Plaintiff appeals from an order which we construe to constitute, in part, a judgment of dismissal following the sustaining of a demurrer without leave to amend in an action wherein plaintiff seeks to recover a $10,000 commission on an oral agreement for his services as a real estate broker.
The first amended complaint herein аlleges the making of the oral agreement for plaintiff’s employment to sell defendant’s apartment building; that plaintiff was to be compensated at the rate of 5 per cent of the sales price; that plaintiff obtained a purchaser to whom defendant sold the property for $200,000; that defendant signed written escrow instructiоns which provided for the payment of a commission of $2,500 to plaintiff, and that plaintiff did not consent to the reduction of the commission from $10,000 to $2,500.
Plaintiff appealed from the order sustaining the demurrer, which order is nonappealable and the appeal was dismissed.
(Beazell
v.
Schrader,
It is settled that “ [w]hen a demurrer to a complaint has been sustained without leave to amend, the only judgment which properly may be entered is a dismissal of thе
*580
action.”
(Stafford
v.
Ballinger,
There is no dispute that plaintiff is entitled to the $2,500, which аmount is below the jurisdictional limit of the trial court. The parties have stipulated that if plaintiff’s claim is to be so limited, the demurrer was properly sustained on the ground that the superior court lacked jurisdiction.
Plaintiff’s sole contention herein is that the escrow instructions constitute a sufficient writing to satisfy the statute of frauds 1 and hence justify the receipt of parol evidence as to the real agreement between the parties. However, he concludes his petition, and properly so, with the concession that prior to the execution of the escrow instructions defendant was free of “any enforceable” claims on the part of plaintiff.
The question herein is: Where a party to a commission agreement relies upon a particular writing of the other party as a “note or memorandum” in satisfactiоn of the requirements of the statute of frauds, may he introduce parol evidence to show that the writing incorrectly states the amount of commissions as theretofоre agreed upon by the parties!
Signed escrow instructions subscribed by the party to be charged and directed by him to the escrow agent have, where sufficient in cоntent, been held to satisfy the statute of frauds.
(Coulter
v.
Howard,
But the instant case differs from the foregoing eases in that the escrow instructions do provide for a fixed commission in precise and definite terms. In this respect, at least, no ambiguity appears, no construction is necessary and no extrinsic matters are referred to оr incorporated into the writing. Without question if plaintiff is permitted to establish a different agreement than that evidenced by the escrow instructions his purpose and the effect of such a showing would be to vary and contradict the terms of the document which he urges as a sufficient memorandum, or to show a different contract than that tо which such memorandum relates.
The contention is advanced that surplus provisions in a memorandum may be disregarded or corrected without doing violence to the statute, and that hence the instant provisions for commission may be treated as surplusage since the claimed memorandum would have been deemed sufficient without it. But certainly a definite and specific limitation on compensation set forth in the memorandum by the one to be charged manifestly is not intended as surplusage. It must be presumed that defendant intended to obligate himself for the commission stated, and the escrow instructions cannot realistically be construed as a memorandum of any other obligation assumed by defendant.
Although there are apparently no cases directly in point, a similar situation was considered in
Smith
v.
Frans Nelson & Sons, Inc.,
While it is true that in the Smith ease, as well as in the other two cited eases, the escrow failed whereas in the instant ease it is alleged the sale wаs completed, nevertheless each of the plaintiffs in those cases claimed that the commission had been earned regardless of the failure of esсrow. They were ready to show, the statute of frauds permitting, a parol agreement contradicting the condition stated in the instructions by which agreement each wаs entitled to compensation, just as plaintiff herein would show he is entitled to a greater compensation notwithstanding the instant escrow instructions. The cases stand for the proposition that the parol agreement of which the writing is a memorandum must be one whose terms are consistent with the terms of the memorandum.
It is urged that equity will not рermit the statute of frauds itself to become an instrument of fraud. (See
Seymour
v.
Oelrichs,
The complaint alleges a second cause of action in
quantum meruit
for the reasonable value of plaintiff’s services in effecting the sale of defendant’s property. This cause of action is also barred by the statute of frauds. Proof of the broker’s employment for his services is necessary to his recovery, and it has been held that such proof can be made only pursuant to the requirements of the statute of frauds.
(Jamison
v.
Hyde,
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of dismissal is affirmed.
Gibson, C. J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., McComb, J., Peters, J., and Tobriner, J., concurred.
Notes
Civil Code section 1624 provides in part: "The following contracts are invalid, unless the same, or some note or memorandum thereof, is in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged or by his agent: ... 5. An agreement authorizing or employing an agent or broker to purchase or sell real estate for compensation or a commission; . .
