19 N.Y.2d 354 | NY | 1967
This is an action for brokerage commissions. Plaintiff became exclusive renting agent for defendants to rent the offices in a building owned by them at 605 Third Avenue, Manhattan, while it was still under construction. It was completed in 1963. This contractual arrangement arose from two letter agreements whereby plaintiff was to be paid regular commissions in accordance with rates recommended by the Real Estate Board of New York, Inc., where plaintiff procured the tenant, and, in instances where the tenant was procured by an outside broker, plaintiff was to be paid commissions equal to 50% of the rate mentioned, not exceeding $125,000, Such 50% commissions are described as “ override ”.
By March, 1962, while the first letter agreement was in force, leases were executed and delivered to defendants with Kudner Agency, Inc., American Gas Association, Inc., John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and Bendix Corporation. Of these, only the Bendix Corporation lease was executed through plaintiff’s efforts, the three other leases having been procured through outside brokers. The first cause of action in the complaint deals with commissions allegedly due from all of these leases. The second through fifth causes of action concern the same leases but are based on
These cross appeals concern summary judgment. Special Term dismissed the first seven causes of action and refused to dismiss the affirmative defenses and counterclaims. The Appellate Division modified by granting to plaintiff summary judgment on some of the causes of action and dismissing the affirmative defenses and counterclaims insofar as related thereto. Both sides appeal.
Defendants have paid to plaintiff the aggregate sum of $82,173.40 in commissions on these leases. This includes substantial payments on account of each of the leases regarding which commissions are in dispute, with the exception -of the rental of part of the 43d floor to TWA, concerning which the Appellate Division correctly held that there is. a triable issue. These payments clearly establish accounts stated for commissions with respect to all of the leases to which they apply.
The Appellate Division’s decision (apart from the 43d floor questions) is based entirely upon the licensing sections of the Beal Property Law as it existed at the times of plaintiff’s performance, more particularly sections 440-a and 441-b. There is no triable issue over whether plaintiff was the procuring cause of the Bendix and TWA leases. It is an established fact that plaintiff procured them.
Initially defendants considered that these commissions were payable to plaintiff, as evidenced by their partial payments to plaintiff of the said $82,173.40 on account of commissions with respect to each lease except for the 43d floor. At some stage, however, defendants discovered the facts relative to plaintiff’s licensing situation, hereafter to be stated, and declined to pay
Plaintiff had a corporation brokerage license, as required by section 441-a, at all times when brokerage services were rendered for defendant; the alleged violations spring from the circumstance that plaintiff was affiliated with another brokerage corporation known as John W. Galbreath & Co., Inc., also a licensed broker, with which it acted in conjunction respecting the rental of these offices. The contention of defendants is that since subdivision 2 of section 441-b, providing for license fees, states that the license issued to a corporation shall entitle its president or such other officer as shall be designated by such corporation to act as a real estate broker, but that, if other officers are to act as real estate broker in behalf of the corporation, an additional license fee ($50 for each) shall be obtained, none except those so authorized could act. Plaintiff’s president, Peter B. Baffin, a licensed broker of more than 30 years’ standing, was authorized to act as broker for plaintiff; plaintiff’s vice-president, Philip M. Shannon, licensed as a broker since 1948, was authorized to act as broker for John W. Galbreath & Co., Inc.. These two men (chiefly Shannon) did all of the brokerage work connected with procuring Bendix and TWA as tenants, and performed such other work as was done (but failed of fruition) in endeavoring to procure the other leases—which were actually procured by outside brokers — on which plaintiff claims the overriding commissions. There is no dispute about any duplication of recovery as between plaintiff and John W. Galbreath & Co., Inc. They worked in conjunction, but any commissions that are recovered concededly belong to plaintiff.
Defendants’ contention—decided in their favor by Special Term and left as a triable issue by the Appellate Division — is that, although no brokerage services were rendered except by licensed brokers, Buffin was the only licensed broker who could act for plaintiff (Galbreath-Buffin Corp.) and that whatever Shannon accomplished toward the earning of plaintiff’s commissions was done in an unlicensed capacity, since he was licensed solely to act as broker in the service of John W. Galbreath & Co., Inc. but did most of this work as vice-president of plaintiff.
It is, of course, the law that commissions cannot be recovered by a real estate broker who is unlicensed while his services were rendered (Bendell v. De Dominicis, 251 N. Y. 305; Roman v. Lobe, 243 N. Y. 51; Brener & Lewis v. Fawcett Pubs., 197 Misc. 207, affd. 276 App. Div. 994, mot. for lv. to app. den. 276 App. Div. 1081). 'The reason for this court-imposed disability to recover commissions on unlicensed brokers was stated in the cases cited to be that “ The intrinsic nature of the business combines with practice and tradition to attest the need of regulation. The real estate broker is brought by his calling into a relation of trust and confidence. Constant are the opportunities by concealment and collusion to extract illicit gains. We know from our judicial records that the opportunities have not been lost ” (Roman v. Lobe, supra, p. 54).
Again it was said in Bendell v. De Dominicis (supra) at page 310: ‘ ‘ One purpose of the statute was to mark off ‘ the business of the broker as distinct from occupations which by general acquiescence are pursued of common right without regulation or restriction,’ and to make illegal the acts of the unlicensed in the real estate broker’s field. (Roman v. Lobe, 243 N. Y. 51.) ”
These and other decisions are clear that the animating purpose of imposing this sanction on obtaining a real estate broker’s license is the protection of the public, as in the ease of licensing a lawyer or doctor, ‘ ‘ not to permit others to take advantage of
The brokerage services in the Bendix and TWA leases, it is conceded, were rendered entirely by Ruffin and Shannon who, as has been said, were separately licensed to act as brokers for their respective corporations. The defense, on this point, is based exclusively on a provision in subdivision 2 of section 441-b of the Beal Property Law, headed “ license fee ”, that “ For each other officer [than the one originally designated to act on behalf of the corporation] who shall desire to act as a real estate broker in behalf of such corporation an additional license expiring on the same date as the license of the corporation shall be applied for and issued, as hereinbefore provided, the fee for which shall be the same as the fee required by this section for the license to the corporation.” The argument for defendants recognizes, therefore, that if plaintiff (Gralbreath-Buffin Corporation) had paid another $50 for an extra license for Shannon (who was its vice-president as well as vice-president of John W. G-albreath & Co., Inc.) —which would have issued pro forma, since he already had been approved to act as broker contemporaneously on behalf of John W. G-albreath & Co., Inc.— everything would have been in order, and no barrier could have been asserted against plaintiff’s recovery.
Plaintiff argues that this section of the Beal Property Law (§ 441-b), as its title implies, is a revenue measure only, and has nothing to do with the protection of the public which is covered by section 441-a. So long as Ruffin and Shannon were both approved and licensed brokers, that is all the public interest demands, and there is no occasion for the courts to add the drastic sanction of refusal to enforce the obligation to pay commissions—which is not expressed in the statute—merely to aid in the collection of an additional license fee, under circumstances where the protection of the public interest by licensing is not involved. This court-imposed penal .sanction was not created, plaintiff argues, for the sake of insuring that another $50 would be paid under subdivision 2 of section 441-b to license Shannon as a representative of plaintiff as well as of John W. G-albreath & Co., Inc., citing the opinion in Silinshy v. Lustig (118 Mise. 298, 299) which well states: “ Thus where the pro
The case of Heinfelt v. Arth (135 Cal. App. 445) is perhaps more closely in point, which concerned a California statute, similar to the one now sub judice, the opinion (pp. 449-450) stating: “ Where each of two partners are already licensed it would be a mere matter of form to require a separate license in the name of the partnership. This would accomplish nothing useful in carrying out the purpose of the act and would, in fact, call for merely a double license for persons whose qualifications have already been favorably passed upon. * * * The essential requirement of the act is that every person, natural or artificial, operating as a real estate broker must obtain a license so to do. In the absence of a positive provision to the contrary, it is in accord with both the letter and the spirit of the act to hold that fully licensed individuals may work in partnership with each other without obtaining another license in the firm name, the only possible effect of which would be to license the same individuals who are already licensed.”
The latter case points to a solution of the problem here involved. Being a penal statute, 441-b should, in any event, be strictly construed. It contains no provision forbidding brokers (as they often do) to act in conjunction with one another in effectuating real estate transactions. What has just been said is not changed by the last sentence of subdivision 2 of section 441-b that, in case a person licensed individually as a real estate broker thereafter becomes an officer of a corporation or a member of a copartnership, an application shall be made in behalf of such corporation or copartnership for a broker’s license for him as its representative for the remainder of the then current license term, “ provided that the license and pocket card previously issued to the licensee in his individual capacity shall have been returned to the department ”. Nothing in this section, even if it were to be construed as anything more than a revenue measure, precludes a broker from being licensed on
None of the cases cited militates against this conclusion. The Brener case (Brener & Lewis v. Fawcett Pubs., supra), chiefly relied on by defendants, not only did not involve collaboration between brokers but presented a situation where a real estate deal was effectuated by one who (unlike Shannon here) was not licensed to act as broker or salesman for the plaintiff therein or any other corporation. Brener did have an individual real estate salesman’s license (different from and inferior to a broker’s license) but that did not help in view of the provision in section 441-b that no license as a real estate salesman — as distinct from a broker license — “ shall be issued to any officer of a corporation nor to a member of a copartnership licensed as a real estate broker. ’ ’
The Appellate Division reversed the judgment dismissing plaintiff’s causes of action for commissions based on the procurement of the Bendix and TWA leases but, instead of granting summary judgment thereon to plaintiff (as was done for the overriding commissions on the other leases), directed a trial to ascertain the views of the Department of State and to take testimony concerning what practical construction has been given by the Department of State in dealing with this problem. Plaintiff has appealed from this part of the order, contending that it is entitled to summary judgment on the ground that it is for the court to construe the statute and that the construction which should be placed upon it is clear. This contention is sound. This case is not one in which the administering agency, namely, the Department of State, was first charged with the function of construing the statute in an administrative proceeding; on the contrary, the Appellate Division has remanded the case for an ordinary judicial trial at which the expertise of that department could be made available through courtroom testimony. The expert opinion of an administrative agency is not ordinarily solicited by courts to resolve a question of statutory construction not raised initially in an administrative proceeding or hearing (Atkin v. Hill, Darlington & Grimm, 15 A D
The other grounds adduced by defendants are palpably insufficient. Defendants are hardly in a position to argue that plaintiff used insufficient efforts to procure tenants, as regards the Bendix and TWA leases, inasmuch as defendants made binding rental agreements with Bendix and TWA. It may well be that, in the case of exclusive rental agency agreements, the principle of Wood v. Duff-Gordon (222 N. Y. 88) applies to the collection of overriding commissions on leases procured by outside brokers. Even though these brokerage agreements were terminable on stated notice at will, it is possible that plaintiff was inferentially obligated to use reasonable efforts to promote the rental of the offices in the building. We need not consider whether there would otherwise be a triable issue on this aspect, however, in view of the account stated allegations of the complaint supported by undisputed evidentiary facts in the affidavits. Defendants have paid substantial amounts on account of each claim for overriding commissions, and are thereby precluded at this late date from contending that no overriding commissions became payable on the ground that plaintiff should have made greater exertions to obtain tenants.
Only the allegations remain to be considered in the sixth and seventh causes of action regarding the 43d floor lease to TWA. Concerning that, the Appellate Division said (25 A D 2d, p. 125): “As to the claim for commissions on the TWA lease, while the lease by its terms recognizes that plaintiff corporation acted as broker in its negotiation and bound the defendants to pay commissions and expenses therefor, and in fact defendants have paid plaintiff the excess of $30,000 commissions, there is a question as to the application of the lease term, to the
Plaintiff is prepared to go to trial with respect to the 43d floor. Defendant appeals from that part of the order, and asks that it be modified so as to dismiss that part of the complaint along with the rest. The second letter agreement between the parties (Exhibit 0), dated September 13, 1963, states: “ (g) In the event Trans-World Airlines, Inc., shall lease additional space over and above that provided for in the lease executed simultaneously herewith prior to the commencement of the term, such space shall be considered a part of the aforesaid lease and the appropriate commission other than that provided for herein shall be paid to us.’ ’ The written lease for the additional space on the 43d floor was executed April 20, 1964, after the commencement of the term for the other space. Defendant points to the language in the above-quoted paragraph (g) which speaks of the leasing of additional space by TWA ‘1 prior to the commencement of the term ” of the lease of the other-floors to TWA. The circumstance is not necessarily controlling if, as stated in Mr. Shannon’s affidavit, TWA had earlier agreed orally to take the additional space on the 43d floor. Section 242 of the Beal Property Law required the lease, in order to be binding, to be in writing, and it was put in writing, as above stated, April 20, 1964. A brokerage commission is earned, however, when the parties are brought together and their minds meet. Formalizing the meeting of the minds by a subsequent written lease was, of course, necessary in order to perfect the obligation of the principal to pay a brokerage commission but, where a subsequent written agreement is entered into, it may well be that the commission was earned as of the earlier date when their minds met. At the least, this would appear to be an appropriate issue to be decided at the trial, as the Appellate Division has held.
The order appealed from should be modified so as to grant partial summary judgment to plaintiff for full commissions on the Bendix and TWA transactions (except for the TWA space on the 43d floor of the building), and it .should otherwise be affirmed, without costs, and the question certified should be answered in the negative.
Order, insofar as appealed from by defendant as of right, affirmed, without costs.
Order, insofar as appealed from by both parties by permission, modified in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so modified, affirmed, without costs. Question certified answered in the negative.