87 Pa. Super. 479 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1925
Argued October 28, 1925. The plaintiff, a real estate broker, seeks to recover a commission claimed to be due from the defendant *480 because of the former's services in procuring a purchaser for some real estate which the defendant desired to sell. The fact of the agency is not disputed nor that the plaintiff secured a contract for the sale of the lot at the price named by the defendant. Defense is made, however, on the ground that the plaintiff concealed from the defendant a material fact in the transaction, important to the defendant, that the person named in the contract as the purchaser was not the party to whom the land was to be conveyed, but was a "straw man" procured by the plaintiff to act in the capacity of a purchaser; on the disclosure of which situation, the defendant refused to proceed further with the negotiation — he not being on good terms with the proposed purchaser and unwilling to sell to him. The person named as purchaser in the agreement prepared by the plaintiff was William Sorkin. The person to whom the plaintiff intended to have the title made was Armin A. Holzer. The transaction is thus described in the cross-examination of the plaintiff:
"Q. Now you give the name of the buyer in this transaction William Sorkin. That is correct, is it not?
"A. Yes.
"Q. Who is William Sorkin?
"A. Mr. Sorkin used to be a friend of mine that I often used in business transactions.
"Q. He was nothing but a mere straw man in this?
"A. Absolutely correct, just a straw party.
"Q. The real buyer all the time was Mr. Holzer?
"A. Absolutely, Armin A. Holzer.
"Q. You had Mr. Holzer's identity disguised under Mr. Sorkin's name?
"A. Surely.
"Q. Why did you?
"A. Because Mr. Holzer and Mr. Hawtof were not on good terms.
"Q. You knew, of course, that if you disclosed the *481 real buyer there would be a hitch and there wouldn't be any agreement?
"A. I didn't know absolutely, but I surmised.
"Q. And in order to avoid Mr. Hawtof's refusal to go into the transaction you thought it would be much more sensible to call up a straw man?
"A. You are absolutely correct."
It was disclosed in the transaction of the business that Holzer had some interest in the land or a right to a participation in the proceeds of the sale, and it was deemed advisable therefore by the plaintiff to include Holzer and wife with the defendant and his wife as vendors to Sorkin. As the contract appears therefore the plaintiff signed as agent for Max Hawtof et ux et al, and Holzer and wife joined with Hawtof and wife as vendors in approving the contract with Sorkin. The evidence of the defendant which is not contradicted was that he would not sell to Holzer and this was evidently known to the plaintiff when the arrangement between the latter and Sorkin was made. As the case stood when the contract of sale was completed the defendant and his wife and Holzer and his wife were selling to Sorkin, but Sorkin was not the purchaser and was not to pay for the property. The owner was induced to sign the agreement of sale through the suppression by the plaintiff of the fact that another person, Holzer, was the purchaser. The trial judge submitted the case to the jury on the inquiry whether the defendant had agreed to pay the plaintiff a commission in the event that he (the plaintiff) produced a purchaser of the property? It is evident from the testimony that the defendant was misled as to the identity of the purchaser. The motive for the misrepresentation practiced was that a sale would not be made by the defendant to Holzer. The nature of the difference between them is not disclosed in the testimony, but it was of sufficient importance in the mind of the defendant that he *482
would not sell his property to Holzer. The question for determination is whether on such a state of facts an agent may recover compensation? It is an elementary rule in the law of agency that a broker is to be regarded as an agent of the seller, and that it is his duty in such capacity to act in the utmost good faith towards his principal, and that if he fail so to do, he is not entitled to compensation for service. When the plaintiff undertook to sell the defendant's land, it was his duty to disclose to his principal the name of the purchaser rather than to turn him over to an unknown and presumably irresponsible party. It was a matter for determination of the owner whether he would accept a straw man rather than the actual purchaser. Good faith would not permit the concealment of an arrangement which was intended to promote the interest of the purchaser rather than that of the owner. On the plaintiff's own admission his intention was to mislead the defendant into a sale which would not otherwise have been made. This was not consistent with the "utmost good faith" due the defendant from the plaintiff in the circumstances. The principle is discussed in Pratt v. Patterson's Executors,
The judgment is reversed, the rule is reinstated and judgment is now entered for the defendant non obstante veredicto.