Court Opinion

ID: 3956802
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:17:54.95223+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:39.769187
License: Public Domain

If the sale had been consummated under the contract made by the agents of Perry  Cram, for A. E. Cooley, on July 10, 1921, or even if Cooley had unqualifiedly assented to the contract and directed the agents to give further attention to the matter in consummating the same, and the sale was not consummated through some defect of title or fault on the part of Cooley, then he would, we think, be liable for the 5 per cent. commission. Riedel v. Wenzel (Tex. Civ. App.) 186 S.W. 386.
The contract of July 10th was unauthorized. Cooley was not informed that the agents had signed a contract binding him to sell the land. He did not assent to the sale unconditionally, but sent the deed to his brother, and informed the agents that he did "not know how the land was used, so had to leave it all to my brother." This, as well as the previous reference of the agents to his brother for information as to when possession of the land could be delivered, was notice to the agents that the question of possession must be satisfactorily arranged as a condition to the sale. If, therefore, the sale was not consummated because of the matter of delivery of possession, the agents were not entitled to their commission. Perry testified that the "final conclusion" of the proposed purchaser was that he would not take the land because the tenant thereon would not deliver possession until the 1st of January.
The defendant, and not the plaintiff, was entitled to the peremptory instruction. We have had some doubt, and even difference of opinion among ourselves, as to whether we should not reverse and render the case, but have concluded to remand it.
Reversed and remanded.