
“Mr. Sam Henderson, Jr., City — Dear Sir: I am in receipt of yours of the 13th, and in reply will say, while the matter is all right as far as it goes, I do not think it full enough to be entirely satisfactory. I am simply acting as a broker or agent in the matter, and when I bring buyer and seller together, in the event of a trade, my commission will be considered earned; in other words, I cannot consummate a trade without Mr. Jay’s assistance, not only as to his own property, but the outside holdings as explained to you.
“I gave you yesterday names of our customer as F. G. Weyerhaeuser, of Weyerhaeuser & Dickman, Bock Island, 111., and St. Paul, Minn. These parties are able to pay cash for a proposition ten times the size of Mr. Jay’s; in fact, recently did so on the Pacific Coast, being the largest individual owners and holders of the timber lands in the country.
“I would thank you to get, from Mr. Jay direct, confirmation of my authority from you to offer the property at the price named, specifying what the proposition covers'; that is, how many thousand acres of land, and how much timber he will guarantee same to yield. Likewise a list of the other property, including railroad, saw and planing mill plant, building and other improvements, lumber on the yard, railroad, steamboat,’and other equipments, store —in fact, everything that goes in-the trade, so that there can be no misunderstanding. I would also like his assurance to the effect that, in the event of a trade for the property, he will agree and undertake to purchase the other 30,000 odd acres' for our parties at a price that will.put the whole property within, or not exceeding, $1,000,000, which he told me in person he would do.
“I would like a separate letter from him, stating that, in the event of a trade with the parties I have named, he will pay me, or to my order, a commission of 5 per cent. It is most desirable that he should also furnish me, at the earliest moment, plat showing his timber land holdings. If he has not the time to make it, and will furnish me legal description of his lands, I will have it made in my office.
“On receipt of the above I will push the matter vigorously. In the meantime, have wired my associate, Williamson, ‘to arrange to get his parties here promptly. Of course, I want, and expect, Mr. Jay to agree that he will not withdraw the property, and will not make any other sale to the prejudice of that which may be pending with my parties, as it will entail considerable expense for them to come here to investigate the proposition, and it would not be fair or reasonable to expect them to do so without assurances that they will be protected during such inspection, which, if satisfactory, and developes the proposition to be as represented, there is no question of a doubt about the. trade being made. Finally, I understand, and expect, that Mr. Jay will treat Mr. Weyerhaeuser, or his firm, as our customer, and in the event of any trade, indirectly or directly, with him or them, that he will protect our commission, as it is through our agency that his property has been, or will be, presented to him.
“Yours very truly,
“[Signed] Wm. B. Taylor.”

Defendant contends that the foregoing contract was not a continuing contract, but was restricted to the party or parties with whom plaintiff claimed to be at the time already in negotiation, which parties turned out to be Weyerhaeuser & Dickman, to whom no sale was made.

Defendant further contends that, even if this contract had been a continuing contract, still no commission would be due plaintiff, because the purchaser was not procured by him.

On the trial plaintiff sought to supplement the foregoing contract by testifying that he made it a’point, whenever he saw Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
43 So. 993, 119 La. 163, 1907 La. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-jay-la-1907.