Wilson v. Brown

118 S.E. 88, 136 Va. 634, 1923 Va. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 14, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 118 S.E. 88 (Wilson v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Brown, 118 S.E. 88, 136 Va. 634, 1923 Va. LEXIS 110 (Va. 1923).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a proceeding by motion by Wilson against Brown to recover $2,000.00 as commissions for the sale of a tract of timber land. There was a verdict for Wilson for $1,000.00 which he moved the trial court to set aside and to enter judgment in his favor for $2,000.00, but the trial court refused to do this, and entered judgment in his favor for $1,000.00, and he excepted, and applied for and obtained a writ of error from this court.

James Brown and Joseph Brown owned jointly the-tract of land and listed it with Wilson for sale at $8,000.00 net, and agreed to give him all over that sum. he could obtain as compensation for his services. The-listing was on a printed card furnished by Wilson and filled out and signed by the Browns. It contained the following paragraph:

“Price $8,000.00 net, terms ***** For the consideration of advertising and making reasonable-efforts to sell the same, this property is hereby listed with R. Lee Wilson, as exclusive agent, to be withdrawn at any time upon ninety days’ notice. Provided that-if sold directly through his efforts all over and above my price as above stated is forthwith due and payable to-him.”

[1] Wilson claimed to have produced to the owners-a purchaser able, ready and willing to buy on the terms-listed, and at the price of $10,000.00, but that the sale was “defeated solely by the whimsical or unreasonable refusal of the owners to carry out their contract with the plaintiff.” James Brown died before suit was-brought. Hence the action was brought against Joseph [637]*637Brown, the survivor, who had, by the death of James, become the sole owner of the whole tract. He defended chiefly on the ground that no such purchaser had been produced, and that before such purchaser was produced he had revoked the powers of Wilson to sell. Other defenses dependent on disputed questions of fact will be noticed later, so far as necessary. The verdict of the jury, which is abundantly supported by the evidence, settled the right of the plaintiff to recover, and that finding cannot be disturbed unless the trial court committed some error in its rulings on the instructions which may have induced the finding.

No complaint is made of the instructions given, but the refusal to give several instructions tendered by the defendant, and refused, is assigned as cross-error.

The defendant asked for three instructions on the subject that when the terms of sale given to a real estate broker are left blank, a sale for cash is implied, and there is no authority to sell on credit. The instructions were asked in varying language, but they amounted to the same proposition, though some gave more details of the testimony than others. The court gave one of them in the following language:

“The court instructs the jury that the power to sell implies a cash sale, unless expressly authorized to the contrary, and that any extension of time of payment, no matter howsoever small, is not cash.”

[2, 3] There was no error in refusing the other two. The multiplication of instructions does not tend to enlighten the jury, and is a practice to be avoided. Newport News Co. v. Beaumeister, 102 Va. 677, 47 S. E. 821; Wallen v. Wallen, 107 Va. 131, 57 S. E. 596. Where the jury has been sufficiently and correctly instructed on any point, it is not error to refuse further instructions on that point, however correct a tendered instrue[638]*638tion may be. Dupont Co. v. Snead’s Adm’r, 124 Va. 177, 97 S. E. 812.

An exclusive power was given Wilson to sell the land “for the consideration of advertising and making reasonable efforts to sell the land,” which it was agreed could not be withdrawn for a period of ninety days. Within the time limited, and before revocation of his powers, Wilson wrote to different persons about the land, and sent an agent to Baltimore and later to the city of Washington to interview prospective purchasers, and secured one in the latter city ready, able and willing to purchase at the owners’ price. A mistake was made by Wilson in giving the terms of sale to the purchaser. He named half cash and the balance some months thereafter. This offer he promptly communicated to the two.owners by mail on April 6, 1920. On the next day, and before the communication had been received, Wilson met James Brown, one of the joint owners, and informed him of the communication, and of the mistake made in the terms, and told him that the purchaser would pay all cash, if desired. James Brown expressed himself as gratified at the sale as “it will give me some money in my old age,” and made no objection to the terms, nor any request for all cash. On the following day, April 8, 1920, Joseph Brown wrote Wilson: “I am writing you in regards to that land we listed with you. I have bought my uncle’s interest and am not going to sell.”' The statement that he had bought his uncle’s interest was not true. Whether or not James Brown communicated the conversation with Wilson to Joseph Brown does not appear from the reeord, but shortly after April 8, 1920,. Wilson saw Joseph Brown and informed him he was ready to pay him the 18,000.00 cash for the land, but he refused to conclude the sale at that price and wanted $15,000.00 [639]*639net. If it be conceded that Joseph Brown had the power to revoke the joint power given by him and James Brown to Wilson to sell the land, he had no right to do so at that time without accountability to Wilson. Wilson had expended time and money in procuring a purchaser at $10,000.00 and Brown had agreed that the agency to sell should not be withdrawn at any time except upon ninety days’ notice. This was something more than a mere agreement to accept an offer made within a given time. It was' a contract from which Brown could not recede without notice, and escape liability to Wilson. It is generally conceded that, in a case of this kind, the commissions of the agent, or the profit he will make by effecting the sale, is not such an interest as to constitute an “agency coupled with an interest,” and hence the agency or power may be revoked, but this does not absolve the principal from liability to his agent for the loss he has sustained. This subject is very fully considered by Judge Kelly in Atlantic Coast Realty Co. v. Townsend, 124 Va. 490, 98 S. E. 684, and he gives a very full citation of the authorities. Paragraphs 5 and 6 of the syllabus, which are fully sustained by the opinion, are as follows:

[6] “When an agency is not such as to constitute what in legal parlance is called a power coupled with an interest, and no third party’s rights are involved, the agency, so long as it remains unexecuted, may be effectually revoked at the will of the principal, but a wrongful revocation will nevertheless render him liable in damages to his agent. In other words, the agency may always be revoked, but the contract of employment will not necessarily be thereby rescinded.
“In the instant case the brokerage company’s agreement to furnish the money for the development and [640]*640subdivision of the land, and for the expenses of the sales, was a valuable consideration for the agreement that the brokerage company should have the exclusive right of sale for a year.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.E. 88, 136 Va. 634, 1923 Va. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-brown-va-1923.