281 A.D. 39 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1952
Defendants have appealed from a judgment of $15,863.90 for brokerage commissions, for services alleged to have been rendered in procuring a prospective purchaser for real property. The action was brought upon the theory that plaintiff procured a Doctor Weinraub, who was ready, willing and able to buy this real estate at a price and upon terms authorized by appellants, but that no sale occurred due to defendants’ fault in raising the price, after the customer had been obtained. No sales contract was signed, but, according to plaintiff, the sale which he arranged would have been closed not later than thirty days after July 27, 1951, viz., by August 26,1951.
It was stated on the argument that after this action had been commenced, defendants did sell the same property to a corporation owned by Doctor Weinraub and by a man named Feinberg who, Doctor Weinraub testified, would have supplied 25% of the $300,000 cash payment on the purchase price which he unsuccessfully offered to defendants through plaintiff as broker. It was broadly hinted (the record contains nothing more) that defendants’ discharge of plaintiff as broker was disingenuous, and that the sale which took place was really to the same inter
Such a theory of fact was not pursued, however, and therefore, it would have been error to admit evidence which merely hinted without tending to establish that the actual sale was to the same interests that plaintiff had procured, or which failed to demonstrate the prior necessary financial ability of Dr. Weinraub. The repeated references to such a sale by plaintiff’s counsel before the jury were prejudicial. Such evidence should be excluded unless connected up. If it were to have been introduced and connected up, however, such an inquiry might well have gone to the heart of the case. In this category belongs the offer of testimony, that in December, 1951, five months after plaintiff claims to have procured Doctor Weinraub as a prospective buyer, and four months after plaintiff claims that title should have been transferred, Dr. Weinraub invested some cash in a corporation which bought the property. Standing alone, such testimony would have no tendency to establish that the negotiations instituted through plaintiff had not been terminated in good faith prior to the consummation of a sale to the same interests. In conjunction with other evidence, it might have done so. Neither would it have been evidence that Weinraub would have been financially able to pay for the property on or about August 26, 1951, in the absence of evidence that the money which went into the purchase price came from assets which he owned at the earlier date or came from other persons who, at the earlier date, were committed or certain to supply the funds. It is not meant to infer that such commitments would be necessary if a purchaser has assets which could normally be used as collateral on which to borrow a required amount of cash.
In the annotation appearing at 1 A. L. R. 528, the holdings of the cases upon this subject are summarized as follows: “ It may be said, in general, that a proposed purchaser is not able, when he is depending upon third parties who are in no way bound to furnish the funds, to make the purchase. McGavock v. Woodlief (1858) 20 How. (U. S.) 221,15 L. ed. 884; Robertson v. Allen (1911) 107 C. C. A. 254, 184 Fed. 372; Mattingly v. Pennie (1895) 105 Cal. 514, 45 Am. St. Rep. 87, 39 Pac. 200; Birnbaum v. Unger (1912) 135 N. Y. Supp. 1; S. V. Thompson Co. v. Goldman (1912) 51 Pa. Super. Ct. 632 ”.
Nothing to the contrary was held' in Mengel v. Lawrence (276 App. Div. 180). It is not necessary to follow a particular formula in order to establish financial ability of a prospective purchaser to meet the price, but there must be some tangible evidence from which a jury could conclude that he would have
The judgment appealed from should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide the event.
Peck, P. J., Callahan and Breitel, JJ., concur.
Judgment unanimously reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellants to abide the event.