1. In this action to recover real estate brokerage fees the defendant moved for summary judgment based on the contention that the plaintiff, Clayton McLendon, Inc., a corporation, is not a broker within the meaning of
Code
§§ 84-1412 and 84-1413 and is therefore not entitled to bring the action. The lease in question is signed by the lessor, lessee, and broker, the latter styled Clayton McLendon, Inc., by a named person as its agent. Under
Code Ann.
§ 84-1402 a corporation may be a licensed real estate broker; however, under
Code Ann.
§ 84-1409 the applicant for a license must be a natural person and stand an examination. A license entitles a corporation and one individual therein who has been properly licensed to be “the broker.”
Code Ann.
§ 84-1415. These fairly ambiguous requirements were met (prior to certain- amendments) by the decision in
Goldgar v. North Fulton Realty Co.,
2. The plaintiff, cross appellant, enumerates error on the overruling of its motion to strike the first defense of Diversified Holding Corporation because insufficient as a matter of law, and enumerates the judgment as error for the reasons that the first defense fails to show wherein plaintiff’s acts were fraud
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ulent and seeks speculative damages. Under
Code Ann.
§ 81A-109 (b) the circumstances constituting the fraud must be stated with particularity. At the very least the pleader should designate the occasions on which affirmative misstatements were made and by whom and in what way they were acted upon. Trussed v. United Underwriters, Ltd., 228 FSupp. 757. The defendant here says only that the plaintiff agreed to represent the exclusive interest of the defendant in real property transactions but that the contract sued on was couched in fraud, was contained within a pattern of fraudulent activities, placed its own financial interests above those of the defendant, and denied defendant’s investors and stockholders a fair return. Such allegations are insufficient to raise a justiciable issue on a defense that the contract sued on is void because of fraud in the inception. For an example of an action between a real estate broker and client in which it was held that the broker's fraudulent activity was sufficiently alleged, see Page v. Comert, 243 F2d 245. A pleading should not be stricken, however, if under any state of facts within its framework the pleader might prevail
(Neville v. Buckeye Cellulose Corp.,
The trial court properly denied the motion for summary judgment in case No. 44712. The court erred in not requiring the defendant to make the allegations of fraud in its first defense with particularity.
Judgment affirmed in case No. 44712; reversed in case No. 44719.
