100 Tenn. 603 | Tenn. | 1898
This is an action to" recover commissions as agents for a sale of certain real estate in Memphis. The property belonged to the Raja heirs, and was sold to Vanfleet for $20,000 by the
The property, it appears, had been put into the hands of a number of real estate agents for sale by the Raja heirs, but no agency was exclusive. It appears that the first conversation Vanfleet had about the property with any agent was with Glas-cock. Vanfleet introduced this conversation and said that it would be desirable property, and that he saw a number of signs of different real estate agents on it but did not see Glascock’s. Glascock informed him that they also had the property for sale, and priced it to him at $27,000. A few days after-wards he saw Vanfleet again, and gave him further •information in regard to the property, and finally told Vanfleet that the lowest figure at which he could offer it was $22,500, but that he would sub
It is insisted that Glascock, having first conferred with Vanfleet about the property, and furnished him information, was the real moving and efficient cause of the sale. If this were so, he wmuld be entitled to the commissibn. But the proof is clear that the property was in the hands of .seyeral agents for sale, and neither of them had any exclusive control or disposition of it. It was simply a race of diligence between the several agents which should find a purchaser and effect a sale. It does not appear that Glascock notified either the Raja heirs o,r the Gilchrist Company that Vanfleet was a. possible, purchaser, and he had no part in bringing Vanfleet and Gilchrist Company together.
. It is true that when a . broker is .employed to sell real estate, and brings the property to the notice of a purchaser and opens up negotiations with him, the. owner cannot step in and complete the sale and
The same principle applies in all the cases, to wit: that the owner cannot interfere, but the -several brokers are free to act independently of each other, and the owner is under no obligation to, decide between their conflicting claims, but only to remain neutral as between them, and between them and the purchaser.
We think, from the facts developed in the record, that Glascock & Co. cannot be considered the ■prime and efficient cause of this sale, and that it was made by the Gilchrist Company, in competition with them, and in no way co-operating with them, and the decree of the Court below is affirmed, with costs.