Court Opinion

ID: 9832565
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 22:00:24.240394+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:48.139669
License: Public Domain

HAMILTON, J.
This was an action to recover a broker’s commission for procuring and effecting tbe exchange, of farm land. Suit was brought by appellee, a real estate agent, upon an express contract between him and appellant by the terms of which, it was alleged, the latter was to pay a commission of 5 per cent, upon the amount of the sale of the land, if it were sold through appellee’s efforts, and 2y2 per cent, of the value of the land was to be paid as commission if an exchange of the land should be made to “some person who had been procured by or through the efforts or instrumentality of the plaintiff.” It was also expressly agreed that ap-pellee should not have an exclusive agency and should receive no commission unless he himself procured the purchaser. Appellant reserved the right to make the sale himself, and it was expressly understood between him and appellee that, if appellant did make the sale, no commission would be paid.
After this contract was made appellant undertook to negotiate an exchange of property with one John Ferguson. For the purpose of trading, he went to see Ferguson, who lived at Hillsboro, Tex., and, after a discussion of propositions and counter propositions, the negotiations were ended without a trade having been made. On that occasion appellant told Ferguson that, if he would find a buyer for appellant’s land, he (appellant) would pay him a commission. Ferguson agreed to try to help find a purchaser for the land, and stated that, if he could find one, he would charge nothing except for his time and gasoline to operate his automobile.
A month or two subsequent to the time of these negotiations with Ferguson appellee saw Ferguson in the town of Milford, Ellis county, Tex., near which place the land was situated, and invited Ferguson to go with him to look at the land with a view to trading for it. Appellee did not disclose to Ferguson that the land which he was going.to inspect was the identical land appellant had theretofore tried to sell or trade to Ferguson. After they had arrived at the farm, and while Ferguson was going over it, he recognized it as appellant’s farm, and asked Dobbs if it was not, to which the latter answered that it was. Ferguson, after looking at the farm, recognized it, it seems, from the description of it appellant had given him when they were trying to bargain with one another over it a month or two previous to this occasion.
Ferguson testified that Dobbs had several times made him a general offer to pay him for finding a purchaser of anything Dobbs had listed for sale.
Several months subsequent to all the above-named events W. N. Wimbish, who lived in Navarro county, was told by his brother-in-law, E. A. Dickson, about appellant’s place being for sale or trade. Wim-bish had a farm in Navarro county which he desired to trade for another of the kind appellant’s was. Dickson, knowing Wimbish’s desire, learned from Ferguson about appellant’s farm and brought Ferguson and Wim-bish together in Hubbard, Hill county, Tex., on the same day that Dickson told Wimbish about appellant’s farm. Wimbish then obtained a description of the farm from Ferguson. In the course of the conversation between Ferguson and Wimbish, Ferguson told him that appellant’s farm was listed with appellee for sale or exchange, but that appellant had reserved the right to sell or exchange it himself. Wimbish stated that he would not deal with a real estate agent at all. A few days after this Wimbish inspected appellant’s farm and also went to see appellant for the purpose of trading. The next day appellant went to Wimbish’s place in Navarro county, where the latter was living and there a trade was closed, whereby an exchange of farms between the parties was made. Later appellee learned about the trade and its terms and demanded a commission. Appellant refused to pay it, whereupon appellee filed this suit, which was tried before the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for appellee, from which appellant has appealed.
Appellant’s first assignment of error is as follows:
“The court erred in refusing to give the third special instruction of the defendant, wherein the issue was presented asking the jury to find for the defendant if they believed the land was sold by defendant to AVimbish through the efforts of the defendant, in describing and pricing the land to Ferguson and enlisting him to send a purchaser, prior 'to the time that plaintiff showed the land to Ferguson, and that defendant had the right to sell the land himself, and that Ferguson did send him a purchaser who bought the land.”
[1-3] We find in appellant’s brief facts there assembled from the record and others there referred to, as contained in the record, which we think abundantly required that the charge should have been given. By the general charge and by special charges, unduly emphasizing appellee’s theory, his contentions are presented to the jury, while nowhere in the general charge or in any special charge given is appellant’s theory of the case laid before the jury. It is uniformly held that a litigant, where he properly requests it, is entitled to have the facts upon which he bases his cause of action or defense clearly and affirmatively presented to the *676jury, and when a defendant presents a special charge, grouping certain facts which the jury may find from the evidence, the legal effect of which is to acquit him of liability, then the court commits reversible error in refusing to give such instruction; the.generál charge containing nothing specifically to indicate such defense. Railway Co. v. MeGlamory, 89 Tex. 635, 35 S. W. 1058; Southern Const. Co. v. Hinkle, 89 S. W. 309. Appellee combats the assignment of error under the view that there was no pleading upon which to invoke the submission of such special charge. This view is not correct. Appellee alleged that he made a certain contract with appellant to procure a purchaser, and that he procured a purchaser and thereby earned his fee. Appellant answered by general denial. This answer was sufficient to put in issue every fact necessary to sustain or defeat the cause of action. There was nothing in the petition calling for any special pleading by defendant, and the general denial met every feature of the case alleged and served to admit the evidence as a defense. All evidence to disprove or rebut a prima facie case was admissible under the answer by general denial. Towne’s Texas Pleading, 532.
[4, 5] There was evidence to the effect that appellant reserved the right to make sale or exchange of the land independent of appellee when it was listed with him; that .appellant tried to trade with Ferguson before appellee showed Ferguson the place; that Ferguson promised to send appellant a purchaser before appellee had mentioned the sale or exchange of the land to Ferguson; that Ferguson, independent of appellee, talked with Wimbish some months after he had gone with appellee to look at the place and that Wimbish following the conversation with Ferguson sought out appellant and traded with him. The evidence also established that Wimbish was first interested in the place by Dickson, who .had learned of it through Ferguson. As hereinabove said, this evidence abundantly warranted the giving of such charge as the first assignment of error shows was requested. And, if these facts were established by the uncontroverted evidence, then we are unable to see how, under these conditions, there could be any liability on appellant’s part to appellee. The circumstances and facts reflected by this evidence interweave into the case too many possible influences in action to permit the conclusion (if this evidence is uncontroverted) that appellee was the procuring cause. Before a broker is entitled to recover a commission, he must show that the buyer' was procured as the proximate result of his efforts; not necessarily that he dealt directly with the purchaser, but that he himself set in motion the chain of events which themselves brought the buyer and seller together, rather than that he remotely and indirectly contributed incidentally to giving some other person information which that person first imparted to the buyer, his kinsman, and himself turned the latter in the direction of the seller, with whom he came in contact and traded.
“It'is not sufficient that the customer was merely influenced to some extent by the broker in entering into the transaction, or that the broker had some negotiations with the customer in reference to the transaction, or that he merely called a prospective purchaser’s attention to the property. The facts that a person with whom the broker unsuccessfully negotiated for a sale called the attention of another party to the property, and that the other finally bought it, do not give the broker a right to a commission.” 9 C. J., 615; Obets v. Maney, 146 S. W. 351.
[6] Conceding, as argued by appellant in this court, that the evidence above referred to was without contradiction, then it was incumbent upon him to ask that a peremptory instruction be given the jury to find for him, and, if refused, to make such ruling the basis of an assignment of error. This he did not do. On the contrary, by the assignments of error throughout the brief he concedes that the evidence makes an issue to be submitted to the jury. This being so, we will not consider his request here made that we reverse the trial court’s judgment and render judgment for appellant. He cannot concede both in the court below and by his assignments of error in this court that the case involved an issue of fact for the jury to decide, and then, inconsistent with such attitude, call upon this court to look through the record to discover that his position is not correct, and fender judgment for him.
For the error indicated, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause remanded.

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