45 Minn. 83 | Minn. | 1890
Where a person agrees with a real-estate broker to pay him a commission if he procures a purchaser for his property on specified terms, the broker, in order to entitle him to his commission, is bound to present a purchaser who is ready, able, and willing to buy on the proposed terms; and the principal is not bound to accept a proposed purchaser unless he is able to perform the contract on his part according to the proposed terms. But it is for the principal then to decide whether the person presented is acceptable; and if, without any fraud, concealment, or other improper practice on part of the broker, the principal accepts the person presented, either on the terms previously proposed or upon modified terms then agreed upon, and enters into a binding and enforceable contract with him for the purchase of the property, the commission is fully earned. The party presented is then a purchaser, within the meaning of the contract between the principal and the broker, although the sale is not completed or executed by payment of the consideration' to the vendor. Rice v. Mayo, 107 Mass. 550; Pearson v. Mason, 120 Mass. 53; Coleman v. Meade, 13 Bush, 358; Love v. Miller, 53 Ind. 294; Glentworth v. Luther, 21 Barb. 145; Simonson v. Kissick, 4 Daly, 143; Keyes v. Johnson, 68 Pa. St. 42. In fact the authorities are all one way on thi3 question, the only apparent exception being Richards v. Jackson, 31 Md. 250, which, however, might have been decided upon the ground that the party presented had never entered into any enforceable contract of purchase, the written 'agreement containing a provision giving him the option to release himself of all liability by paying a sum of money as a forfeit. This was the ground upon which Kimberly v. Henderson, 29 Md. 512, was decided. In most of the cases cited by defendant, the proposed purchaser had never been accepted by the principal, and the question generally was whether he was such a person as he ought to have accepted. There is nothing decided in Grosse v. Cooley, 43 Minn. 188, (45 N. W. Rep. 15,) in conflict with the views here expressed. The most that can be claimed from that case is that some facts are referred to in the opinion which would have been wholly immaterial if the principal had accepted the
Defendant’s second assignment of error is clearly without merit. It was wholly immaterial what conversation passed between defendant and Eustis. The important thing was whether plaintiffs or Eustis were the procuring cause of the sale; and all the evidence bearing upon that question was admitted, and submitted to the jury under proper instructions.
Judgment affirmed.