132 P. 559 | Utah | 1913
The appellant, plaintiff below, brought this action to recover a broker’s commission. In this complaint, after stating the corporate capacity of respondent, he in substance alleged that on or about the 16th day of March, 1911, he entered into a contract with the respondent wherein he “agreed to find for said defendant (respondent) a purchaser for certain first mortgage” bonds, and for which services respondent agreed to pay him out of the proceeds derived from the sale of the bonds 2% per cent, of the par value thereof; that said appellant found a purchaser for said bonds, and as a result of the services rendered by him respondent, in July, 1911, sold “$400,000' worth of said bonds to said purchaser;” that said respondent received the money from the sale of said bonds; that for the services rendered as aforesaid respondent is indebted to appellant in the sum of $10,-000, no part of which has been paid. Eespondent answered the complaint by filing a general denial thereto. Upon these issues a trial to the court was had, which resulted in a judgment dismissing the complaint upon respondent’s motion for a nonsuit. Appellant has brought the case to this court on appeal and asks us to reverse the judgment upon various grounds; the principal one being that the court erred in sustaining the motion for a nonsuit and in entering judgment dismissing the appellant’s complaint.
Although the alleged contract is denied in the answer, yet the evidence leaves no doubt that a contract, in substance as alleged in the complaint, was entered into between the parties. Nor is there any doubt that appellant introduced the officers of respondent to the person who subsequently purchased at least at portion of the bonds, and' that some negotiations were entered into by said officers with such person for the
We remark further that there are no charges of bad faith, concealment, or fraud on the part of respondent in this case.
“But in all the cases, under all and varying forms of expression, the fundamental and correct doctrine is that the duty assumed by the broker is to bring the minds of the buyer and seller to an agreement for a sale and the price and terms on which it is to be made, and until that is done his right to commissions does not accrue.”
The foregoing statement of the rule is approved by the Supreme Ccourt of California, in Zeimer v. Antisell, 75 Cal. 512, 17 Fac. 642, and in Ayres v. Thomas, 116 Cal. 144, 47 Fac. 1013.
In Wylie v. Marine National Bank 61 N. T. 416, the rule is stated thus:
‘•Before the broker can he said to have earned his commissions, he must produce a purchaser who is ready and willing to-enter into contract upon his employer’s terms. . . . The broker must he the efficient agent or the procuring cause of the sale. The means employed by him. and his efforts must result in a sale. He must find the purchaser, and the sale must proceed from his-efforts acting as broker.”
The question therefore is: Has appellant brought himself within the foregoing rule ? Upon this question the undisputed evidence is to the effect that after the officers of' respondent had from time to time furnished appellant various-statements and letters recommending the property, maps, and . other data, for the purpose of showing that the property upon which a trust deed was made to secure the payment of the-bonds in question was first-class security, the appellant had utterly failed for a period of several months to secure a purchaser for the bond's. In view of the prevailing conditions as aforesaid, the president of the respondent corporation, on the 27th day of May, 1911, wrote appellant as follows:
“In the matter of disposing of the bonds of the Consolidated Fuel Company, I have been advised by Mr. W. H. Shearman in person and by letters written by you to him that you are unable to dispose of the issue. Therefore, we take this opportunity of canceling our arrangement with you for the sale of said bonds and respectfully request that you return to us the data, maps, etc., supplied for your aid.”
In answer to the foregoing letter, appellant, on June 1,. 1911 replied as follows:
*504 “In. answer to jour letter of May 27th will saj some time ago I received a wire from Mr. Harry A. Lee from New York City requesting me to forward to him all data of the Consolidated Fuel Company in my possession. As it was through Mr. Lee and Mr. W. H. Shearman the matter came to me on receipt of Mr. Lee’s wire I sent all the data to him. On receipt of your letter I immediately notified' Mr. Lee that you had requested return of all data.”
Before writing the foregoing letter, appellant had written to Mr. Lee, who he said was assisting him in his efforts to sell the bonds, as follows:
“I sent you all the papers of the Con. Fuel Co. by American Express on 21st. Nothing could be done here. Money has tightened up here in the last few weeks. The other coal company (Vulcan, I think is the name) the one that owns part of the railroad, got in the Chicago market and their paper was offered to every bank in Chicago. They have not done any business and their operations and proceedings hurt our proposition. I will write Mr. Sweet to-day that I have sent all papers and maps to you.”
Some time prior to the foregoing correspondence, appellant had submitted all the information and data in his possession to a Mr. Caldwell, who was the authorized agent of the purchaser, and who was authorized’ to pass on the question of whether the bonds were desirable or not. After Mr. Caldwell had examined into the matter, he returned all the papers and data to appellant and informed him that his company would not be interested in or purchase the bonds. The whole matter was thus supposed; to be closed, and no doubt would have been so considered even by appellant had it not been for the fact that Mr. L. H. Curtis, a director of the respondent corporation, happened to be in Chicago, and apparently without knowing (this is, however, not material) the precise status of affairs, called at the office of appellant, and, not finding him at his office left the following note for him, to wit:
“Mr. L. H. Curtis, interested in the Consolidated Fuel Co., Salt Lake City, called. Am now leaving the city for two*505 or three days. Would be glad to have an interview with yon on'my return. L. H. 0.”
Mr. Caldwell’s testimony relating to his state of mind with regard to the purchase of the bonds was objected to by appellant, and its admission is assigned as error. The evidence was competent. In McGuire v. Carlson, 61 Ill. App. 295,the law in the headnote is stated as follows:
“In determining the question as to which one of two brokers effected a sale, it is proper to show hy the purchaser what was the state of his mind regarding the purchase of the property after he left the broker claiming the commissions.”
This seems reasonable. Why may not a purchaser, after testifying to the facts, also state whether at a particular time he had concluded not to purchase and that he considered the matter closed so far as he was concerned ? Such a statement is, of course, not conclusive of the question, but it is competent as evidence.
An agency created for the purpose of selling real or personal property upon a commission to be paid in case of sale as compensation for the services rendered is not one coupled with an interest, and may therefore be terminated at any time without the consent of the agent. (Mechem on Agency, sec. 207.)
“The well-settled rule is, if a broker abandons the trade or relinquishes his efforts, the principal is not precluded from negotiating with any person whom the broker has introduced; the broker is not entitled to commisson.”
In Earp v. Cummins, 54 Pa. at page 397, 93 Am. Dec. 718, Mr. Justice Woodward, in a case which in principle is like the one at bar, in referring to the question now under consideration, said:
“But if the services of the broker, whatever they be, fail to accomplish a sale, and several months after the proposed purchaser has decided not to buy, he is induced by other persons to reconsider his resolution, and then makes the purchase as a consequence of such secondary or supervening influence, the broker has no right to the commission.”
“•Wliere an agent opens negotiations for such a sale, fails to 'bring the intending purchaser to definite terms, and the negotiations are abandoned, he is not entitled to a commission, even though the owner of the property subsequently sells the same to the person with whom the agent previously negotiated.”
In addition to the foregoing eases, we refer to the following, which will be found directly in point upon this question: Lipe v. Ludewick, 14 Ill. App. 372; Moore v. Cresap, 109 Iowa, 149, 80 N. W. 399; Markus v. Kenneally, 19 Misc. Rep. 517, 43 N. Y. Supp. 1056; McGuire v. Carlson, supra; Hunn v. Ashton, 121 Iowa, 265, 96 N. W. 745; Wylie v. Marine Nat. Bank, 61 N. Y. 416; Sibbald v. Bethlehem Iron Co., supra.
From what we have said we do not wish to be understood as holding that the principal pending negotiations for the sale may revoke the agent’s authority and may then avail himself of the agent’s efforts to consummate a sale, and after having done so escape liability for the agent’s commission. What we are now passing on and deciding is that under the undisputed facts of this case and the law applicable thereto appellant has not made out a prima facie ■case against respondent, and hence the district court committed no error in sustaining the motion for a nonsuit and in entering judgment dismissing the action.
There are a few other assignments, but they are not of sufficient importance to require separate consideration, since they could not have had any influence in the determination of the case by the district court.
We have carefully examined all of the cases cited by appellant, and, without pausing to review them, it must suffice to say that in our judgment they have no bearing upon the questions involved and decided here.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs to respondent.