Wick v. McLennan

186 S.W. 847, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 681
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 1916
DocketNo. 5603.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 186 S.W. 847 (Wick v. McLennan) 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
Wick v. McLennan, 186 S.W. 847, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 681 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

MOURSUND, J.

Appellants’ statement of the case is adopted, as follows:

Plaintiff (appellee), in his first amended original petition, sought to recover from Frank W. Wick, J. G. Fowler, and O. S. Fowler, as partners in the Wick-Fowler Colonization Company, certain real estate commissions claimed due on a sale made to J. A. Burton and a sale to P. E. Nispel and E. S. Krause, under a general agent’s contract with said partnership, a copy of which contract was attached to the petition as an ex-Mbit. In addition to stating that plaintiff was the procuring cause of said sales, this petition, in line with the -terms of this contract, alleged that said sales were closed through the efforts of plaintiff, and that the lands sold were controlled by the Wick-Fowler Colonization Company. On the Burton deal, $2,560 was claimed due, as of July 6, 1912, and on the Nispel and Krause deal, $640, it being alleged with reference to the latter that there was a special verbal agreement that plaintiff should have $4 per acre on the 160 acres sold, instead of $2 per acre, the amount provided for exchanges in the written contract.

Defendants! first amended original answer alleged, under oath, that the Wick-Fowler Colonization Company was dissolved about June 1, 1912, and that said partnership had no interest whatever in the Burton sale, aft-erwards made, and denied that the land sold was, at the time of sale, controlled by said partnership. It was further alleged by defendants that, after plaintiff had attempted and failed to sell the land for the Wick-Fowler Colonization Company to J. A. Burton and J. F. Ringler, the defendant Wick, individually, contracted with Mrs. Shaw, the then owner of said land, that she should deed this land to whomsoever Wick designated, and that immediately thereafter, on June 26, 1912, Wick himself procured the contract of sale with J. A. Burton and his wife, under which contract this property was, on July 6, 1912, deeded by Mrs. Shaw to J. A. Burton. It was further denied by the defendants that plaintiff was the procuring cause of this salo, or that same was closed through his efforts, but defendants alleged that, on June 15, 1912, plaintiff was discharged, and notified of his discharge, by the Wick-Fowler Colonization Company for violations of his employment contract, for selling lands in South Texas, other than lands the sale of which was controlled by said firm, and that prior to this time he had been notified of the dissolution of this firm and had himself virtually abandoned his employment with them; that plaintiff had represented that he would not claim a commission on this Burton deal, and that Wick had acted upon this representation when he closed his contract with Burton. With reference to the Nispel deal, it was admitted by defendants that a commission had been earned by plaintiff on same, but defendants alleged that this was an exchange of lands, upon which $2 per acre, instead of $4, was to be paid, and that all of the $320 that was due had actually been paid plaintiff. Attached to this pleading, as an exhibit, was an itemized statement showing commissions earned by plaintiff, and advancements made on same by defendants, and. the balance due defendants of $1,451, which amount defendants asked might be offset against anything found due plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s first amended first supplemental *849 petition, after denying most of the defendants’ allegations, and reaffirming the original contentions of plaintiff, alleged that Wick, on June 15, 1912, had fraudulently canceled plaintiff’s contract with a view to precluding plaintiff from receiving a commission on the Burton deal, which he contended had previously been worked up and all but concluded by plaintiff, and that-Wick’s transactions with Mrs. Shaw were part and parcel of such fraudulent scheme on the part of defendants. Plaintiff further set up the statute of two years’ limitation against defendants’ counterclaim for advancements, also alleging that certain of these items of advancement shown in defendants’ first amended original answer covered the Lower deal and the Neal deal, not charged in the account by plaintiff of the commissions earned, while other items, particularly a check of April 3, 1912, for $200, payable to Mrs. Lula I. Mc-Lennan, represented checks cashed for defendant Wick by plaintiff.

The defendants filed a first supplemental answer, denying the allegations of plaintiff’s first amended first supplemental petition; and prior to the announcement of ready, defendants also filed their trial amendment, which withdrew from the account of commissions paid by defendants to plaintiff the above item for $200, and added to defendants’ account of commissions paid an item of $125, and to the account of commissions earned by plaintiff the like sum, due plaintiff by defendant Wick personally on the Neal deal.

The case was submitted to the jury upon special issues, and on the basis of the jury’s answers to these, judgment was rendered, on May 13, 1915, in favor of plaintiff, and against all the defendants, for the sum of $3,155.04, together with interest and costs, and in favor of the defendants C. S. Fowler and J. G. Fowler for a like sum over against the defendant Frank W. Wick. The amount of the judgment, as shown by the decree, as well as by the verdict of the jury, was made up as follows: $2,560, together with interest amounting to $438.18; $320 on the Nispel deal, together with interest amounting to $53.86; and a deduction of $200, together with interest thereon amounting to $17, representing advancements made by the defendants, and allowed as a credit on the amount due plaintiff.

The questions submitted to the jury, with the answers thereto, were as follows:

“Q. (1) Was plaintiff, McLennan, the procuring cause of the trade which was actually consummated by J. A. Burton and wife, purchasing the 1,280 acres of land in Victoria county, Tex. ? By ‘procuring cause,’ as used in this connection, is meant that the efforts, acts, and negotiations, if any, of plaintiff, McLennan, induced the trade which was actually made. Ans. Xes.
“Q. (2) Did the Wick-Fowler Colonization Company, through F. W. Wick, for good cause, and in good faith, cancel their contract with plaintiff, McLennan, on or about June 15, 1912? Ans. No.
‘‘Q. (3) By whom was the 1,2S0 acres of land purchased by Burton and wife in Victoria county, controlled for purposes of sale at the time the contract of sale was made, between Burton and wife and Wick which was actually consummated? Ans. Wick-Fowler Colonization Company.
“Q. (4) Did the plaintiff, McLennan, state to J. A. Burton, before the making of the contract between Burton and wife and Wick, which was actually consummated, that he (McLennan) would not claim any commission if Burton purchased or traded for the 1,280 acres in question, and did Burton communicate such statement, if any such was made, to Wick, and did Wick rely upon said statement, if any such was made, in closing the trade? Ans. No.
“Q. (5) Did the defendants or either of them agree to pay plaintiff, McLennan, $4- per acre commission on the land purchased by Nispel and Krause in Victoria county, or -was he to receive only $2 per acre as provided in the written contract? Ans. Two dollars per acre.
“Q. (6) What amount do you find from the evidence that L. W.

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 847, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wick-v-mclennan-texapp-1916.