Whitelock v. Beach

Decision Date03 November 1913
Citation160 S.W. 815,174 Mo.App. 428
PartiesJ. M. WHITELOCK et al., Respondents, v. W. B. BEACH, Appellant
CourtKansas Court of Appeals

Appeal from Adair Circuit Court.--Hon. Nat. M. Shelton, Judge.

REVERSED AND REMANDED (with directions).

Higbee & Mills for appellant.

J. A Cooley, and Weatherby & Frank for respondents.

OPINION

ELLISON, P. J.

Plaintiffs, Whitelock & Gregory, real estate agents, and defendant had a contract wherein the former were engaged to sell the latter's farm in Adair county at eighty dollars per acre, for which they were to receive two dollars per acre as their commission for making a sale. Their agency was limited to three months. It appears that one Johnson became interested with Whitelock & Gregory in an effort to make a sale and he is made a party plaintiff.

Finally after the time limited in the contract had expired, a sale or exchange was made to Gelbach, the latter putting in his farm and paying defendant $ 10,500 in money. There is some controversy between the parties concerning the sale, which will not be necessary to notice.

This action was brought on the original contract and plaintiffs seek to recover a commission of two dollars per acre as agreed in that contract. On a trial with the aid of a jury a verdict was returned for the defendant. Thereafter plaintiffs asked a new trial, which the court granted, and from that order defendant appealed.

The evidence showed that after the expiration of the time limited in the original contract the parties entered into a new contract whereby the time of plaintiffs' agency was extended; and there was evidence tending to show the terms of sale were changed to seventy-five dollars per acre with a commission of one dollar per acre, and the court gave an instruction for defendant that if the jury believed the latter contract was made the verdict should be for defendant. The court afterwards concluded that since defendant's answer was merely a general denial, it erred in giving that instruction, and that was assigned as the reason for granting a new trial.

Since the sale or exchange was made several weeks after the contract sued on had expired, it became nullified by its own limitation. The petition, based solely on the contract, while setting out its terms and a sale, adroitly omits to allege the date of the sale. If it had done so it, of course, would have affirmatively shown there was no cause of action. But when plaintiffs came to show their case in evidence they showed the contract as declared upon, but also showed the sale was made after that contract had become of no effect. They sought to avoid this self-destruction by showing another contract extending the time of the original. This, if viewed as a modification of the contract, should have been pleaded, since that was vital to a cause of action. [Lanitz v. King, 93 Mo. 513, 6 S.W. 263; Koons v. Car Co., 203 Mo. 227, 259...

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