99 P. 526 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1908
At the time of the transaction both plaintiff and defendant were real estate brokers. The former seeks to recover from defendant a broker's commission upon an oral agreement for services rendered in effecting a sale of certain real estate, which agreement, it is alleged, was made with defendant as the agent and broker of Frances D. Kraemer and Frank White, each of whom, with defendant, *373 owned an undivided one-third interest in the property sold. It is alleged in the complaint "that in offering said property for sale the defendant was acting as the agent of said Frances D. Kraemer and of said Frank White as to the interest held by each of them in said property as aforesaid; that as such agent for said Frances D. Kraemer and said Frank White defendant entered into an oral agreement with plaintiff, wherein and whereby the defendant agreed to pay plaintiff a reasonable commission if plaintiff would effect a sale of the property hereinbefore described." It is further alleged that plaintiff effected a sale thereof, by reason whereof and by reason of said agreement there became due to him from the defendant a reasonable commission upon the price for which the property was sold.
Defendant interposed a general demurrer, and also demurred to the complaint specially, alleging as grounds therefor that the cause of action was barred by subdivision 6 of section
Section
Conceding that the compensation recoverable by a broker for selling real estate is the subject of an oral contract between him and another, under which agreement the latter is to recover the commission for effecting the sale, nevertheless, a complaint, in order to state a cause of action upon such oral contract must allege that the one from whom it is sought to recover was by his principal authorized in writing to effect a sale. Therefore, in the absence of an allegation in the complaint showing some written memorandum signed by her, Kraemer could not be chargeable with the payment of a commission to defendant for effecting a sale of her interest in the property. Hence, there was no commission that could be the subject of an oral contract. While a pleading must be construed most strongly against the pleader, nothing appears in the complaint which by any stretch of the imagination could be construed as a memorandum or note subscribed by her and constituting an employment of defendant to make the sale of her interest, from which a promise to pay a reasonable or any commission to defendant could be implied. It is alleged that "in offering the property for sale defendant wasacting as the agent of said Frances D. Kraemer," and "that assuch agent " — that is, such acting agent — he entered into an oral agreement with plaintiff not to pay him what defendant might recover under a written employment signed by Kraemer for effecting a sale of her interest, but a reasonable commission for making a sale of the whole property. It would appear the complaint could not be otherwise drawn; for plaintiff himself testifies, "he (defendant) promised me $1250 commission for the selling of that piece of property (the whole) for $24,500." Assuming the words, "as agent," used in the complaint, as beingdescriptio personae, and that the contract was made in defendant's individual capacity, or considering it made on behalf of Kraemer, for whom it is alleged he was the acting agent, it charges him unconditionally in the one case and his principal in the other with the payment of compensation which, under subdivision 6 of section 1624, Code of Civil Procedure, cannot be recovered in the absence of a written memorandum or note of the agreement. None is alleged, and, therefore, the demurrer should have been sustained.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
Allen, P. J., and Taggart, J., concurred. *375