131 A. 700 | Pa. | 1925
Gilmore and Bentley, respectively appellant and appellee, instituted separate actions against Shaffner et al., vendors of real estate, to recover a sum of money due as commission on the sale thereof. On petition of the vendors, an issue was framed to determine which of the two plaintiffs was entitled to the commission admitted to be due, the fund having been paid into court by the *201 owners. Bentley's claim was in his own right while Gilmore's rested on the allegation that Bentley was his employee and negotiated the sale for him. The jury by its verdict found Bentley was not in the employ of Gilmore and that the latter did not aid in or have anything to do with the sale, Bentley's work being the exclusive and efficient cause of procuring it. There was ample evidence to sustain this conclusion.
Gilmore, however, interposed as a legal defense Bentley's failure to take out a real estate broker's license (Johnson v. Hulings,
In this connection, it should be noted that under Gilmore's contention Bentley was his agent in this transaction, the vendors had a perfect right to pay Bentley, and if he did not account to Gilmore, his right was against Bentley personally, not against the vendors of the property. The issue then would have been unnecessary. The jury, however, found Bentley was not an employee of Gilmore and the latter had nothing to do with the sale; having submitted these questions in the present action, Gilmore is precluded from again raising them. In Saxton v. Morris, supra, the question this court really decided was that discussed on page 347, the facts of which were in effect similar to those just narrated. The question as to who may raise the defense of failure to have a license was not really before the court, though liberally discussed. It is unnecessary in the present case to decide that question, if it is to be considered an open one.
Judgment affirmed.