Yoder v. Randol Nix

1905 OK 128, 83 P. 537, 16 Okla. 308, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 127
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 8, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1905 OK 128 (Yoder v. Randol Nix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yoder v. Randol Nix, 1905 OK 128, 83 P. 537, 16 Okla. 308, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 127 (Okla. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

PaNCOAST, J.:

This was an action brought by defendants in error for commission on the sale of certain real estate under a contract of employment with plaintiff in error. Defendant below demurred to the amended petition, which was overruled. He thereafter filed, a general denial, verified, coupled with certain allegations and admissions, to which plaintiffs replied, and filed their motion for judgment on the pleadings. This motion was sustained, and judgment rendered for defendants in error, and plaintiff in error brings the case here for review.

The action of the trial court in overuling the demurrer oj: plaintiff in error to the amended petition, and in sustaining the motion for judgment upon the pleadings and rendering judgment thereon, are the errors to which our attention is directed.

*310 As to the first ground relied upon, it may be stated as a general rule, the entire duty, and also, the limit of authority, of a broker employed to assist in the sale of property, is to find and introduce or report to his employer a person who is willing and able to purchase the property at the price and upon the terms which the employer has designated. 23 A. & E, Enc. of Law, 900. • .

And, in any specific case, the general rule is of course abridged or extended in accordance with the particular contract of employment, and to such contract, in controversies as to right of compensation, reference must be had for guidance. in determining whether or not the broker has performed his full duty towards his employer, and accomplished all he undertook to do. Millan v. Porter, 31 Mo. App., 563; Maze v. Gordon, 96 Cal., 61.

To plead property, therefore, such a cause of action, it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to incorporate in his petition the requisite allegations of employment, followed by sufficient averments of a compliance with that contract on his part to show he has accomplished the whole of what was entailed upon him thereby. •

In the case, at bar, to apply these general rules thereto, the amended petition alleges that the defendants in error were “To find for said defendant a purchaser” for the land concerned, “at the agreed price of $2750.00, this sum'to be net to the said defendant,” and that plaintiffs were to receive as their compensation for “such services, a commission, which defendant agreed to pay, equal to the difference between the net price of $2750.00, thus set by the said defendant, and the contract price agreed to by the proposed purchaser.”

*311 This, of course, constitutes the contract of employment, specifies the amount of compensation, and defines the conditions upon the full accomplishment and pleading of which depended the right of plaintiffs below to maintain their action.

To meet, then, the requirements of a compliance with their contract;, plaintiffs alleged, in the language of their amended petition, that they “immediately began to search and labor for a purchaser, and finally, on August 15, 1903, they introduced to said defendant.... one H. J. Vandenburg as a purchaser for said land, at the agreed price of $3000.00, and said defendant being satisfied with said purchaser, then and there... .entered into a written contract with said H. J. Vandenburg for the saie of said land, and has since then duly conveyed said land to said purchaser, and did then and there agree to pay the plaintiffs the sum of $250.00 for said services so rendered to defendant,” followed by averments of a demand for payment and refusal thereof.

Under the contract of employment, which the demurrer admitted, the entire duty of the plaintiffs below consisted in finding a purchaser for the land, at the agreed price of $2750.00, net to the said defendant, with the usual proviso attached by the law that the purchaser be ready, willing and able to buy; and the full performance of such duty was necessary to be pleaded, together with an allegation of the contract of employment, to render the petition proof against demurrer, and entitle plaintiffs to recover.

• The allegation as to compliance is that they, the plaintiffs, “introduced to said defendant one H. J. Vandenburg as a purchaser for said land, at the agreed price of $3000.00,” and there being no question raised here or in the'court below *312 as to the willingness of the purchaser to buy or as to his financial ability to consummate a purchase, we think this allegation is amply sufficient to meet the requirements of the contract, that plaintiifs below were to “find a purchaser for said land, at the agreed price of $2750.00.” It follows, therefore, the demurrer to the amended petition was properly overruled.

The action of the court below in sustaining the motion for judgment on the pleadings and rendering judgment thereon is the subject of particular complaint by plaintiff in error, for the reason, as he says “there were certain questions of fact raised by the pleadings which were material to the rights of plaintiff in error, and- which should have been determined by the court or jury.”

Now, the material allegations in the amended petition some one or more of which it was necessary for defendant below to deny in order to raise successfully a direct and essential question of fact, are the contract of employment, the procurement by plaintiff of a purchaser at the agreed price of $3000.00, and that as a result of their procurement of a purchaser, such purchaser and the plaintiff in error entered into a written contract for. the sale of the land at said price of $3000.00.

The answer, as stated before, while it contained a general denial, in another paragraph admitted all the allegations .of the petition and if there be a basis for the action of the court below in sustaining the motion for judgment on the pleadings, it must be found, it would seem in the admissions, in thai part of the answer following the general denial.

*313 After the allegation of certain facts not material for the purpose of this discussion, it is alleged by plaintiff in error that “he entered into a written contract with EL J. Vanden-burg for the saie of said land, and that in accordance with the terms of said contract, the defendant was to make deed to said Vandenburg for said land, and that the said EL J. Vandenburg agreed, to pay as the purchase price for said land the sum of $3000.00,” and that “he agreed to pay the said plaintiffs, Raudo] and Nix, any excess above $2750.00 which he should receive from the said EL J. Vandenburg for said land, in accordance with the contract then and there entered into between defendant and H. J. Vandenburg for the sale of said land.”

Now, thus far, considered in its application to those allegations of the amended petition above mentioned, the answer not only plainly fails to rebut the averment of employment and of a compliance with the terms of the contract, but, on the other hand, definitely and distinctly recognizes the procurement of Vandenburg by plaintiffs below as the purchaser for the land in question, pleads an acceptance of the purchaser by the land owner, and discloses the execution of a binding, valid and enforceable contract of a sale between the two.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1905 OK 128, 83 P. 537, 16 Okla. 308, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yoder-v-randol-nix-okla-1905.