Hull v. Tonkin
Hull v. Tonkin
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
R. D. Hull and Samuel Gutsch, as successors of Hull Brothers, sued- R. G. Tonkin for a real-estate broker’s commission and recovered a judgment, from which he appeals.
His principal contention is that a demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. He owned a section of land which he listed with Hull Brothers, telling them a commission would9 he paid to the agent who made a contract of sale with the purchaser. The firm held some communication with persons interested in the purchase, but closed no contract with them. Through another agent a contract was made for the sale of the land to a different buyer, who later assigned the contract to persons with whom Hull Brothers had been in negotiation. While there was direct testimony that the Hulls did not effect the sale, we think, under all the evidence, there was room for the inference that it was really the result of their efforts, and that a circuitous method of dealing was adopted for the purpose of defeating their claim to a commission.
There was evidence tending to show these facts,
Complaint is made of the overruling of an objection to a question asked of a witness for plaintiff — “When did you first learn that the Hoffmans and Jacobsons had taken this land?” The assumption that the Hoff-mans and Jacobsons had taken the land is said to have been unwarranted. The form of the question can not have been seriously prejudicial.
The court refused to submit to.the jury two special questions: “Did Hull Brothers or Tonkin sell the land in controversy or any part of it to Joseph F. Hoffman?” and the same question with respect to Henry P. Jacobson. Answers to these questions would not have aided in settling- the controversy between the plaintiffs and the defendant. The jury, in response to a question that was submitted, answered that Hull Brothers secured these persons as purchasers for the land. This answer disposed of the vital matter at issue.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- R. D. Hull, Copartners, etc. v. R. G. Tonkin
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. Real-estate Agent — Commissions—Evidence. The evidence in an action for a real-estate agent’s commission held sufficient to authorize a recovery.