Weiss v. Gaines

51 S.W.2d 428, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 601
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1932
DocketNo. 2672.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 51 S.W.2d 428 (Weiss v. Gaines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weiss v. Gaines, 51 S.W.2d 428, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 601 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

This ease presents a suit by R. G. Gaines, a broker, against Martin Weiss for a commission for making sale of property.

In- February, 1923, Martin Weiss owned a laundry in the city of Dallas, consisting of washing machines, compressors, mangles, boilers, engines, delivery trucks, and other attachments, and was carrying on the laundry business under the name of Lakeside Laundry & Cleaning Company, a corporation; Weiss being sole owner.

Gaines alleged that in February, 1923, Weiss employed him to find a purchaser for said property, and agreed to pay him for finding a purchaser and making a sale for the stipulated “sum of $4,000.00, which was equal to 10% of the total amount of the purchase price, as brokerage and as compensation for the services hereinbefore alleged,” the commission to be due and payable when the purchaser had paid the entire amount of the purchase price. The suit is for the said sum, less $250 paid.

Gaines alleges that in February, 1923, ho advised Weiss that he had a purchaser in view who would purchase the laundry, and discussed with Weiss certain property the purchaser had, and the terms of payment, not material to this statement; the total purchase price for said laundry being $40,000.

*429 Gaines alleges that he did find purchasers for said laundry, stock, and equipment in the persons of H. Gendel and M. Weinstein, and to whom Weiss sold said laundry, stock, and equipment, for the tdtal purchase price of $40,000, upon terms and time of payment satisfactory to Weiss, and that on August 2,1929, the entire balance of said purchase money for said property was paid off and satisfied.

Gaines’ original petition was filed on November 4, 1929, and amendments thereto and trial amendment filed subsequently thereto.

Weiss answered by demurrer, general denial, the two-year statute of limitation, the statute of frauds (Rev. St. 1925, art. 3995), specially denied that Gaines was the efficient and procuring cause of the sale of said property ; that, if Gaines negotiated with Gendel, it was voluntary and without Weiss’ knowledge or consent. Weiss further specially answered that he was the owner of sixty shares of the capital stock of the Lakeside Laundry & Cleaning Company, a corporation; that about said time he became acquainted with M. Weinstein, and that he and Weinstein discussed and entered into negotiations for the sale and purchase of certain of the stock of said laundry; that Weinstein introduced to him H. Gendel, and that it was through Wein-stein and no other person that he met Gendel; that Weinstein and Gendel purchased of him thirty shares each of said capital stock; that at no time prior to, during, or subsequent to said introduction of the parties or the negotiations did he (Gaines) claim to act for him (Weiss) and that he never knew that Gaines was claiming to have so acted, or was claiming a commission until shortly before the filing of this suit.

On special issues submitted the jury found:

(1) Martin Weiss engaged R. G. Gaines to sell the laundry for the sum of $40,000 on terms agreeable to Weiss, at an agreed commission of 10 per cent.

(2) R. G. Gaines, acting under such authority, procured a buyer, ready, able, and willing to buy said property for such sum on terms agreeable to Martin Weiss.

(3) R. G. G'aines was the efficient and procuring causé of bringing Weiss, Gendel, and Weinstein together for the purpose of the selling by Weiss and the buying by Gendel and Weinstein of the property in question at a price of $40,000.

(4) Weiss and Gaines made an agreement by which Gaines would not be entitled to the commission until the consideration for the property had been paid in full.

The court entered judgment on the verdict, in favor of Gaines for the unpaid balance of the commission from ithe date it was due and interest thereon, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $4,108.75, from which judgment Weiss duly prosecutes this appeal.

Opinion.

Appellant submits error to the giving of charge No. 1. The contention is made that appellee did not plead that he was to sell any property on terms agreeable to appellant for an. agreed commission of 10 per cent., but expressly pleaded that he was to sell specific property, viz. the physical property and equipment and stock of the corporation for $40,000, and for which he was to receive the fixed sum of $4,000 as commission.

We do not concur in appellant’s interpretation of appellee’s pleading. The petition states that said Lakeside Laundry & Cleaning Company consisted of certain properties, specifying it; that appellant was desirous of selling it; that he employed appel-lee to find a purchaser, and agreed to pay him for finding such purchaser and making said sale a stipulated amount ás thereafter alleged ; that appellee advised appellant that he knew of such purchase, and stated his means for making weekly payments and, his means of securing any unpaid balance, and that appellant proposed to appellee that he would sell the stock and laundry equipment upon terms and conditions which would be satisfactory, stating such terms “to be further agreed upon between the seller and the purchaser satisfactory to said defendant”; that at the request of appellant he went to work to secure said purchaser which would be satisfactory to appellant, and that he did find such purchaser in the person of Gendel, and in his trial amendment added the name of Weinstein; that thereafter appellant, acting in ⅛⅛ own behalf, effected a sale of said properties, with the purchasers procured by ap-pellee. The pleading, we think, is sufficient to justify the submission of the issue.

Appellant submits error in submitting issue No. 2, insisting that to entitle appellee to recover he must do so on terms pleaded by him; that is, if we understand the proposition, on the terms upon which he could make sale of the property. The pleading is sufficient, we think, to tender the issue.

The question, as we view it, has often been before the courts. Weiss had the right to require of Gaines that a purchaser be presented who would purchase upon the exact terms agreed upon, and to have refused a sale upon any terms other than those proposed by him to Gaines. -But when a purchaser, ready, able, and willing to buy is presented to the seller, and the seller directly makes a sale upon terms satisfactory to himself, as alleged, though different from the terms limited to the broker, the rule invoked by appellant does not apply, and the broker is entitled to the commission according to the contract. Conkling v. Krakauer, 70 Tex. 735, 11 S. W. 117, 118; Goodwin v. Gunter, 109 Tex. 56, 185 S. W. 295, 195 S. W. 848; Loomis v. Broaddus & Leavell (Tex. Civ. App.) 134 S. W. 743; *430 Hancock v. Stacy, 103 Tex. 219, 125 S. W. 884.

What we have said above applies to appellant’s fourth proposition claiming error in the court’s refusal to submit appellant’s special issue No. 4. The rule is well settled that, where the broker has found the purchaser, and the owner in person makes the sale to such purchaser on terms satisfactory to himself, he thereby waives the terms to which the broker was confined, and such terms thereafter become immaterial.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W.2d 428, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiss-v-gaines-texapp-1932.