325 Mass. 72 | Mass. | 1949
The plaintiff’s intestate, herein called the plaintiff, originally brought this action of contract to recover a broker’s commission for procuring a purchaser for the Lawrence Hotel and nearby cottages at Salisbury Beach. The property, which was owned by the defendant Warner, admittedly was sold by her to one Traynor and one Chadwick, the defendants’ principal contention being that another broker was the. efficient cause of the sale. The defendant McCarthy is the brother-in-law of the de
There was testimony from the plaintiff that in the summer of 1944 the defendants spoke to him about the hotel; that the defendants requested him to sell the hotel and cottages for $25,000 or the hotel without the cottages for $15,000; that the defendant McCarthy in the presence of the defendant Warner asked the plaintiff what his commission would be; and that the plaintiff replied that it would be five per cent. This evidence warranted the jury’s answer to the first question, and it was error not to record it.
On the other question whether the plaintiff could have been found to be the predominating efficient cause of the sale (see Whitcomb v. Bacon, 170 Mass. 479; John T. Burns & Sons Inc. v. Hands, 283 Mass. 420, 423) the jury could have found these facts. In March, 1945, Chadwick, accom-ponied by Mrs. Traynor, while riding on a bus, saw the plaintiff, whom he knew. In the ensuing conversation the plaintiff, learning that Chadwick was giving up another hotel, suggested Salisbury Beach and mentioned the Lawrence Hotel as being for sale. Mrs. Traynor "overheard” the conversation. On April 1, 1945, there was another conversation relative to the Lawrence Hotel in a café in Lawrence, at which the three were present. They "talked it over pro and con,” and the plaintiff explained "what the set-up was.”. Chadwick said that he knew nothing about Salisbury Beach, never had seen the hotel, and did not
It should not have been ruled as matter of law that the plaintiff was not the predominating efficient cause of the sale. While there may have been a lapse of a year between the start of the employment of the plaintiff and the finding of the purchaser, the plaintiff’s authority had not been
The plaintiff’s exceptions are sustained. Thejyerdict entered under leave reserved is set aside, the jury’s answers to the special questions are to be recorded, and the verdict returned by the jury is to stand.
So ordered.