88 Pa. Super. 206 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1926
Argued May 3, 1926. The plaintiff, an incorporated real estate broker, brought this action of assumpsit for commissions alleged to be due it by the defendant for securing a purchaser for his real estate. The defendant denied that he had ever employed the plaintiff to sell his property. That was the matter in dispute between the parties and was the only question of fact for the consideration of the jury.
We agree with the learned court below that the letters between the parties did not of themselves constitute an employment of the plaintiff by the defendant. The plaintiff did not declare upon them as constituting a contract and the president of the plaintiff company testified on the trial that he did not consider them as *208 effecting a listing of the property with his company for sale. They were entirely consistent with defendant's theory that in the negotiations leading up to the execution of the contract of sale the plaintiff was representing the purchaser and not the seller. But there was testimony, offered on behalf of plaintiff, of an employment by the defendant and an agreement to pay it a commission of three per cent if it procured a purchaser for the property, which was sufficient to carry the case to the jury. The defendant denied such employment in toto, and the jury's verdict should have depended on the decision of this question of fact.
A purchaser satisfactory to the defendant was produced by plaintiff and a written agreement of sale was duly entered into and signed by both parties; and if the jury found that the plaintiff had been employed by defendant and was acting for him in negotiating the sale, plaintiff was entitled to a verdict, in the absence of any evidence in the case of a double employment, or of any compensation or commission paid or payable by the purchaser for plaintiff's services.
If the plaintiff was employed by defendant to sell his property and a commission of three per cent on the purchase price promised if it made a sale, then the commission was earned when defendant entered into the agreement with Rosen, the purchaser produced by plaintiff. Unless the contract of employment provides otherwise, a real estate broker has earned his commission when he procures a party with whom his principal is satisfied and who actually contracts in writing for the property at a price satisfactory to the owner, although the purchaser may afterwards attempt to avoid the contract of purchase: Hipple v. Laird,
The subsequent assignment of the contract of sale by Rosen to Friedman and the matters leading up to the refusal of the latter to accept the property, had no effect on the plaintiff's rights if a contract of employment existed between it and the defendant. The references to them in the plaintiff's statement of claim were surplusage.
The court below consequently erred in affirming defendant's first point, which in effect made plaintiff's recovery dependent on whether Rosen, or Friedman his assignee, was ready, willing and able to purchase the property on the day set for the closing of the transaction.
The first assignment of error is sustained. The judgment is reversed and a new trial awarded.