Court Opinion

ID: 5547517
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 19:04:05.749724+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:57.399201
License: Public Domain

PEE CURIAM.
This action was brought to recover the sum of $7,200, the amount of commissions alleged to be due to plaintiff’s assignor under a certain agreement for the purchase of bonds that said assignor, one B. H. Oppenheim, had entered into with defendant. The appeal before us is by the plaintiff from a judgment entered at trial term dismissing the complaint. .At the close of plaintiff’s case, in granting the motion of the defendant that the complaint be dismissed, the learned trial judge delivered the following opinion:
“To recover in this action, the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to establish such a breach of the contract on the part of defendant as would entitle Mr. Oppenheim to recover his whole commission on the whole issue of bonds to the amount of $400,000. The defendant did not decide not to negotiate the balance of the bonds, and it did not fail to cause them to be prepared; but, on the contrary, the second series of $100,000 of bonds were prepared and tendered to Mr. Oppenheim for negotiation, and were refused by him. Unless Mr. Oppenheim was justified, under the contract, in refusing them, and refusing to go any further, this constituted a breach of the contract on his part, and released the defendant from any further obligation under the contract. The whole case, therefore, turns upon the question whether Oppenheim was justified in liis refusal. It is claimed that he was justified by reason of the alleged fact that the proceeds of the first series of bonds had not been expended strictly for the purposes for which the defendant was bound to expend them; but the evidence, m my judgment, does not establish the claim. Mr. Oppenheim, under his contract, had no right to control the manner or the order in which the work was to be prosecuted. As long as the expenditures were incurred for work within the general scope of the act of 1889, or for work preliminary to the inauguration of the system, or any part thereof, contemplated by the act of 1889, it was sufficient. If the application of the proceeds of the bonds can be questioned at all,—as to which there may be a strong doubt,—the authorities of the city of Key West necessarily ought to have a large discretion in directing all preliminary measures, and in the manner and the order of the prosecution of the general plan authorized by the act of 1889, and Mr. Oppenheim could not control the exercise of that discretion. The resolution referred to by the plaintiff’s counsel is not of itself a breach of the contract. Under all the facts as they appear, the motion to dismiss must be granted. There being no dispute as to the facts, there can be nothing to submit to the jury.’’
A careful examination of the evidence does not disclose any dispute as to the facts. Assuming all the testimony offered by plaintiff to be true, and adopting the inferences most favorable to him, we are of the opinion that he had failed to establish a cause of action. We concur in the conclusion of fact reached by the learned trial judge and with the principles of law applied to the case. The record is free from error. The judgment is right, and should be affirmed, with costs to the respondent.