Thompson v. First Methodist Episcopal Church

38 S.W.2d 561, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 2133
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1931
DocketNo. 1258-5646
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 S.W.2d 561 (Thompson v. First Methodist Episcopal Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. First Methodist Episcopal Church, 38 S.W.2d 561, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 2133 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

SHOET, P. J.

The opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals in this case is reported in 22 S.W.(2d) 346, wherein that court reversed the judgment of the trial court, which rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in error, and remanded the cause for another trial, on the ground that the evidence was insufficient, under the law, to show that the defendant in error had notice of the agreement between the plaintiff in error and Fred' W. Cathey, by the terms of which Cathey agreed to pay to the plaintiff in error one-third of the commissions he might receive in the event Cathey succeeded in making a sale of property belonging to the defendant in error.

The defendant in error, a private corporation, in the month of November, 1925, and previous thereto, owned a parcel of land situated in the city of Dallas, at the southeast corner of the intersection of Harwood and Eoss avenue, on which was situated a brick structure known as the First Methodist Episcopal Church of Dallas, Tex., which property it desired to sell, and finally did sell to another church, known as the Abbey Presbyterian Church, the price paid being $125,000. This sale was effected under and by virtue of a contract made with Fred W. Cathey, a real estate agent, who was to receive, and in fact did receive, as his commissions, the sum of $5,000, one-half of which was paid in the month of December, 1925, and the remainder of which was paid about the 1st of March, 1926. There is no controversy between the plaintiff in error and the defendant in error about the sum of money the latter was due to pay for the services rendered in procuring a purchaser for its property. However, this controversy has arisen by reason of the fact that the plaintiff in error clfiims that, before the defendant in error paid Cathey the second installment of $2,500, as the procuring agent of a purchaser of its property, the plaintiff in error had notified it that there was an agreement between Cathey and the plaintiff in error that whatever commissions Cathey might receive for these services should be divided on the basis of one-third to the plaintiff in error and two-thirds to Cathey and one White, with whom Cathey was doing business as a real estate agent, and that, notwithstanding this notice, the defendant in error paid Cathey, who was allcged^o be insolvent, all of said $5,000, and that, having so paid him, with notice of the claim of the plaintiff in error to participate in the fund, the defendant in error, in view of Cathey’s insolvency, was liable to pay the plaintiff in error one-third of said fund so wrongfully paid to Cathey.

The case was tried to a jury upon two special issues only, no other having been requested by either party, and the jury answered issue No. 1 in the affirmative, to the effect that there was an agreement between the plaintiff in error and Cathey, under the terms of which Cathey agreed to pay the plaintiff in error one-third of the commissions he might receive, in the event Cathey should succeed in making a sale of the property belonging to the defendant in error, and also answered in the affirmative issue No. 2, to the effect that the •board of trustees of the defendant in error had notice of such agreement before it made the final payment to Cathey of the commissions agreed to be paid. Judgment was entered in accordance with these answers. Cathey, against whom judgment was rendered, did not prosecute any appeal from that judgment, but the defendant in error did, with the result above stated.

While the record is'voluminous and several propositions are presented, we think the case, as made by the record, presented by the application for the writ of error, must, depend upon the legal sufficiency of the testimony to support the answer of the jury, to the effect that the board of trustees had notice of the agreement which the jury found had been made between the plaintiff in error and Cathey to divide the commissions Cathey might earn in procuring the sale of the property before said ■board of trustees made final payment to Cath-ey of said commissions.

Before entering upon a discussion of this question, wo deem it proper to say that the record discloses, without contradiction, under the unchallenged facts found by the jury, that the defendant in error occupied the position of a stakeholder, having in its possession the sum of $5,000, which, up to the time it received notice from the plaintiff in error of a claim to a part of said fund, it was under the obligation to pay to Cathey, as commissions, for services rendered in procuring the sale of its property. The testimony tending to show notice of the claim made to a part of this fund was partly in the form of two letters, one dated November 24,1925, and the other February 26, 1926, the latter date being previous to a final payment of said commissions by the defendant in error to Cathey. Since these let[563]*563ters are set out in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, we will only give the substance of them.

• The letter dated November 24, 1925, stated that the plaintiff in error had received from the defendant in error’s representative the price it was willing to accept for the property, and that, after receiving this information, the plaintiff in error offered the property for this price to the representative of the Abbey Presbyterian Church, in effect claiming that the plaintiff in error had acted by authority of the defendant in error in offering the property for sale at the price mentioned to the Abbey Presbyterian Church through its representative, which afterwards bought the property at that price, and stating, in effect, that he expected the defendant in error to pay him a commission which was just and right.

The letter dated February 26, 1926, in effect, stated that it was through the plaintiff in error that Cathey had obtained his data regarding the property belonging to the defendant in error, and also the name of the purchaser, who afterwards purchased the property, and it notified the defendant in error not to pay all of Cathey’s commission without first satisfying his claim. Among other allegations of the petition was one of the existence of a custom in the city of Dallas, among real estate agents and property owners, that if a person, who is regularly engaged in such a business, as the plaintiff in error is shown to have been, found a purchaser for an owner’s property which was on the market for sale, and put such purchaser in touch with the owner, and the sale was thereby effected, the owner became liable for said agent’s commission, the amount of which is also alleged to have been, by custom, fixed at 5 per cent. The petition also contained the further allegation that the general rule among real estate agents in the city of Dallas was that, when one agent obtained the listing of a piece of property, and was directed to find a purchaser for same, and engaged another agent to help him in such sale, the commissions earned on said sale were equally divided, but that in this instance the agreement was that the plaintiff in error should receive only one-third, the other two-thirds to be divided between Cathey and an associate of the latter. These allegations were established by uncontradicted testimony, the sufficiency of which is not challenged.

In addition to the two letters above mentioned, the execution and reception of which were acknowledged by the defendant in error, the record contains other testimony tending to show that the defendant in error had notice of the plaintiff in error’s claim to some interest in this fund, though the testimony on this subject is meager, and yet the jury were entitled to give it whatever weight they saw proper.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.W.2d 561, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 2133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-first-methodist-episcopal-church-texcommnapp-1931.