Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Demarest, J.), entered November 6, 2000 in St. Lawrence County, upon a decision of the court in favor of defendants.
Plaintiff seeks a $15,600 real estate commission from defendants following the sale of their St. Lawrence County farm to Ernest Casner and Sharon Casner. Following a non-jury trial, Supreme Court found that plaintiff failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he was entitled to a commission from this sale. Based upon our review of the record, we can discern no basis upon which to set aside this finding and accordingly affirm.
When the Casners were in the area the following month attempting to negotiate a sale on another farm, they made an impromptu visit to defendants’ home in an attempt to ascertain the asking price for the farm. According to Casner, he did not procure plaintiff’s presence at this visit because of the prior disagreement between plaintiff and Amyot. During the visit, Amyot would not commit to any price nor were any terms of a potential agreement even discussed. Rather, the Casners and defendants just talked and got to know each other. According to defendants, before they would even consider negotiating a deal with the Casners, they needed to satisfy themselves that the Casners were viable purchasers and, in fact, owned all the real and personal property that they had represented they owned. Thus, defendants personally traveled to the Casners’ Pennsylvania home for this purpose. After seeing their home and property, they told the Casners that they wanted $195,000 for the farm and equipment, which the Casners believed was a fair price. A sale was ultimately consummated in April 1998.
We begin by noting that “when a broker opens negotiations between parties but, failing to bring the customer to the terms specified by the owner, abandons them and the owner subsequently sells to the same person, the owner is not liable to the broker for commissions” (Salzano v Pellillo,
While there is no dispute that plaintiff alerted the Casners to the availability of defendants’ farm (as well as numerous other farms in the area) and also brought Casner and Amyot together on that one occasion in January 1998, Supreme Court could rationally conclude that he was by no means responsible for a meeting of the minds between these parties (see, Gabrielli v Cornazzani,
Mercure, J. P., Peters, Mugglin and Lahtinen, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed, with costs.
Notes
. At trial, although Casner and Amyot each testified that the verbal offer was rejected, plaintiff claimed that it was not rejected but that Amyot instead indicated that he had to discuss it with his wife “before he did anything.”
. In his own angry words to Casner following the dispute, plaintiff stated that defendants would “never sell that damn farm [and] could sit on it forever.
