117 N.Y.S. 216 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
The plaintiff employed the firm of Smith & Verity and the defendant • Mae E. Powell, under separate agreements, to sell a piece of real property, agreeing with each that if they procured a purchaser she would pay a commission of two and one-half per centum of the purchase price for their services. Thereafter plaintiff sold her property to one Rosanna Norman for $2,000. Smith & Verity and their codefendant each claim to have procured the purchaser, and to be solely entitled to said commission, and the plaintiff, being unable to determine to which of the claimants she was indebted, paid neither. Smith & Verity thereupon commenced an action in Justice’s Court to recover under their contract, and the plaintiff thereupon commenced this action of interpleader against both claimants, demanding that they be severally restrained by injunction from proceeding against her in severalty, that she be authorized to pay the money into court, and that upon such payment being made, they be required to interplead and litigate their alleged rights, and she be discharged from liability to either. The defendants answered severally, each admitted the alleged contract with them, denying the alleged contract with the other, averring full performance of their respective contracts, and their sole right to said commission. Smith & Verity demanded a dismissal of the complaint, and Powell an affirmative judgment for fifty dollars and costs. The issues coming on to be tried at Special Term, counsel for the plaintiff opened his case, after which the learned court held that the action could not be maintained, and dismissed the complaint.
The complaint presents all the facts necessary to maintain the action. (Dorn v. Fox, 61 N. Y. 264; Crane v. McDonald, 118 id. 648.) The right to interplead adverse claimants to a brokerage commission on the sale of realty is upheld in Trembley v. Marshall (118 App. Div. 839). The case at bar presents a single sale of real property, with two brokers claiming the right to the commission. One only could have procured the purchaser and been the procuring cause of the sale. The contracts, although separate, were for
The learned Special Term is shown by the record to have dismissed the complaint upon, the sole ground that the agreements upon which the defendants báse their rights to commissions were separate and independent, and that, as matter of law, an action of interpleader could not be maintained. While this was unquestionably the rule as laid down by the early authorities, it has of later years been modified in many cases and wholly ignored in others, as is pointed out in Crane v. McDonald (supra), and at the present time we do not regard it as controlling in this State. As Mr.. Pomeroy well says in his Equity Jurisprudence (§' 1324, note): “ It is a manifest imperfection of the equity jurisdiction that it should be so limited. A person may be and is exposed to danger, vexation and loss from conflicting independent claims to the same thing, as well as from claims which are dependent; and there is certainly nothing in the nature of the remedy which need prevent it from being extended to both classes of demands.” (See, also, Dorn v. Fox, supra; Crane v. McDonald, supra; Mohawk & Hudson R. R. Co. v. Clute, 4 Paige, 384; Redfield v. Supervisors, 1 Clarke Ch. 42; Mayor, etc., of New York v. Flagg, 6 Abb. Pr. 296.)
The judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.
TIirschberg, P. J., Woodward, Burr and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.