48 Pa. Super. 382 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1911
Opinion by
The plaintiff is a real estate broker and brought this action to recover commissions upon a sale of real estate alleged to have been made through his agency. The fact that the defendant had on August 3, 1907, employed the plaintiff to procure a purchaser for the property was not disputed. The evidence established that the property had been sold by the defendant, on October 5, 1907, to the Excelsior Drum Works, the purchaser having been repre
The first point presented by the plaintiff, stripped of its unnecessary recitals of facts, in substance, requested the court to charge: “If the jury believe .... that the plaintiff or his employees .... first brought the attention of the property to A. G. Soistman, an officer of the Excelsior Drum Works, and further believe that the Excelsior Drum Works subsequently purchased the property, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover a commission on the purchase price.” This point the learned judge of the court below, in the hurry of the trial, affirmed, which ruling is the subject of the third specification of error. The jury were thus instructed that the right of the plaintiff to recover was dependent upon two facts only: (a) Did he first bring the attention of the property to the officer of the Excelsior Drum Works, and (b) Did the Excelsior Drum Works subsequently purchase the property. This entirely eliminated from the consideration of the jury any question as to whether the action of the plaintiff, as agent, was the efficient cause of the sale. When in an action by a real estate broker to recover commissions for the sale of property the evidence in the case is of the character here presented, the burden upon the plaintiff is to satisfy the jury that the service rendered by him as agent was the immediate and efficient cause of the sale. “ If a mere introduction of the property to the notice of the buyer effects the sale, the broker earns his commission. An advertisement or any other service is enough if it be the immediate and efficient cause of the bargain. But if the services of the broker, whatever they be, fail
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.