90 Cal. 346 | Cal. | 1891
J.— This is a suit in equity arising out of a controversy between several opposing claimants to a sum of money in the hands of the London and San Francisco Bank. There are two appeals in the case, the first, No. 12958, being an appeal by plaintiffs from a part of the judgment in favor of the interveners, and the second, No. 13333, being an appeal by the defendants Heiman and Hamilton from the whole judgment, which was in favor of the plaintiffs and the interveners. The two appeals have been argued and submitted, and may be conveniently considered together.
The controversy arose upon the following state of facts: In January, 1886, and prior thereto, John Bathgeb and brother were owners of a valuable mine in Calaveras County, known as the Cordova mine, which they were willing to sell for one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, less ten per cent commission to any broker who might effect a sale for them at that figure. The plaintiffs Gorham and Bank, were partners in the business of selling mines and other real estate on commission, and had been in communication with the Bathgebs, endeavoring to secure written authority to make sale of their mine. The interveners, Snell and others, partners in the same business, had likewise been endeavoring to secure such authority from the Bathgebs, but neither had
The plaintiffs in their amended complaint allege that on or about the 18th of January, 1886, they and the defendants associated themselves together as copartners, under an oral agreement to deal in mining properties, and divide the profits equally; that in pursuance of said agreement they informed defendants about the Cordova mine, and that the owners had orally agreed to give them, and such others as they chose to associate with them, a written contract to pay a commission, provided they procured a purchaser for said mine at one hundred and fifty thousand dollars or more; that it was then
£5,000 ........August 31, 1886;
£5,000 ........ 5 months thereafter;
£5,000 ........ 6 months thereafter;
£5,000 ........ 9 months thereafter;
£5,000 ........ 12 months thereafter;
£5,000 ........ 15 months thereafter; and
£10,000 ......' . .18 months thereafter;
Each of the deferred payments to bear interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum; that on August 31st the Rathgebs executed deeds of the mine and deposited them in the London and San Francisco Bank, with instructions to deliver them to the purchaser upon payment of the purchase price; and for the purpose of defrauding plaintiffs out of their share of the commissions, instructed the bank to pay the commissions to Heiman; that the first payment was made August 31, 1886, and ten per cent thereof, amounting to $2,418.12, paid to and appropriated by Heiman, to the exclusion of plaintiffs.
To this complaint Heiman and Hamilton each interposed a general demurrer for want of facts, which being overruled, they answered separately, denying all the material allegations of the complaint, except the sale of the mine and its terms, and alleging an exclusive contract between themselves and the Rathgebs for its sale and the payment of the commissions.
Afterwards, a supplemental complaint was filed, alleging the payment to the bank of two additional installments of the purchase price of the mine, and the receipt and appropriation by Heiman of ten per cent of the second installment, all of which was admitted by the several defendants to be true.
Afterwards, the interveners were permitted to file their complaint in intervention, wherein they alleged that in November, 1885, they associated themselves as co-partners, under an oral agreement to deal in mining properties, and divide the profits; that thereafter they were engaged in negotiating a sale of the Rathgebs’s mines, and while so engaged were informed by Heiman and Hamilton of the facilities they claimed to have for selling mines in London; that they thereupon informed defendants of their attempts to sell the Rathgebs’s mine, and that they were to receive ten per cent of the selling price, which must not be less than one hundred and fifty thousand dollars; that defendants offered to aid them in negotiating a sale, and they “ then and there agreed
Wherefore interveners pray,—1. That the bank be directed to pay them such sums as may be found to be due, etc.; 2. That Hamilton and Heiman be ordered to pay them the sums they have received; and 3. For general relief.
To this complaint in intervention the plaintiffs and the Rathgebs interposed demurrers, which were overruled, whereupon they answered, denying all the material allegations contained therein. The defendants Heiman and Hamilton answered by similar denials, without having demurred.
Upon these pleadings the cause was tried by the superior court without a jury, and the facts found substantially as set out in the beginning of this opinion, from which it was concluded as follows:—
“As against the defendants, the plaintiffs are entitled to one half of the sum on deposit in the London and San Francisco Bank, Limited, as the commissions; as against the defendants, the interveners are entitled to the whole of said commissions; as between the plaintiffs,*357 the interveners, and the defendant London and San Francisco Bank, Limited, the plaintiffs are entitled to one third and the interveners to two thirds of the sum on deposit in said bank; defendants Hamilton and Heiman to pay the costs.”
The following judgment, omitting formal recitals, was at the same date signed and filed by the judge, together with the findings, and was afterwards duly entered:—
“Now, therefore, in accordance with law and decisions and findings aforesaid, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiffs C. L. Gorham and J. B. Rank do have and recover of and from the defendants C. A. Hamilton and Joseph Heiman the sum of $7,275, with interest at seven per cent per annum from the thirty-first day of August, A. D. 1886, and for their costs, taxed at the sum of-. And it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the interveners, Henry Snell, W. E. Gris-wold, James McMehan, and S. W. Howland, do have and recover of and from the defendants C. A. Hamilton and Joseph Heiman, the sum of fourteen thousand five hundred and fifty dollars ($14,550), with interest thereon from the thirty-first day of August, A. D. 1886, and their costs of this action, taxed at the sum of-. And it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the defendant London and San Francisco Bank, Limited, do pay over and deliver to the plaintiffs and interveners above named all funds received and held by it as commissions on the sale of the so-called Rathgeb or Cordova mine, or held by it to the credit or order of the defendants C. A. Hamilton and Joseph Heiman, or either of them, and all moneys received by it from the Union Gold Company, Limited, or from John Rathgeb, Sen., and Hans Rathgeb, or either of them, to the credit of said defendants C. A. Hamilton and Joseph Heiman, or either of them, to the extent of the judgments in favor of the plaintiffs and interveners herein ordered, in the proportions following, viz., one third of such funds to the plaintiffs, and two*358 thirds thereof to the interveners. Done in open court this twenty-fifth day of May, A. D. 1888.”
We will first consider the appeal of the defendants from this judgment.
1. They contend that the superior court erred in overruling their demurrers to the complaint of the plaintiffs, because the oral agreement to form a copartnership to deal in mining properties therein alleged was void. But, reading the w'liole complaint together, it is apparent that the contract alleged was merely to buy and sell as brokers, and there is no statute of frauds requiring such contraéis to be in •writing. Besides, there is enough in the complaint to show a cause of action against the appellants, independent of the contract of partnership. It shows an agreement to co-operate in obtaining authority to sell, and in selling, a mine for an equal share of the commissions. It shows that the agreement "was acted upon. It shows performance on the part of plaintiffs, collection of the commissions by appellants, and refusal to divide. Certainly this establishes a cause of action if the agreement was valid, and we know of no ground upon which it can be held invalid. Counsel seem to rely on section 1624 of the Civil Code, subdivision 6. But, clearly, that provision was only designed to protect owners of real estate against unfounded claims of brokers. It does not extend to agreements between brokers to co-operate in making sales for a share of the commissions. It may be, as counsel argue, that the allowance of such claims as plaintiffs and interveners make in this action, unsupported, as they are, by any written evidence of the contract, opens the door to frauds of as gross a nature as -were ever perpetrated by real estate brokers under pretense of oral employment by the owners to make sales; but if so, the evil is one which the legislature alone can remedy. It might be as plausibly argued that contracts should generally be
The court did not err in overruling the demurrers.
2. The objections to the sufficiency of the complaint in intervention urged in the argument are better founded, and will be referred to hereafter; but for the present it is sufficient to say that defendants did not demur to the complaint in intervention.
3. It is no objection to the sufficiency of the findings that they do not respond to the allegation of a partnership between plaintiffs and defendants. As we have seen, that allegation is wholly immaterial.
We think the findings do clearly and sufficiently show that it was understood and intended by the Rathgebs that plaintiffs were to have a share in the business of selling the mine and an equal share of the commissions; that the direction to pay the commissions to Heiman was for the benefit of all these parties; and that Heiman was thereby constituted the agent and trustee of plaintiffs in the collection of their share of the commissions.
4. Such being the case', the allegation that the Rathgebs colluded with defendants to defraud the plaintiffs becomes immaterial, and the failure to find this allegation true does not affect their right to recover.
5. The findings in favor of the interveners are certainly rather meager, but they come fully up to the allegations of their complaint, so that the particular objection made to them goes rather to the complaint than to the findings themselves. In setting out their agreement with defendants, interveners allege that they agreed “ to place said property in the hands of Heiman and Hamilton for sale,” but they nowhere allege compliance with this stipulation, or anything equivalent to it, or excuse for non-compliance. Their complaint was, in this respect, extremely faulty, but the court, in the absence of a demurrer, seems to have treated the allegation quoted as the equivalent of an allegation that interven
6. The defendants make the point that the findings do not support the judgment, and in this respect we think their contention must be sustained.
There is nothing in the pleadings or the findings to show that anything more than the first three installments of the price of the mine, amounting to fifteen thousand pounds, has been paid by the English purchaser, and it clearly appears that under the contract with the Bathgebs, Heim an and Hamilton were only to receive for commissions ten per cent of the amount actually paid into the bank. But the judgment against them in favor of the interveners is for ten per cent of thirty thousand pounds, and in favor of plaintiffs for half that sum; in other wmrds, there are judgments against them for commissions which, so far as the record shows, they have never received, and may never become entitled to. For this error^ the judgment must be re
For the purpose of such further proceedings, it is. necessary that the superior court should be advised of our views respecting the controversy between plaintiffs and interveners as to the proportion of the fund in the hands of the bank to which they are respectively entitled.
The plaintiffs contend, in support of their appeal, that the superior court erred in directing payment to them of only one third of said fund, and we think they are right in this contention. It may be that defendants have become personally liable to the interveners for an amount equal to the whole of the ten-per-cent commissions on thirty thousand pounds, and that, as against the defendants, the interveners would be entitled to the entire fund. But if one half of the fund has always belonged to the plaintiffs, it cannot he taken away from them and given to a party to whom the defendants, without right or authority, agreed to give it. According to the findings, the defendants, before obtaining any authority from the mine-owners, agreed to give the interveners the entire amount of the commissions. This, as we sa.y, may have resulted in a personal liability to that amount, but the right of the interveners to share in the specific fund is dependent upon the right of the defendants, and can by no possibility exceed it. Now, this fund was created by the act of the mine-owners, and belongs to those for whose benefit they designed it. They had a right to select their agentk for the sale of the mine, and they selected, not the defendants only, but the plaintiffs and the defendants, and they agreed with the plaintiffs that they should have one half of the commissions. By virtue of this agreement, one half of the commissions became the property of the plaintiffs, and the defendants had no power to dispose of it. The mere fact that Heiman was empowered to draw the whole of the commis
It remains to be decided what further proceedings in the superior court are necessary for determining and enforcing the rights of the parties.
As to the plaintiffs, there seems to be no necessity for a new trial of the issues upon which their right to recover from defendants one half of the commissions depends, but for the purpose of determining the amount to which they are entitled, it will be necessary, by supplemental complaint and additional findings, to ascertain the amount paid by the purchaser of the mine, for upon that depends the amount of commissions earned.
As to the interveners, they should be allowed to amend their complaint, and as between them and plaintiffs and defendants, there should be a new trial. If. they again recover, the fund in the hands of the bank should be equally divided and applied in satisfaction of the respective judgments in favor of plaintiffs and interveners. If the in.erveners fail to recover, the fund in the bank should be applied, as far as necessary, in satisfaction of the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to the sup rior court to proceed in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Paterson, J., De Haven, J., Garoutte, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Harrison, J., deeming himself disqualified, did not participate in the above decision.
Rehearing denied.