193 Mich. 585 | Mich. | 1916
It appears from the record that plaintiff is a real estate broker in the city of Detroit. His method of doing business, according to his own description of it, is as follows:
‘I go to the records in the city hall and get the names of the owners, or I go right to a certain piece of property, and ask who the owner is; then, if the owner lives there, I call on him.”
If the property is for sale, plaintiff says he picks up such information about it as he can, and starts out to find a purchaser. It is to be inferred from his testimony that he usually arranges with the latter for his compensation. In stating the origin of the present action, plaintiff says:
“In February, 1914, during one of these listing canvasses, I called at 63 Watson street.”
No. 63 Watson street is the property in question in this case. He there met Mrs. Campau, one of the defendants, and learned from her that the property belonged to Mrs. Hanley, and that it was for sale. Mrs. Campau also informed him that the price asked
Plaintiff also testifies that he had hoped to be able to get the property for $16,000, but found he could not. He did, however, succeed in getting Mrs. Hanley to sign a written contract, running to “Alvin G. Sherman et al.,” by which she agreed to make a conveyance for $19,000. Of this amount $500 was to be paid immediately, and the balance at a later period. Having secured Mrs. Hanley’s signature to the contract, he returned to the Shermans, who also signed it. At the time the contract was being executed by Mrs. Hanley, he asked Mrs. Campau and Mrs. Kern to sign it as witnesses. This they did, but in signing it he had them place their names below that of Mrs. Hanley, as if they were parties. Upon plaintiff’s return to the Shermans with the contract, they executed an agreement in writing to pay him a commission of $570 for securing the sale. The agreement states that such payment is understood to be his profit on the agreement to buy and sell secured by him from Mrs. Hanley.
Upon the tender of a check, a little later, to Mrs. Hanley, as payment of the $500, she repudiated the entire transaction, and refused to proceed farther with the sale. A bill was filed by the Shermans for spe
His claim, if we rightly understand it, is based upon two theories:
First, that the defendants, by refusing to perform the contract, became indebted to him for services in procuring a purchaser; and, second, that defendants misrepresented the authority of Mrs. Hanley to make the sale.
At the close of plaintiff's proofs, the trial court directed a verdict against him; and in this the trial court was undoubtedly right. Plaintiff utterly failed to show any contract relations whatever between himself and the defendants, or either of them. He does not testify that they ever asked or in any way employed him to dispose of the property. So far as they are concerned, he was a mere volunteer, hoping to get a commission out of the purchaser. That being true, a misrepresentation as to Mrs. Hanley's authority to make the sale, even if there were such a misrepresentation, could not be made the basis of an action in his behalf. But there is no competent proof showing that there was a misrepresentation. Plaintiff was told, so he says, after the deal fell through, that a party, other than the defendants, would have to be consulted before a sale could be effected. But he fails to furnish any evidence of the fact other than his own hearsay information.
The judgment is affirmed.