176 N.E. 543 | NY | 1931
Plaintiffs, as purchasers of real estate in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., brought action against the defendant, the vendor, to recover damages for fraudulent representations made to them by the vendor's broker at the time of the purchase, concerning the condition of the heating and plumbing system of the building. No doubt arises as to the nature of the broker's employment. He was, in writing, "authorized to enter into negotiations with prospective purchasers for the sale of our property located at #9 Cannon St. in the City of Poughkeepsie, N.Y." The broker had no authority to sell and convey the land and the contract of sale was in fact executed by plaintiffs and defendant themselves.
The question is whether the misrepresentations were incidental to the business with which the broker was intrusted; whether the wrongful act was in the real or *394
apparent course of the employment; in the line of duty or outside of it and foreign to its purpose. (Mulligan v. N.Y. R.B. Ry.Co.,
When the agent misconducts himself "in the course of hisemployment" his acts are the acts of the principal, who must answer for them whether he authorized them or not. Otherwise the principal is not held. (Mott v. Consumers' Ice Co.,
A principal is liable for false representations of a selling agent in respect to the land (Bennett v. Judson,
A real estate broker has no general authority as such to make a sale or a binding contract of sale. (Stone v. U.S. TitleGuaranty Indemnity Co.,
The employment of one as a broker "to enter into negotiations with prospective purchasers" carries with it no general incidental powers to make representations as to the condition of the heating and plumbing system of the property. The purchaser is, therefore, bound to know the extent of the broker's powers. (Martin v. *395 Farnsworth,
A real estate broker, as such, is sent out as a mere negotiator. He brings the parties together. Having done this his task is completed. (Lansing v. Coleman, 58 Barb. 611.) The deal must be consummated by the principals. It follows that if such a broker, in his zeal and to carry out his own purposes, makes false representations as to the condition of the property, the principal is not bound thereby.
The judgment of the Appellate Division and that of the Trial Term should be reversed and the complaint dismissed, with costs in all courts.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Orders reversed, etc.