We will not consider the assignments of error seriatim, and only the material ones.
The defendants complain that the court below allowed the plaintiff to amend his pleadings after all the evidence was in and the argument had begun. Plaintiff, in the complaint, alleged: “That by the terms of said contract, the plaintiff was to receive 5% commission of the amount said property brought when same was sold.” The amendment allowed “whether by plaintiff, Mrs. W. C. Corbett, or by another person.” Bearing on this, plaintiff testified: “I am a real-estate agent in the town of Shelby, and exhibit here my license for the years 1924 and 1925. Mrs. Ella M. Corbett and Mrs. W. O. Corbett are one and the same person. I had a contract with Mrs. Ella M. Corbett to sell her property known as the Courtview property in the town of Shelby, and was to receive 5% commission when the property was sold, if I sold it, or if she sold it, or if any one else sold it.”
Amendment of pleading is in the sound discretion of the court below. This is not reviewable here unless there is an abuse of discretion. The amendment added no new cause of action. Johnson v. Telegraph Co., 171 N. C., 130; R. R. v. Dill, 171 N. C., 176; Talley v. Granite Quarries Co., 174 N. C., 445; Brewer v. Ring and Valk, 177 N. C., 485.
It was said in Sams v. Cochran,, 188 N. C., p. 733: “Under our liberal practice, the court below, in its sound discretion, in furtherance of justice, can amend the pleading, before and after judgment, to con*786form to tbe facts proved, keeping in mind always that an amendment cannot change substantially the nature of the action or defense without consent. Our system is broadening and expanding more and more, with the view at all times that a trial should be had on the merits and to prevent injustice.” O. S., 547.
We think the complaint fully sets forth a cause of action.
“Where a broker, authorized to sell at private sale, has commenced a negotiation, the owner cannot, pending the negotiation, take it into his own hands and complete it, either at or below the price limited, and then refuse to pay the commission.” Keys v. Johnson, 68 Penn., p. 42; Martin v. Holly, 104 N. C., 39; Trust Co. v. Goode, 164 N. C., 19.
From the testimony of plaintiff there was a binding contract: “When the property was sold, if I sold it, or if she sold it, or if any one else sold it.” Mrs. Corbett was sui juris, under our law, and had the legal right to make such a contract. She denied plaintiff’s version of the contract. This was a question for the jury. The court below properly refused to grant her motion for judgment as in case of nonsuit at the close of plaintiff’s evidence and at the close of all the evidence. C. S., 567; Fleming v. Holleman, ante, 449.
The assignment of error most earnestly pressed before us by the able counsel for defendants, was the charge of the court below as follows: “Now the defendant, Mrs. Corbett, asks you to answer this issue Nothing.’ She says she had put this property in the hands of Mr. Dorsey, but there was no agreement as to amount of commission she was to pay, and she had right in law to make this kind of contract, if that contract was made. If that was the agreement between herself and Mr. Dorsey and the agreement further was she was to pay him whether he sold the property, or she sold it, or some one else sold it under her direction, then she would be indebted to him, nothing else appearing, to what the service was reasonably worth, or what was the customary charge of real estate agents in this community and territory for making sale of property. In other words, the law would imply a contract on her part whether it was specified or not to be paid what the services were reasonably worth, or the customary charge by real estate agents in this part of the country.”
The defendant says: “It is respectfully submitted that no witness testified to any such statement of facts or any 'statement of facts from which the foregoing could be inferred. Plaintiff emphatically alleges and testifies to the contract of 5 % absolutely due upon sale of property. The defendant testifies that she placed the property with him for sale without stipulated commission.”
An instruction about a material matter which is not based on sufficient evidence, is erroneous. Williams v. Harris, 137 N. C., 460; Smith v. R. R. 174 N. C., 111.
*787C. S., 535, is as follows: “In tbe construction of a pleading for tbe purpose of determining its effect its allegations shall be liberally construed with a view to substantial justice between tbe parties.”
0. S., 552 is as follows: “1. No variance between tbe allegation in a pleading and tbe proof shall be deemed material, unless it has actually misled tbe adverse party to bis prejudice in maintaining bis action upon tbe merits. Whenever it is alleged that a party has been so misled, that fact, and in what respect be has been misled must be proved to tbe satisfaction of tbe court; and thereupon tbe judge may order tbe pleading to be amended upon such terms as shall be just. 2. Where tbe variance is not material as herein provided, tbe judge may direct tbe fact to be found according to tbe evidence, or may order an immediate amendment without costs.”
Mrs. W. C. Corbett, tbe defendant, testified: “She authorized W. N. Dorsey to use bis -best efforts to sell said property, no commission was mentioned. ... I wrote him to sell it at any price rather than to be foreclosed.” Plaintiff performed services in negotiating a large loan, some $48,000. True, she said she paid him just before she left Shelby in July. “He told me be ought to be paid something further for bis services, and I asked him what amount, and be finally wrote $1,000,' and I paid him at that time $500, which be accepted, and with which be seemed to be satisfied. I listed tbe property with him for sale as well as others, but at no time gave him exclusive agency.”
Tbe price that she was asking for tbe property was $90,000. Her evidence shows that plaintiff bad an offer from E. E-. Campbell for $80,000, be submitted tbe offer to her less bis 5% commission. Without revoking tbe agency, she negotiated tbe sale through another in Shelby and closed at $85,000, to tbe same^party — E. E. Campbell — and made a deed to him. Campbell in his testimony stated that another than Dorsey “was tbe first to begin negotiations” and through whom be closed tbe deal and obtained tbe deed.
C. O. Blanton testified: “That Mrs. Corbett said that be (W. N. Dorsey) was her agent and' would get tbe commission anyway, that be bad all the business to attend to, renting, selling and everything, that when it was sold Mr. Dorsey would get his commission out of it.
Q. State whether or not she stated tbe amount of commission be would get? Answer: I don’t think so. I don’t remember whether be stated that or whether she did; something was said about 5%, but I don’t remember which one said it. I believe both told me that, but I am not positive.
Q. State whether or not she stated that Mr. Dorsey was her sole- agent ? Answer: Yes, she did. She said that on several occasions, her sole agent, and that is when she spoke of paying him 5%.
*788Q. State whether or not she had reference to the sale of the Court-view Hotel property when she stated that he was her sole agent. Answer : Yes, that is what she was talking about. •
Q. State whether or not she made any statement about whether he would get the commission if he sold it, or if she sold it, or whoever sold it? Answer: Yes, she said that if she sold it Mr. Dorsey would get the commission and she said: ‘He is my sole agent and has done a great deal for me and I will expect him to have the commission out of the sale of the property.’ ”
We think from the evidence the charge was fully warranted. The jury gave the plaintiff less.than he was suing for, taking the evidence of others than plaintiff on a quantum meruit basis. We cannot see any prejudicial error, the amount being far less than that sued for.
Mordecai’s Law Lectures, vol. 1 (2 ed.), p. 127, says: “Under the old practice the plaintiff generally declared upon the special contract and added also what were called the common counts, so that if he failed on the special contract he could have relief in assumpsit; and now under The Code a party may recover on a quantum meruit, although the conn plaint is on the special contract; or the plaintiff may so frame his complaint as to declare both on the special contract and in quantum meruit; or the complaint may state the cause of action so broadly as to authorize a recovery of either on a quantum meruit or on the special contract. This, however, is a slovenly mode of pleading, tolerated, but not approved, as the cases cited will show.”
There are cases where this principle would not apply. 'When the recovery is restricted by the special contract, and the price agreed upon in the special contract is the standard, the special contract “must of necessity guide the jury.” Mordecai’s Law Lectures, supra, p. 128; Markham v. Markham, 110 N. C., p. 362; Reams v. Wilson, 147 N. C., 304.
In the case at bar, the evidence showed the special contract was not the only standard of recovery, but the evidence, on the entire record, was sufficient to be submitted to the jury, as to quantum meruit. The able judge who tried the case, with more than ordinary care, gave in his charge the law as it applied to the different phases of evidence. We see no reason for the defendants to complain under the facts and circumstances of this case, reviewing the whole evidence as the court did below, and as we now do, in a judicial and nonpartisan view.
From the entire record, we can find no prejudicial or reversible error.
No error.