This is an action to recover commissions which the plaintiffs claim to have earned as real estate brokers in effecting the lease of certain factory property in Brooklyn, from the American Machine
“To entitle a broker to recover commissions for effecting a sale of real estate,, it is indispensable that he should ¡show that -he was employed -by the owner (or on his behalf) to make the sale.” (Pierce v. Thomas, 4 E. D. Smith, 354.) This doctrine is equally applicable to a case like this, where a broker seeks to recover commissions for effecting a lease of real estate. . “It is well.settled thát if a broker, without a previous- request, brings a customer to á vendor, and the latter, without further acceptance of the broker’s services, takes the customer, the broker is not entitled to compensation.” (Fowler v. Hoschke, 53 App. Div. 327.) In its facts the. case at bar is very much like Haynes v. Fraser (76 App. Div. 627), except that the alleged employment in that case was to effect a sale, and in this case it was.to effect a lease. ■ Here, as there, the defendant certainly did not offer the property, in the first instance, either through the plaintiffs’ agency or otherwise, but the plaintiffs’-connection with the lease arose out of the fact that Mr. Brady had a “ client ” who desired to obtain factory property like that owned by the defendant. ‘ .:
None of the cases cited in the brief for the respondents holds that employment can be made out by such evidence as was adduced in .support. d>f this claim. In Lloyd v. Matthews (51 N. Y. 124) the
Considerable proof was introduced tending to show the existence in Brooklyn of what is called a custom, to the effect that where brokers negotiate a lease of real estate the lessor pays the commission. Such a custom, even if it exists, cannot fasten upon a property owner any liability as the employer of a broker simply because he consents to let his property to someone who is induced to lease it through the agency of the broker without any request, express or implied, on the part of the owner.
The judgment should be reversed.
Goodeioh, P. J., Woodward and J enes, JJ., concurred.
Judgment of the Municipal Court reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.