162 P. 140 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1917
Appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment entered in favor of defendant.
As foundation for his suit plaintiff alleged the making of an oral contract under which defendant agreed to pay to plaintiff and one Norris a sum of money. The trial judge found all of the facts in favor of plaintiff, but as a conclusion of law determined that the contract was void because it was in violation of subdivision 6 of section
"That on the twenty-eighth day of November, 1913, the plaintiff and one Harry C. Norris had knowledge of the fact that a certain person in Los Angeles, California, was desirous of buying a small improved ranch, with dwelling-house thereon, and had been informed that such person was able and willing to pay cash for any property that he might determine to buy; that plaintiff and the said Norris also had information at said time that such person would not negotiate the purchase of any property through any real estate agent or agency.
"That on the said twenty-eighth day of November, the defendant was the owner of a ranch located one and one-fourth miles from the Santa Ana car line and due north of Garden Grove Station on the Anaheim-Long Beach oiled road in Orange county, state of California, . . .; and that the plaintiff and said Norris knew, at said time, that the defendant *103 was offering said ranch for sale through and by reason of a circular published by the defendant. . . .
"That on the said twenty-eighth day of November, the plaintiff and said Norris told the defendant that they knew of a person desiring to purchase for cash a small improved ranch, and they also informed defendant, at said time, that they believed that defendant's said ranch would suit such person, but that it would be useless for the plaintiff and said Norris, or either of them, to show or undertake to negotiate a sale of the defendant's said property to the person to whom they referred, for the reason that said person would not deal with or purchase property through any real estate agent or agency; that thereupon, and on the said twenty-eighth day of November, at the city of Los Angeles, in said Los Angeles county, the defendant orally promised and agreed to and with the plaintiff and the said Norris, that in consideration of the plaintiff and the said Norris putting the defendant in possession of information as to the identity and residence of such person, that he, the defendant, would personally endeavor to sell his said twenty-acre ranch to such person, and in case he should make a sale thereof to such person, then he, the defendant, would pay the plaintiff and the said Norris for such information a commission equal to five per cent of any price at which he, the defendant, might sell his said ranch to such person, and the plaintiff and said Norris, in consideration of the said promise of the defendant, orally promised and agreed to put the defendant in possession of the said information; and the court finds that said agreement between the plaintiff and said Norris and the defendant was oral and not in writing.
"That thereafter, and pursuant to the said oral agreement, the plaintiff and said Norris, at the said city of Los Angeles, gave to the defendant the name and residence of one Frank Meier, being the person whom the plaintiff and said Norris knew was desirous of buying for cash a small improved ranch, as hereinbefore set forth; and that thereafter the defendant dealt and negotiated with the said Frank Meier, and thereafter, and before the commencement of this action, the defendant sold his said ranch to the said Meier, at the price of sixteen thousand dollars ($16,000)."
The findings further recite that no writing had been made evidencing the contract, and that payment of the amount of *104 plaintiff's claim had been demanded and refused. A further finding appeared as to the assignment of the interest of Norris to this plaintiff.
It is the contention of the appellant that the contract as made was not a contract employing an agent or broker to purchase or sell real estate; that the contract as made involved no services to be rendered by any such agent or broker, and provided merely for the sale of certain information to the defendant by which a buyer for the defendant's property was secured through the efforts of the defendant. The case ofKincart v. Shambrook,
The judgment is affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred.