122 Va. 465 | Va. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
In an action of assumpsit, the firm of Walker & Mosby, real estate agents, plaintiffs, recovered the judgment under review for $300 against James F. Casey, defendant.
There is no great conflict concerning the essential facts of the transaction out of which this litigation arose, though there is serious diversity of opinion between the parties with respect to their rights flowing therefrom. The material facts, are these: Defendant was the owner of storehouse property located on Main street, in the city of Lynch-burg, which in the year 1911 was unoccupied. At that time a verbal contract of indeterminate duration was entered into between the parties, whereby plaintiff agreed to. lease the property for defendant on a three per cent, commission.
After the expiration of the first lease, no new or different contract was made between plaintiff and defendant, but, with the latter’s approval, a ten-years’ lease of the premises was entered into between plaintiff and another lessee at the same rental, and plaintiff collected two months’ rent from the new tenant from which it deducted commissions as usual and paid the balance to defendant. Then it was that defendant sold the property and parted with his domination over it, thereby terminating plaintiff’s agency. The happening of that contingency was within the contemplation of the parties and understood by them when the contract of agency was entered into. Plaintiff knew from the time defendant first purchased the property that it was his purpose to sell it, and that he intended to do so whenever a purchaser could be found. With that object in view, the property was exclusively listed by defendant with plaintiff for sale for the first six months of his ownership; and afterwards, until it was finally sold, plaintiff, along with others, had authority to sell it. When defendant informed plaintiff that he had given other agents an option to sell the property, it interposed no objection; and not until after the sale had been consummated did plaintiff make known its contention that defendant was liable for commissions on rents thereafter accruing.
The declaration, in addition to the claim for commissions
In these circumstances, there can be no implied liability resting on defendant to pay this demand. .The principle is elementary, that “Assumpsit does not lie in any case except when damages are sought for the breach of a contract, express or implied.” Burks’ PI. & Pr., 120.
In light of these facts,- the original contract of employment not being for a fixed time, or the agency coupled with an interest, defendant could revoke the powers of plaintiff at will and without incurring liability in damages therefor. “When no express or implied agreement exists that the agent shall be retained for a definite time, the power and the right of revocation coincide. Such employments are deemed to be at will merely, and may be terminated at any time by either party, without violating contract obligations or incurring liability. The law presumes that all general employments are thus at will merely, and the burden of proving employment for a definite time rests upon him who alleges it.” Mechem on Agency (1 ed.), section 210.
“If no term of service has been agreed upon, the princi
“A power of attorney to collect the rents from a farm on a certain commission may be revoked at the will of the principal, notwithstanding the fact that the agent has made advances under and upon the faith of it, the power not having been conferred as security for such advances, and the agent being under no legal obligation to make them. Smith v. Dare, 89 Md. 47, 42 Atl. 909. So a power of attorney to collect money for the principal, the attorney to receive as compensation one-half of the net proceeds, is not a power coupled with an interest, and is revocable. Hartley’s Appeal, 58 Pa. 212, 91 Am. Dec. 207. An interest in the proceeds to arise as compensation for executing the power never makes it irrevocable, and a mere power is always revocable at will when it concerns the interest of the principal alone, even though there be an express declaration therein of irrevocability. Blackstone v. Buttermore, 53 Pa. 266.” See also, Perrow v. Rixey, 119 Va. 192, 89 S. E. 101.
Having thus reached the conclusion that defendant was
For these reasons, the judgment must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial (should plaintiff be so advised) in conformity with the views expressed in this opinion.
Reversed.