DAILY CAPITAL ' JOCK SAL," SALEM," 0REG05."WEDXESDAT. OCTOBER 25. 1911. OREGON SUPREME COURT DECISIONS Fill Text Pibllihed bj CoirUir of I. A. Turner, Reporter of the Supreme Coart Henry y. Hurler, Multnomah County. Decided October 1, 1911. Charles K. Henry, respondent, v. Ceorge A. Harker, appellant. Appeal from the circuit court for Multnomah county. Hon. C. U. Gantenbeln, Judge. Argued and submitted October 3, 1911. Ongood Putnum and Williams, Wood & Linthicum for appellant. Malarkey. Seabrook & Stott for respondent. Bur nett, J. Reversed. The substance of the complaint Is that along about November, 19U6, the I defendant employed the plaintiff as a real estate broker to find and secure a purchaser for certain real property, situated in Portland, for the sum of $45,000.00 agreeing to pay the plain tiff the usual and customary commis sion paid to real estate agents In said city; that plaintiff accepted the em ployment and In pursuance thereof, on December 15, 1906, found and pro cured Frank C. Ilaker and A. II. Maeg- I ley as purchasers for the premises at . the pnee stipulated, and having noti fied defendant thereof the latter re fused to sell although Baker and Maegley were at all times ready and willing to purchase at that price. The defendant admits his refusal to 8ell the property and admits that the plaintiff notified him that he had sold the property for $45,000.00, but other wise the complaint Is traversed by the denials of the answer. The defendant affirmatively alleges that immediately upon notice of the property having been sold he advised the plaintiff that the alleged sale was unauthorized and that he would not make the same. This allegation of the answer was traversed by the reply. The cause was tried by the court without a Jury. The court In Its findings, after giving the character of the plaintiff as a real estate broker and stating that the de fendant was the owner of an undi vided property described, finds as a matter of fact that no oral communi cations were had between the plaintiff and the defendant concerning the mat ters referred to In the pleadings, and that all the negotiations and transac tions between them are shown to be and consist In correspondence which, no far as we deem It material, Is here set down: 1. "Portland, Oregon, March E, 190C "Mr. O. A. Harker, "Santa Barbara, California. "Dear Sir: I have some prospec tive customers for first street prop erty, and as you are the owner of tho south half of lot No. 7, and tho north half of lot No. 6, In block No. 3, I wish to Inquire whether you will sell this property, and if so what your price would be, and also your terms. If you desire to place this property In my hands for sale on the usual commission basis, 1 will give it my immediate and prompt attention. "Respectfully yours, "CHAUUiS K. HENRY." 2. "Santa Barbara, March 10, 1900. "Mr. Charles K. Henry. "Dear Sir: Yours of March 5 at hand. In reply will say that we will sell the property you mention for $40, 1100.00. Terms cash. Though we are not putting the property on the mar ket, we would bo willing to huve any transaction on tho above terms go through your hands. "My permanent address Is Mill Val ley, Marin County, California. Very truly yours, OKOHOK A. HARKER." 3. "Portland. Oregon, Oct. 9, 1906. "To Dr. George A Harker, "Mill Valley, Marin County, Cal. "Wire best terms on gross price. Forty thousand dollars on First street property. CHARLES K. HENRY." 4. "Portland, Oregon, Oct. IS, 1906. "Dr. George A. Harker, "Mill Valley, Marin County, Cal. "Dear Sir: When I wired you it was my object to get terms on vour place. Your price for it some time ago was $40,000.00, and I had quoted It to several people. At that time it appeared that the tenants were going to move, and buyers did not like to buy with that uncertainty before them. "Would be Dleased to hav vnn atnte your lowest price and terms, allowing me uie usual commission in the event of making the sale. "Trustine to he favnrefl with in early reply, and thanking you in ad vance, i am, respeetrully yours, "CHARLES K. HENRY." 5. "Mill Valley, October 30, 1906. "Mr. Charles K. Henry. "Dear Sir: Your letter of the 18th waB sidetracked In our local post of fice, otherwise I should have answered before. "Since stating my figure on the First street property 1 have decided to make improvements and lease It for a number of years. As It will bring an increased rental I would not sell for $10,000.00 I consider the prop erty a good Investment at $45,000.00 and would not sell below that figure. "Very truly yours, "GEORGE A. HARKER." 6. "Portland, Oregon, Nov. 5, 1906. "Dr. George A. Harker, "Mill Valley, California. "Dear Sir: Just In receipt of your letter of October 30th. eivine the nrlce of $10,000.00 for your First street property, will yon kindly give me a short time, say thirty days. In which to effect the sale at the orlce of J40.- 000.00? For how long does the lease run, ana at wnat rate or Interest? "Would you want all cash, or just what payments would suit you? Kindly let me know at your earliest conven ience, and I will be pleased to make the salo on the usual commission basis. "Trusting I may be favored with an early reply. I am, respectfully yours, "CHARLES K. HENRY." 7. "Mill Valley, November 8, 1906. "Mr. Charles K. Henry. "Dear Sir: Yours of the 5th at hand. I think you must have made a mistake nbout my price. 1 wrote, or it was my Intention to write, $15,000.00 as the price. "According to the terms of the lease I am to spend $.1,000.00 on the prem ises. The lease Is for 5 years at $300.00. "I am not particularly nnxlous to sell, but might consider a cash offer. "Very truly yours, "GEORGE A. HARKER." 8. "Portland. Oregon, Nov. 14, 190G. "Dr. George A. Harker, "Mill Valley, California. "Dear Sir: Replying to your letter of the 8th Inst., I beg to say that It will be difficult to get $15,000.00 for the property under a long time lease at that rate. The long lease bars other people from the property, and Dr. Lyon's PERFECT Tooth Powder Used by people of refine ment in every part of the world where the use of the tooth-brush is known, for Almost Half a Century. does not pay much after deducting the taxes and Insurance. I doubt if I can get more than $42,500.00. However, I will make the best efforts I can, and If I get an offer near that price I will wire you. As I understand It you are asking all cash. Rest assured, Mr. Harker, that I will do the best 1 can to get $45,000.00 for your lot, although I consider It rather high. "Trusting I may be able to effect the sale for you In the near future, I am, respectfully yours, "CHARLES K. HENRY." 9, "Portland, Oregon, Dec. 14, 1906. "Dr. Geo. A. Harker, ".Mill Valley, California. "New Increased assessment makes I property hard to sell. Have tried many buyers for First street property. Best offer I get Is forty-four thousand dollars cash. Wire answer at my expense. CHARLES K. HENRY." 10. "Mill Valley. Cal., Dec. 14, 1906. "Mr. Charles K. Henry, "122 Third St., Portland, Oregon. "Will not sell at price mentioned. "G. A. HARKER." 11. "Portland, Oregon, Dec. 15, 1906. "Dr. George A. Harker, "Mill Valley, California. ".Have sold First street property for your price, $45,000.00. I rebating five hundred dollars of my commission to purchaser to effect sale. Forward ab stract. CHARLES K. HENRY." 12. "Portland, Oregon, Dec. 15, 1906. "Dr. George A. Harker, "Mill Valley, California. "Dear Sir: I wired you yesterday an offer of $44,000.00 for your First street property. On receipt of your reply, I finally prevailed upon the purchaser to come up to your price of $15,000.00, nnd in order to do so I had to rebate five hundred dollars of my commission to them. The new assessment of $37,700. 00 will bring the tax up so high that there Is not much margin for investment. I wired you tmlay notifying you of the sale at your price, $45,000-00 as above, and have accepted a deposit of one thousand dollars on It, and the re mainder to be paid when the abstract nnd title are found perfect. Kindly forward your abstract that it may be brought up to date, that we may get the transaction finally closed. "Respectfully yours, "CHARLES K. HENRY." 13. "Mill Valley, December 17, 1906. "Mr. Charles K. Henry. "Dear Sir: I am In receipt of "your telegram saying that you have a pur chaser for the property at $45,000.00. Though this Is a good price, consid ering the terms of the lease, we have decided on account of the Increasing values not to sell at present. "Regretting to have put you to any trouble, I am, very truly yours, "GEORGE A. HARKER." Greatest Cash Clubbing Offer Ever Made to the People of Oregon Three Newspapers Five Years' Subscription for only One Dollar Read This Carefully. 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These prices are strictly cash in advance, and no commission to postmasters or agents. We challenge any newspaper to duplicate this offer or anywhere near it five years subscription for three Oregon newspapers at an average of twenty cents a year for this reading matter. Can You Afford to Pass This Up? Subscription Blank. Enclosed find $ 1 .00 for which send to my address gived below: Weekly Capital Journal One Year. Weekly Oregonian One Year. Pacific Northwest Three Years. Name. P. O.: State: 14. "Portland, Oregon, Dec. 20, 1906. "Dr. George A. Harker, "Mill Valley,. California. "Your letter of seventeenth a sur prise. I sold your property under written authority, in good faith, for your price, cash. Buyers will insist on delivery, and I shall insist on my commission. Wire ratification or suit will be brought immediately. "CHARLES K HENRY." There is an additional letter from plaintiff to defendant under date of December 21, 19ut but as it only quotes and amplifies upon the tele gram last mentioned, it is not deemed necessary to reproduce it here. The court also made a finding of fact as follows: "11. On December 15. 190G, the plaintiff received from said Frank C. Baker and A. H. Maegley $1,000.00 on account of the purchase price of said real property, and as agent for de fendant signed and delivered to them a receipt for said $1,000.00 In words and figures as follows: Portland, Oregon, Dec. 15, 1906. 'Received from Frank C. Baker and A. H. Maegley the sum of one thou sand ($1,000.00) dollars, as part pay ment, and as earnest of their intention to purchase from Dr. George A.' Har ker, the following real property: 'The north half of lot numbered six (6), and south half of lot numbered seven (7), In block numbered three (3), to the City of Portland, being fifty (50) feet frontage on First street, and building thereon occupied by Martin Furniture company. Sub ject to an existing five-year lease of the Martin Furniture company, at a monthly rental of three hundred ($300) dollars, at the agreed price of forty-five thousand dollars ($45, 000.00), to be paid as follows: 'Forty-four thousand dollars ($44, 000.00), remainder, to be paid In cash on delivery of clear deed and abstract of title. It is hereby agreed that In case of failure of title, or from any other cause, said land is not delivered free of all Incumbrance by a good and sufficient deed, the said above sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) Is to be returned to said Frank C Baker and A. H. Maegley. Fifteen days al lowed to examine abstract of title. 'It Is hereby agreed that the pur chaser is to pay all taxes or street Improvements that may be levied against said property after date of delivery of deed. Purchaser failing to make the payments above specified the deposit money will be forfeited as stipulated damages. 'GEORGE A. HARKER, 'By Charles K. Henry, Agent." 'Note. On completion of this sale I am to pay to Maegley and Baker five hundred dollars ($500.00) of my commission to effect sale. 'C. K. HENRY'." On the findings the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant appeals. Burnett, J. As a preliminary mat ter it is our judgment that the court erred in allowing the plaintiff to tes tify and In finding as a fact the con struction the plaintiff put upon the defendant's letter of November 8, 1906. Tnder the authority of Mahon v. Rankin, 54 Ore. 32$; 102 Pac. 608; 103 Pac. 53, a party or witness may state his own intent, where the same is material, in doing an act or making a declaration, hut he cannot testify as to the intent of another or construe the legal effect of the other's writing. The Intent of the latter Is a quesion for the jury or other trier of the facts and the legal effect of the writing is for the court to determine. The contract in form as alleged In the complaint has been denied by the answer and it is Incumbent upon us to determine whether the letters quoted in the findings prove or con stitute such a contract. In the first letter the plaintiff states that he has some prospective custom ers for First street property and In quires whether the defendant will sell and. If so, upon what terms. The lat ter might well construe this language as the negotiation of a purchaser's broker, and treat the ninlntiff m i, agent of some undisclosed buyer. It is tue plain import of plaintiff's lan guage in the opening paragraph of the communication. It is true that the plnintiff states further to the defendant that "If you desire to place this property In my hands for sale on the usual commis sion basis, I will Kive It my Immediate and prompt attention." The defendant answered this letter giving his terms as forty thousand ($40,000.00) dollars, cash, which would be an apt and suf ficient response to the purchaser's broker. To the suggestion about put ting the property into the plaintiff's hands for sale on the usual commis sion the defendant answered, In ef fect, that they were not putting the property on the market. This would certainly seem to imply that he de clined the offer of plaintiff to take the property for sale. Indeed, the plaintiff himself does not count upon this as a Contract nf emnlnvmont tn he alleges in his complaint that the agreement was made .In the month of November, 1906. That the plaintiff considered the terms of the proposed transaction still open Is shown bv his letter of October 18, 1906, In which he asks the defendant to state his lowest price and terms, allowing the usual commission In the event of making the sale. The negotiations between the plaintiff and the defendant being thus open the defendant had a right to de cline to sell for $40,000.00 and stated In his letter of October 30, "I consider the property a good investment at $45,000.00 and would not sell below that figure." By a fair construction such language does not amount to nxing a price at which he would sell the property, but only as estbllshlng a minimum below which ha u-nuM .,t sell. Bearing in mind the allegations ot tne complaint that the contract was lmiiie in .November, so far as offer and acceptance Is rnm-empH tha i.lunH offer, which he claims was accepted, must be found In his letter of Nov 5. 1906. In the following 1 :1 n 1 1 i era Will you klndlv elvn ma say thirty days in which to effect the sale at the orlce nf Jio.oon.on' Wr,,,m you want all cash, or just what pay ments would suit you? Kindly let me know at vour earliest and I will be nlenseH tn ninka thamU on the usual commission basis." The aeienuants letter of November 8. In response to the plaintiffs letter, last quoted. Is a clear refusal the terms offered. In addition to that ne says. I am not particularly anxious to sell but might consider a cash of fer." This language cannot be con strued Into an acceptance of plain tiff's offer So as tn make n rnntrant of employment between the parties. Cream Cake Makes You Hungry to Look at It By Mrs. Janet ilck'enzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine When company arrives unexpectedly, this cream cake' often covers an other wise embarrassing situation, for :t answers the place of any other dessert as it can be stirred up quickly. K C Cream Caka One-half cup butter; 1 cup sugar; yolks of 2es;gs, beaten tight; IK cups sited flour; 2 level teaspoonfuls A' C Baking J'ouder; cup cold water; whites of 2 eggs, beaten dry. Cream the butter; add the sugar, yolks of eggs and water; then the Hour, sifted three times with the baking pow der; lastly the whites of eggs. Hake in two or three layers; put these together with cream filling, and dredge the top with confectioner's sugar. 84 Cream Filling One-fourth cup sifted flour; tea spoonful salt; 1 cup hot milk; 1 egg, beaten light; 's cup sugar; 1 teaspoon ful vanilla extract; 1 ounce chocolate. Mix flour and salt with a very little cold milk; stir into the hot milk ami cook ten minutes; add the chocolate and stir until it is melted and evenly blended with the flour mixture, then beat in the egg mixed with the sugar, and lastly the vanilla. You need the K C Cook's Book, con taining this and 89 other delicious recipes sent free upon receipt of the colored certificate packed in every 25 cent can of K C Baking Powder. Send to the Jaques Mfg. Co., Chicago The thirty days would expire by the terms of his -own letter-on December 5, 1906. It is elementary that ot con stitute a contract based upon offer and acceptance, the acceptance must coincide with and be in the same terms as the offer, otherwise the con tract is not complete and all that passes between the parties can be deemed only as negotiation. 9 Cyc. 265; Clarke on Contracts, sec. 21. But If we concede that the defendant ac cepted the offer of November 5, 1906, made by the plaintiff, including the terms of thirty days in which to effect the sale at the price named, what is the result? The plaintiff has not per formed his part of the contract for his earliest mention of finding a pur chaser at any price is in his telegram of December 14, 1906. . The plaintiff Is bound by the terms of his own offer, and not having found a purchaser within the time stipulated iie cannot recover. Hardv v. S!ieedy 113 Pac. 1133. There Is jet another obstacle to prevent the plaintiff from recovering in this action, even if his offer to take the property to sell on commis sion had been accepted so as to form a contract. He alleges that he was employed to find and procure a pur chaser and that he performed the contract, all of which is. denied and so he is put upon the proof of his allegation. In performance of such a contract on his part, the seller's real estate broker must do one of two things before he can recover his com mission from his employer. He must furnish his principal a binding con tract executed by an intending pur chaser who Is able to buy and upon whom, If he fails to buy, the principal may have recourse; or the broker must bv some means hrlnir the hiivoi- and seller together or Into communi cation witn each other so they may themselves make the contract and conclude the sale. York v. Nash, 42 Ore. 321, 330; 71 Pac. 59; Hardy v. Sheedy, supra. It is not pretended that the plaintiff secured from Baker and Maegley any contract which the defendant could enforce against them. The receipt quoted in the eleventh finding of fact Is not such a contract and It does not appear that even this receipt was ever exhibited to the de fendant. Hence there is nothing to satisfy the first alternative allowed to the agent in performing his contract to procure a purchaser. The latter alternative is not satisfied by the agent informing his principal that he has sold the property or has found a purchaser without disclosing the iiin. tlty of the intending purchaser, for under such circumstances tho nu-nnr Is authorized to conclude that the broker is himself speculating on the property in violation of his dutj Hay den v. Grillo, 35 Mo. App. 647; Baars v. tiyianu. Minn. 150; Burnett v. Edling. 19 Tex. Civ. App. 711; Gerding v. Haskin, 141 N. Y. 514. In the present case none of the cor respondence. Which, according tr. tha findings constitutes the entire nego tiations, ontains anv Intimnttnn ht. ever about the identity of the proposed puicuasers, ana, ror all that appears, they are unknown to the HefnHont even to this day. It is possible that if the complaint were drawn upon the theory that the defendant had broken the contract resulting in damage to the plaintiff, or that full inrfnrmn by the plaintiff had been waived bv the defendant, a different case would nave been presented. But having pleaded full performance, the ninlntiff is bound by Vie allegation as thus cast, must prove It as laid and until he discloses to the H identity of the intending purchaser eimer Dy a contract signed by the buyer or brlneinc him of the seller In some way, the agent's contract is not performed. The Judgment of the court below is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. o Being disagreeable is censurable, but being a bore is fatal. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C A STO R I A Uneeda Biscuit never disappoint! You have never heard anyone say "The Uneeda Biscuit in that last package were not as good as usual." You have never said it yourself. 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