Brennan-Love Co. v. McIntosh
Brennan-Love Co. v. McIntosh
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff began a civil action and recovered judgment in the trial court. The defendant brings the case here for review by proceedings in error. The suit was instituted to recover the sum of $519.25 for services alleged to have been performed and money expended for and on behalf of the defendant in and about the examination of and perfecting the title to certain real estate belonging to one Charles J. Karbach, who procured a loan thereon in the sum of $150,000 from the New York Life Insurance Company through the defendant acting as a broker or loan agent in negotiating and procuring such loau. The alleged contract was a verbal one and the value of services rendered is undisputed. The answer denied any liability on the part of the defendant, denied that it had made the contract as alleged or that any service had been performed or money expended for or on its behalf. The real grounds of the defense interposed were that, while
In a letter of instructions to the plaintiff, as the attorney of the company for the purposes aforesaid, it is stated: “In this and in all similar cases in Avhich you may act for us, please to bear in mind that all your costs and charges are to be paid by the bor'roAver, Avhether the loan goes through or not.” The defendant places considerable stress on this clause as supporting its position that the borroAver, Karbach, and not the defendant, Avas responsible for the value of plaintiff’s services Aidiich are made the basis of the present action. The letter clearly advised the attorney that he must not look to the company for his compensation. It Avould not, lioAvever, preclude the plaintiff from entering into any contract he might think advisable as to Avhom he should look for compensation. The statement that charges and costs are to be paid by the borroAver Avas for the purpose of negativing any responsibility on the part of the company, and left the attorney free to provide for his pay in any manner that he might adopt which was found agreeable and advisable.
The court instructed the jury, at the defendant’s request, that, if they found from the evidence that the defendant acted as a broker for the borrower, Karbach, in procuring him the loan and such agency was known to the plaintiff, then the plaintiff must look to the principal, Karbach, for pay .for his services, and not to the- defendant, unless it was further found that the defendant expressly agreed to pay for said services. As presented to the jury the instructions, as a whole, required them to ascertain from the evidence as a question of fact whether in making the contract, which it is conceded was made with the plaintiff for the services he rendered in and about the examination and perfecting of the title to the real estate offered by the borrower as security, the defendant acted in its own behalf as a principal in the transaction or whether it acted only as the agent of the borrower and for that reason assumed no personable responsibility.
An intelligent understanding of the legal principles applicable in determining the respective rights of the parties requires of us, in addition to what has been said, to speak briefly of the relations existing between the parties at and about the time of the alleged contract by virtue of which the plaintiff prosecutes the present action. The evidence shows that, prior to the time the plaintiff was requested to perform the services for which he sues to recover the value thereof, he had rendered similar service to the defendant in relation to loans made to othér parties through the defendant acting as a loan broker, for which
In each of the two prior transactions had between the plaintiff and the defendant in which the defendant compensated the plaintiff for his services complaint was made to him that his charges were too high. This becomes pertinent in the light of what follows. On March 28 the defendant was advised by telegraph that the insurance company making the loan had accepted the application, and at once obtained from Karbach a written contract authorizing it to secure the loan on terms stated in the contract as to commissions and other expenses to he borne by the borrower in consummating the loan. On the next day, the following conversation occurred between the plaintiff and one of the members of the defendant company, as-testified to by the plaintiff, and which is undisputed :
Q. When did you have your first dealing with the defendant in respect to the matters charged in the petition?
A. In August, 1895 — to matters charged in the petition?
Q. Yes.
A. I beg your pardon — In March, 1896.
Q. Where was your first talk with the defendant, or any one representing the defendant, in that respect? .
A. At the intersection of 16th and Douglas streets was my talk with Mr. Brennan, on the 29th of March, 1896. I think I had not had any talk with him before that.
Q. What relation did Mr. Brennan at that time sustain to the defendant?
A*. I understood him to be its president.
Q. What was said on that occasion at that place?
A. I was on my way to the post-office; it was a little after 12 o’clock on Sunday the 29th day- of March; Mr. Brennan was coming from the direction that I was going,
After testifying with particularity as to the prior relations existing between the plaintiff and the defendant with reference to other loans, in which it appears that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant acting in its own behalf and not as the agent of the borrower, and that the defendant was well acquainted with the relations existing between the plaintiff and the loan company and knew the purport of the letters of instructions and terms upon which the plaintiff was acting as the company’s agent for the purpose of examining titles, etc., the witness testifies to the receipt of papers from the company making the loan with the information that the application for the loan had been accepted; that he notified defendant of that fact by letter, and that a day or two after writing the letter, “Mr. Brennan brought the abstracts of title to niy office, and told me to go ahead with the matter; and I did.” There is much testimony showing what transpired subsequently to plaintiff’s employment, and that all the
By the pleadings, the plaintiff sued on the alleged contract with the defendant for the reasonable value of the services performed thereunder. The defendant denied the contract. The burden of proof was on the plaintiff to prove the contract as alleged. The instruction, when considered with the others given on the courtls own motion, told the jury that in order to hold the defendants personally liable it must appear from the evidence that the plaintiff was dealing with it as a principal and looked to it for his compensation, and so advised it, and that an express contract must have been proven. The evidence justifies the verdict under the instructions referred to when fairly considered. It seems reasonably clear that the defendant entered into the contract with knowledge that the plaintiff was performing for it the required services and looked to it for his compensation. He so stated when it was attempted to have him fix his charges at a specified sum. He said to a member of the firm, “I will charge you what the services are reasonably worth.” If the contract is proven as alleged, as we think it was, it can not be said
It is argued that the court erred in sustaining an objection to certain testimony offered in surrebuttal. Mr. Brennan, a member of the defendant company, was asked on cross-examination if he had in his testimony in the county court in the same case testified to a certain statement just testified to by him in his direct examination, and he answered that he had so testified in the county court. The plaintiff in rebuttal was permitted to call a witness who testified that, in his testimony in the county court, the witness Brennan had not testified to the statement about which he was interrogated on cross-examination and stated that he had. After the plaintiff had introduced his evidence in rebuttal, the defendant called a witness in surrebuttal evidently for the purpose of corroborating the testimony of the witness Brennan as to the disputed. statement claimed to have been made by him in the county court with reference to the conversation had between him and the plaintiff on the Sunday heretofore referred to. An objection to the question was interposed and sustained. The objection was well taken, in any view of the case, because the question was not confined to the particular statement in dispute and regarding which the witness Brennan had been contradicted. An offer was then made to prove by the witness that Brennan had testified in the county court to the same statement testified to by him in the district court ami regarding which he had been contradicted by the plaintiff, in rebuttal. The offer did not correspond to the question to which the objection was sustained, and no ruling appears to have been made by the court on the offer.
There appearing no prejudicial error in the record, the judgment of the district court should be, and therefore is,
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.