DOTSON ?. MILLIKEN. 209 U.S. Opinion of the Court. found that it would not build, he could not complain. The judge called attention to the failure to specify any time at which the plaintiff began to inquire, and said what we understand to mean that the prayers were based on the theory that if, after the purchaser was ready to complete the sale and the question as to the railroad alone prevented it, the purchaser made an attempt to induce the railroad to build,-and so discovered the truth, and thereupon refused to go on, the plaintiff could not recover. At all events, he said. enough to warn the defendant to make some necessary amendments. He gave as his reason for refusing the instructions asked that they did not undertake to refer to any time prior to the consummation of the sale. The request assumed that no agreement had been reached until Septelnber 15, on evidence which it has not been ne.cessary to state. But the plaintiff's argument was that he had earned his commission on August 25, and there was evidence on which his conclusion might be sustained. On the instructions given we have no doubt that the jury understood the true conditions of the plaintiff's ,case. They were told in terms that if the plaintiff was to recover they must find that the plaintiff did his work and found a purchaser, relying on the defendant's representations, if he made them, and that the purchase failed because they were inaccurate and the railroad had not agreed to build. Judgment a?rmed.
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