(after stating the facts). — 1. On his redirect examination, plaintiff, over the objection of defendant, was permitted to testify that prior to the time defendant authorized him to sell the lease, defendant offered it to him for $1,000, and be bad a letter or memorandum of the contract to that effect typewritten, but defendant refused to sign it. The admission of this evidence would have been error but for the fact that defendant’s counsel, in bis cross-examination of plaintiff, brought out the subject of an offer to sell the lease by defendant to plaintiff.
2. Error is assigned in the permission of the court for plaintiff to amend bis petition and change bis cause of action. There is but one petition in the abstract and it does not purport to be an amended petition, nor is there any statement in the abstract that an amended petition was filed at all, nor does the record show one was filed.
8. In defendant’s examination, bis counsel attempted to meet and deny categorically plaintiff’s evidence of statements made to him by defendant in respect to the contract for the sale of the lease. On objections of plaintiff’s counsel this course of examination of defendant was denied. Greenleaf says: “In some cases, however, leading questions are permitted, even in a di*221rect examination.” Among .the instances where this may he done, he mentions this one, “where a witness, is called to contradict another, who has stated, that such and such expressions were used, or the like, counsel are sometimes permitted to ask, whether those particular expressions were used, or those things said, instead of asking the witness to state what was said.” [1 Greenleaf on Evidence (Lewis Ed.), sec. 435.] The justice of this ruling, we think, is self-evident, but its non-observance does not call for a reversal of a judgment, when the witness’ testimony, as does defendant’s shows a clear, positive and unequivocal denial of- the expressions attributed to him by plaintiff.
4. Error is assigned in the giving of the following instructions for plaintiff:
1. The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence, that the defendant, W. P. Diggs, was occupying the premises on Main street, in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, as the tenant of John J. O’Fallon, on or about the first day of November, 1902, and that the defendant was desirous of disposing of and selling his interest in said lease, and authorized the plaintiff, Frank B. Northrup, to negotiate the sale of the same for the sum of one thousand dollars, and agreed to pay the said Frank B. Northrup for his said services, whatever sum the defendant received above the. sum of one thousand dollars, and that the plaintiff, acting upon the representations and authority of the defendant, effected an agreement for a sale of said leasehold interest for the sum of two thousand dollars, and that said agreement was effected through the representations and efforts of said Northrup, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff in the sum of one thousand dollars, though the transaction was finally closed between the defendant, owner and the purchaser.
“2. The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence, that the plaintiff was requested *222by tbe defendant to find a purchaser for defendant’s lease, and assist defendant in the sale of his lease to the premises on Main street, city of St. Louis, Missouri, and the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff whatever sum the defendant received over and above one thousand dollars for the sale of said lease; and that the plaintiff, relying upon the representations and agreement of the defendant, secured for the defendant a purchaser of said lease for the sum of two thousand dollars, and said lease was sold by the defendant for the sum of two thousand dollars, to the purchaser so secured by the plaintiff, then your verdict shall be for the plaintiff in the sum of one thousand dollars, though the transfer and assignment of the lease was made directly between the defendant owner and the purchaser.”
The petition alleges that through negotiations of-plaintiff with the Mississippi Valley Trust Company, said company, as agent of the Terminal Railroad Company, agreed to pay plaintiff the sum of $2,000 for the lease. Plaintiff’s evidence shows that he offered the lease to Benóist, real estate officer of the Trust Company, for $2,000, but his offer was not accepted by Benoist, and his negotiations, if they can be called negotiations, began and terminated with an offer of the lease for $2,000. The uncontradicted evidence also shows that, the negotiations which terminated in the sale of the lease were carried on between Walsh and •defendant in person, and that plaintiff took no part in, or even had knowledge of these negotiations. Therefore, there is no evidence upon which to predicate instruction No. 1 and it should not have been given.
5. The second instruction is based upon the theory that plaintiff found a party ready, willing and able to buy the lease and brought that party into communication with defendant. The gist of the action, as stated in the petition, is that plaintiff negotiated the sale of the lease for $2,000, and after an agreement had been *223reached between him and the trust company, whereby the latter agreed to pay $2,000 for the lease, the Trust Company paid oyer the money to defendant. The instruction is therefore outside the scope of the petition, and for this reason is erroneous. The evidence offered by plaintiff, including his own and that of Benoist, only shows that plaintiff offered the lease to the Mississippi Yalley Trust Company, the agent of the Terminal Railroad Company, for $2,000; that Benoist told him it Avas too much and he was not ready to take the matter up, and Avould not be until he could ascertain Avhat the fee to the property could be bought for. If this transaction can be dignified as negotiations, then plaintiff began the negotiations for the sale of the lease Avhich finally terminated in its sale for $2,000, and he is entitled to recover, provided he was employed by defendant to make the sale. The term “negotiate,” as used in the petition, we think should be construed to mean conversation in arranging the terms of a contract, and as plaintiff’s conversation with Benoist had reference to a sale of the lease and the terms upon which it could be bought, a jury might be authorized to find that plaintiff began the negotiations which finally resulted in the sale.
For errors noted, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.