192 A.D. 353 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
This is an action for commissions upon the sale of the stock of a corporation which involved the transfer of a lease of substantial value. The case has been twice tried. Upon the original trial the complaint was dismissed and judgment was directed for defendant upon the counterclaim. This was reversed by the Appellate Term. (173 N. Y. Supp. 383.) Upon the second trial the jury found for the plaintiff, both upon his cause of action and upon the defendant’s counterclaim. This was affirmed by the Appellate Term, and from that affirmance this appeal is taken.
The defendant Schwartz apparently was the owner of the lease upon premises known as 219-223 West Seventy-seventh street in the borough of Manhattan. He had just organized a corporation known as the Wellsmore Garage, Incorporated. He had assigned, or was about to assign, to this corporation this lease. He owned all the stock of the corporation. He desired to sell- the stock of this corporation which would carry the right of this lease, and the plaintiff was employed for that purpose. The terms that he first named were $30,000 as a first payment, and $16,500 per year as rent. Thé plaintiff, acting through one Allen as his agent, negotiated with the National Garage Company for this transfer, but the National Garage Company was unwilling to pay the amount named. He succeeded in bringing the parties together upon the 12th day of October, 1917. Negotions were had between them and terms were thereafter agreed upon and the formal contract signed upon the, eighteenth day of October. Prior to that time Schwartz had a further talk with Allen representing
“ Now, therefore, it is agreed:
“ 1. The vendor agrees to and hereby does sell and set over unto the vendee all of the capital stock of the said Wellsmore Garage, Inc., under the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth.
“ 2. The vendee hereby agrees to pay for said stock Twenty-five Thousand Dollars, payable as follows:
“ Seventy-five Hundred Dollars in cash, upon the execution of this agreement, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged.
“ Eighty-five Hundred Dollars — Forty-two Hundred Fifty Dollars upon the occupancy of the vendee of such garage building, and Forty-two Hundred Fifty Dollars upon the substantial completion of said building. In the event that the building is substantially completed prior to March 15th, 1918, then the sum of Eighty-five Hundred Dollars shall be paid upon the occupancy of the said garage by the Wellsmore Garage, Inc., or the vendee hereunder.
“ One note for Two Thousand Dollars, with interest at six per cent, payable six months after the said garage is substantially completed and delivered to the said Wellsmore Garage, Inc.;
“ One note for Two Thousand Dollars, with interest at six per cent, payable twelve months after the said garage has*356 been substantially completed and delivered to the said Wells-more Garage, Inc.;
“ One Note for Twenty-five Hundred Dollars, with interest at six per cent, payable two years after the said garage has been substantially completed and delivered to the Wellsmore Garage, Inc.; and
“ One note for Twenty-five Hundred Dollars, with interest at six per cent, payable three years after the said garage has been substantially completed and delivered to the Wells-more Garage, Inc.
“ 3. It is understood and agreed that until the completion of said building and the payments to be made hereunder, the said stock of the Wellsmore Garage, Inc., sold and set over, as provided in Paragraph * 1 ’ herein, shall be assigned in blank by the vendee and held by the vendor as collateral security for the payment of the aforesaid sums, to be returned to the vendee upon the payment of the last note required to be paid hereunder.
“ 4. It is understood and agreed that substantial completion of said building on or before March 15th, 1918, is of the essence of this agreement.
“ In the event that said building is not substantially completed by the 15th day of March, 1918, but is sufficiently completed for partial occupancy, then and in that event the vendor agrees that the Wellsmore Garage, Inc., 'may enter into possession and thereupon shall receive a reduction in rent from the 15th day of March, 1918, to the 15th day of July, 1918, of Six Hundred Eighty-seven and 50 /100 Dollars per month, but from the 15th day of July, 1918, during the fife of said lease, full rent shall be paid.
“ 5. It is understood and agreed that in the event that the said garage building is not substantially completed by the 10th day of July, 1918, then, at the option of the vendee, this contract may be cancelled and all the moneys paid hereunder to the vendor shall be repaid and the stock transferred to the vendee shall be and become the property of the vendor. Written notice of the exercise of said option must be sent by registered mail on the said 10th day of July, 1918.”
On March fifteenth the building was not substantially completed. The National Garage Company claimed its right
The claim of the plaintiff is that this contract gave the right of cancellation only upon July tenth, in default of substantial completion of the garage at that time, and that the cancellation upon April ninth was a voluntary act on the part of the defendant which cannot defeat the plaintiff’s right to commissions.
The contention of the defendant is that under this contract the substantial completion of this building upon March fifteenth was made of the essence of the contract, and because of the fact that the garage was not substantially completed upon March fifteenth, the defendant’s act in canceling the contract was not a voluntary act, but was only an acquiescence in the legal demand of the National Garage Company, and that under the plaintiff’s contract to receive the twelve per cent commission only upon the payments as made, the plaintiff has established no cause of action.
The main question to be determined is the construction of this contract. The provision is that the building shall be substantially completed upon March 15, 1918, and that is declared to be of the essence of this agreement. If this provision stood alone in the contract, there is no question that the failure of substantial completion upon March fifteenth would justify the National Garage Company in canceling the contract. While there is no proof in the case to the effect that the building was not substantially completed upon that date, that fact is assumed throughout the case and neither the plaintiff nor the defendant can now question it. But the whole contract must be read together. The subsequent provisions of the contract providing for the entering into possession and the reduction of rent if the building be not substantially completed by the fifteenth day of March and the specific provision that if the building be not substantially completed upon the 10th day of July, 1918, then at the option of the vendee the contract may be canceled
The fact that the defendant had other negotiations pending early in April for the transfer of the property to another vendee may or may not give color to the consent given to the cancellation of this contract upon April ninth. It is for
It is unnecessary to cite authorities to the proposition that if a vendor voluntarily releases a vendee from his contract, which might have been enforced, the broker of the vendor may recover his commissions. To defend against the broker’s claim, the vendor must at least show that his consent to the cancellation of the contract was a consent to a legal right in the vendee. (Colvin v. Post Mortgage & Land Co., 225 N. Y. 510; Duclos v. Cunningham, 102 id. 678.; Condict v. Cowdrey, 139 id. 280.)
Under this construction of the contract it becomes immaterial to consider the legal effect of the claimed alteration in the brokerage contract made either before or after the consummation of the contract between the defendant and the National Garage Company.
Upon the facts as shown, the plaintiff is entitled to its commissions, and this, of necessity is a complete answer to the defendant’s counterclaim. The determination should, .therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Page and Merrell, JJ., concur.
Determination affirmed, with costs.