OPINION OF THE COURT
Memorandum.
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs. The certified question should not be answered upon the ground that it is unnecessary.
We decline to accept plaintiffs invitation to overrule
Graff v Billet
(
Chief Judge Kaye (concurring). In the past, reasonable minds differed over the interpretation of a contract provision that a brokerage commission was due and payable “if and when title passes * * *, except for willful default on the part of the seller, in which case the commission shall be payable upon demand after said default.” On February 14, 1985,
Graff v Billet
(
In the appeal now before us, plaintiff — a broker who drafted the commission agreement — virtually copied the key language we construed against the broker in Graff. Plaintiff now argues that the Court was wrong in Graff, and that the case should be overruled. This we refuse to do.
Continuity and predictability are important values for a Court. We should adhere to precedent unless it is clear that a prior decision has produced an unjust or unworkable rule. As Chief Judge Breitel observed in
People v Hobson
(
First,
persons entering into contract and property transactions are guided by court decisions and tailor their agreements to conform to the law. Because “settled rules are necessary and necessarily relied upon, stability and adherence to precedent are generally more important than a better or even a ‘correct’ rule of law”
(Matter of Eckart,
These principles mandate affirmance in the case at hand. Graff has been the law for more than 15 years, and we have no evidence that it has proven unworkable or produced manifest injustice. Brokers and sellers alike rely on Graff. Finally, plaintiff drafted its agreement a full decade after our decision. If plaintiff intended a different result, it should have used other language to say what it meant.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Bellacosa, Smith, Levine, Ciparick, Wesley and Rosenblatt concur in memorandum; Chief Judge Kaye concurs in a separate concurring opinion.
Order affirmed, etc.
