469 A.2d 1232 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1983
The plaintiff is a real estate broker suing to recover a commission. Its claim is based on an oral listing agreement it entered into with the defendants for the sale of the defendants' business and real property.
The plaintiff procured a buyer who thereafter entered into a written sales agreement with the defendant sellers. The only writing evidencing the listing contract is a provision in the sales agreement establishing the plaintiff as the exclusive real estate broker. On the basis of this provision, the plaintiff obtained an attachment on realty owned by the named defendant and the defendant Paulette R. Lamoureux and instituted this action for collection of the brokerage fee. The named defendant now moves to strike the complaint because there is no written agreement as required by General Statutes §
Section
The statute requires that the agreement shall be made in accordance with the provisions of subsection (b). Thornton Real Estate, Inc. v. Lobdell,
The courts have strictly adhered to the language of this statute. See Thornton Real Estate, Inc. v. Lobdell,
supra (court found that absence of a signature of one of the parties was fatal to the brokerage contract). The rationale is that "[i]f a real estate broker fails to obtain a written contract of employment from his customer, he proceeds at his own peril." Good v. Paine FurnitureCo.,
A broker may establish the existence of a valid listing contract where there are several writings which, taken together, would satisfy the statute. Jay Realty,Inc. v. Ahearn Development Corporation,
The plaintiff argues that notwithstanding the applicability of §
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals has adopted, as have a majority of states, the "New Jersey Rule," which denies a commission to a broker under an oral listing contract even where sale of a business is involved. Marina Management Co. v. Brewer,
The court is obligated to dissolve a prejudgment remedy on realty if there is no probable cause to sustain the validity of the plaintiff's underlying claim. Good
v. Paine Furniture Co., supra, 25. The plaintiff here has not sustained its burden in that it has violated §
The named defendant has also properly moved to strike the plaintiff's complaint for failure to state a cause of action. The motion to strike is used to test the legal sufficiency of a pleading. Alarm Applications Co.
v. Simsbury Volunteer Fire Co.,
The named defendant's motion to strike is accordingly granted and the plaintiff's prejudgment attachment is dissolved.