AMEND
v.
485 PROPERTIES.
Supreme Court of Georgia.
Thuy N. Vu, McKenna, Long & Aldridge, LLP, Bruce Perrin Brown, Atlanta, for appellant.
Jill Warner, Peter Brooks Glass, Kilpatrick Stockton LLP, Atlanta, for appellee.
*566 THOMPSON, Justice.
By way of Amend v. 485 Properties,
The facts giving rise to this question are set forth at length in Amend v. 485 Properties,
The question stems from a conflict in Georgia's case law. The majority of cases have reiterated the long-held rule that procuring cause is a necessary ingredient in a quantum meruit claim brought by a real estate broker.[1] However, a handful of more recent cases would lead one to a contrary conclusion.[2]
It would appear that the contrary view was first expressed in Sharp-Boylston Co. v. Lundeen,
McNatt was a correct decision, but Lundeen failed to interpret and apply it properly. This failure occurred because the Lundeen court only focused upon, and quoted from, a portion of McNatt, which set forth the rules of quantum meruit generally. In so doing, Lundeen overlooked this key language: "The court did not err in charging the jury that the plaintiff could recover if a contract were proved as contended by the plaintiff, but if the jury rejected the oral contract, plaintiff could still recover if he were the procuring cause of the sale." (Emphasis supplied.) McNatt, supra at 8,
Of course, procuring cause is not an element of every quantum meruit claim. See OCGA § 9-2-7; City of Gainesville v. Edwards,
When it comes to a quantum meruit claim brought by a real estate broker, however, the law is different because it adds a fifth element. To recover on quantum meruit, a broker must show:
(1) his performance as agent of services valuable to the defendants; (2) either at the request of the defendants or knowingly accepted by the defendants; (3) the defendants' *568 receipt of which without compensating [the broker] would be unjust; (4) his expectation of compensation at the time of the rendition of the services; (5) and that he was the procuring cause of the completed transaction.
(Emphasis supplied.) Allen v. T.A. Communications,
This requirement that a broker must prove that he is the procuring cause of sale in order to recover in quantum meruit is not, as [Amend] contends, an imposition of an additional and unnecessary element for recovery. . . in quantum meruit. Rather, it is a logical sine qua non to the establishment of the fact that the services rendered were valuable and of benefit to the seller, and thus, it is merely a part of the existing elements required for recovery in quantum meruit.
Van C. Argiris & Co. v. FMC Corp.,
It has been the well-established rule in this jurisdiction, and others,[4] that a real estate broker cannot recover in quantum meruit unless he or she is the procuring cause of the sale. We adhere to this rule. To the extent that Lundeen and its progeny depart from it, they are overruled.
Question answered.
All the Justices concur, except BENHAM, J., who dissents.
BENHAM, Justice, dissenting.
Contrary to the majority, I see "procuring cause" as a limitation on recovery and not as an explicit element of a quantum meruit claim. I read the cases cited by the majority in support of its position as actually supporting the position I espousethe "long-held rule" is that procuring cause is a necessary ingredient in an action based on a contract brought by a real estate broker who had an express or exclusive contract to buy, sell, or lease certain property and the broker sued for the promised commission when the property owner closed the deal without the broker. In fact, it is the more recent appellate decisions, all with their inception in Allen v. T.A. Communications,
As noted by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, "the Georgia Supreme Court has never adopted this `procuring cause' element of a quantum meruit claim." Amend v. 485 Properties,
When a real estate broker sues under an express contract or exclusive listing for compensation, i.e., the commission provided by the express agreement, the owner of the real property is liable for the commission if the *569 broker's negotiations on behalf of the property owner culminated in the sale or lease of the property, or would have so culminated but for the property owner's interference. Bowers v. Greene,
A broker may recover in quantum meruit when the broker is not relying on an express or exclusive contract with a property owner to bring about the sale or lease of the property, but the broker performs valuable services to that end with the expectation of being compensated therefor, the broker's services are accepted by the property owner, and it would be unjust not to compensate the broker for the services. OCGA § 9-2-7 ("Ordinarily, when one renders service . . . which is valuable to another, which the latter accepts, a promise is implied to pay the reasonable value thereof."). See also Christopher Investment Prop., supra,
I fear the majority has taken the law applicable to litigation seeking commissions based on a contractual relationship and has erroneously applied it to litigation in which a real estate broker seeks to recover in quantum meruit for the broker's services. I respectfully disagree with the majority's reconfiguration of this common-law remedy, and I believe the question posed by the Eleventh Circuit should be answered in the negative.
NOTES
Notes
[1] See, e.g., Lifestyle Family v. Lawyers Title Ins. Corp.,
[2] See, e.g., Killearn Partners v. Southeast Properties,
[3] See fn. 2.
[4] See, e.g., MDC Inv. Prop. v. Marando,
