57 Pa. Super. 625 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1914
Opinion by
The plaintiff, who was a licensed real estate broker,
The difficult question on this appeal is as to his right to recover commissions on the sales to Mihil Maczko, and George Vargo. Allusion is made in the appellee’s paper-book, and in the opinion of the learned trial judge overruling the motion for a new trial, to an agreement or understanding of counsel, before the argument of the case to the jury, as to what should be the question to be submitted to them. But as there is a difference of recollection as to that matter, we must take the record as we find it. The question, whether under the evidence the plaintiff could recover commissions on the sales to Mihil Maczko and George Vargo, was distinctly raised as a separate proposition by the defendant’s sixth point, and is brought before us by the ■second assignment of error, in which the answer to the point is quoted, and by other assignments, particularly the ninth, in which instructions to the same effect are set forth. Therefore the question must be met.
It is true, the plaintiff did not know Mihil Maczko, did not introduce him to the defendant, and had no communication whatever with him. But there was evidence from which the jury could legitimately find that, in the first negotiations between the defendant and Annie Maczko, which the plaintiff brought about and at which all three were present, she was acting for her husband as well as herself, and that, after the defend
With regard to the sale to Vargo the case is different. There is no evidence that the plaintiff ever communicated with him directly or indirectly, or that Annie Maczko was acting for him in any of the preliminary negotiations or had any authority to act for him. If, as the result of the plaintiff’s efforts, a contract had been made between the defendant and Annie Maczko for the sale of the three properties to her, and Vargo had stepped in her place to take one of the properties off her hands and to comply with her contract regarding it, it might be, as was intimated in Johnson v. Seidel, 150 Pa. 396, that the plaintiff would be entitled to commissions on that sale. But no such case is presented by any of the testimony. Possibly the evidence would sustain an inference that Vargo would not have bought if Annie Maczko had not told him the properties were for sale; but, as there is no evidence that she conveyed this information at the request of the plaintiff, or with his knowledge and assent, the connection between the plaintiff’s agency and the sale to Vargo is too remote and speculative to sustain a finding that his efforts were the immediate and efficient cause of that sale. As was said upon this subject in Earp v. Cummins, 54 Pa. 394, “the law regards only proximate and not remote causes.”
Without further elaboration, and without discussing the several assignments in detail, our conclusions are, that the defendant was not entitled to binding direction, that the plaintiff could not recover anything or
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo is awarded.