269 Mass. 292 | Mass. | 1929
This is an action of contract brought in the District Court to recover a real estate broker’s commission. The declaration contains two counts for the same cause of action. The first count alleges an express contract by which the amount of the commission was fixed. The second count is on a quantum meruit.
The following requests for rulings made by the defendant were refused: “1. On all the evidence the plaintiff is not
The trial, judge made the following findings of fact: “. . . the property was listed by the defendant with the plaintiff originally for the sum of $19,500 to be sold by the plaintiff. After subsequent interviews and many conferences . . . the defendant authorized the plaintiff to sell the property for $18,000 and to take a deposit from the customer. A few days later the plaintiff found a customer who would pay $18,000 for the property in question and . . . .took a deposit from the customer; . . . the plaintiff immediately reported these facts to the defendant, [and] showed the $500 deposit to the defendant . . . after the defendant counted it, [he] said to the plaintiff, ‘All right, you keep the deposit until Saturday and we will go to a lawyer and draft the papers, as I am in certain trouble now and have got to go to a funeral tomorrow morning’ . . . the plaintiff never disclosed to the defendant who the customer was, nor did the defendant ever ask the name or address of the customer.” There was a finding for the plaintiff, a report to the Appellate Division which was dismissed, and an appeal to this court from the order dismissing the report.
Upon the subsidiary findings the plaintiff was entitled to his commission if he procured a customer who was able,
Whether the plaintiff should recover on the first count or on the second depends on whether the amount of his commission was fixed as a term of the defendant’s offer. See Simon v. Lettiere, 257 Mass. 563, 570. Since the evidence is not before us we cannot say that there was not evidence which would have warranted recovery on either. Hence we cannot say that there was error in denying the first and the second requests for rulings. The refusal of the third and the seventh requests was proper for reasons already indicated. There is nothing in the record which makes material the
Order dismissing report affirmed.