Bradley Real Estate Trust (“Bradley”) hired Grubb & Ellis, а real estate broker, to act as its agent for the sale of a downtown Chicago building; the agency agreement between the two parties provided, with some exceptions, that Grubb & Ellis would *1052 receive a commission upon the sale of the building during the term of the agency. The choice of brokers appears to have been unfortunate for Bradlеy, however, because the Synergy Realty Group, Ltd. (“Synergy”), not Grubb & Ellis, arranged the sale of the building to the Art Institute of Chicago. After the sale, Bradley refused to pay a commission to Grubb & Ellis, reasoning that Grubb & Ellis played no role in the sale and therefore was not entitled to a commission. Grubb & Ellis protested and filed suit (pursuant to our diversity jurisdiction) in federal court, claiming that Bradley had reneged, оn its promise to pay a commission if the building was sold during the agency’s term, without regard to Grubb & Ellis’s role in the sale. The district court agreed with Grubb & Ellis and we affirm.
I.
In April 1987, Grubb & Ellis and Bradley exchanged a series of letters discussing Grubb & Ellis’s offer to become Bradley’s agent for the sale of the Champlain building in downtown Chicago. The agency agreement adopted by the parties consists of two letters: one, from Grubb & Ellis to Bradley, is dated April 9, 1987, and the other, from Bradley to Grubb & Ellis, is dated April 28, 1987. The April 9 letter provides, in pertinent part:
Grubb & Ellis (G & E) will enter into a sale agency agreement with Bradley Real Estate Trust (Owner) under the following conditions:
Term: Six (6) Months (unless mutually extended) commencing April 15, 1987.
Sale Exclusions: Any active deals (the attached 34 contacts as submitted in your letter dated 3/30/87) which arе currently in serious, on-going negotiations with Synergy Realty Group, Ltd. and Owner shall be excluded from this agreement for a period of (60) sixty days.
Leasing Commissions: If Grubb & Ellis is the procuring cause for bringing a qualified prospective tenant to the Champlain Building, the Owner agrees to pay Grubb & Ellis a full commission. ...
Building Sale: The Building will be listed for 6.75 million dollars. In the event of a sale, the commission is the total of 6% of the first $300,000.00 of the selling price and 5% of the selling price in excess of $300,000.00. If an outside broker is involved in the sale transaction, the commission will be divided equally between Grubb & Ellis and the outside broker.
Letter from Richard W. Herbert, Assistant Vice President of Grubb & Ellis, to • E. Lawrence Miller, President of Bradley at 1-2 (Apr. 9, 1987) (“Grubb & Ellis Letter”) (reprinted in Appellant’s Brief at Appendix Tab G).
Miller countersigned this letter, stating that Bradley accepted Grubb & Ellis’s proposed sales agency agreement, and, on April 28, returned it with his own letter proposing additional terms to the agreement. Of these additional terms, only one is relevant for our purposes:
Commission on sales will be paid to Grubb & Ellis only upon consummation of a sale for which a contract has been entered into (a) during the term of the agency or (b) within ninety (90) days after expiration of the term provided that the prospect has been identified in writing by Grubb & Ellis prior to the expiration of the term.
Letter from Miller to Herbert at 1 (Apr. 28, 1987) (“Bradley Letter”) (reprinted in Appellant’s Brief at Appendix Tab H). Grubb & Ellis countersigned this letter and returned it on May 1.
Grubb & Ellis began marketing the Champlain building in April, but admittedly played no role in its eventual sale. The Synergy Realty Group, which had served as Bradley’s real estate broker prior to the appointment of Grubb & Ellis and also had managed the building, negotiated Bradley's sale of the building to the Art Institute of Chicago. Robert Mars, the Art Institute’s Vice President of Administrative Affairs (who was personally responsible for the decision to acquire the building), contacted Synergy in mid-May 1987, but did not con *1053 tact Bradley until August 1987. The Art Institute and Bradley signed a contract for purchase of the building on September 8 and 9,1987, and closed оn the contract on October 30, 1987. The final sale price of the building was $5,425,000.
After 'the sale, Grubb & Ellis demanded its commission pursuant to the terms of the agreement. When Bradley refused to pay, Grubb & Ellis sued for the commission. District Judge Norgle determined that the agreement required payment of the commission and therefore granted Grubb & Ellis’s motion for summary judgment. Bradley now appeals.
II.
Despite all the distractions, this, for the most part, is a straightforward case of contract construction. Grubb & Ellis argues that it is entitled to a commission under the agency agreement (consisting of the Grubb & Ellis Letter and the Bradley Letter), while Bradley responds that the agreement is ambiguous and that, since Grubb & Ellis was not the “procuring cause” of the sale, the agreement does not entitle it to a commission. The district court concludеd that Grubb & Ellis is entitled to a commission and therefore granted its motion for summary judgment. Bradley mounts a number of attacks upon the district court’s ruling; we consider each in turn.
A. Does the Agreement Have a Fixed Date of Termination?
Bradley’s first challenge is to the form of the agency agreement itself: the agreement is void, Bradley argues, because it does not contain an automatic date of termination as required by Illinois law. Specifically, section 19 of the Illinois Real Estate License Act of 1983, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. Ill, fl 5819 (Smith-Hurd 1990), provides that “[n]o licensee shall obtain any written listing contract which does not provide for automatic expiration within a definite period of time. No notice of termination at the final expiration thereof shall be required. Any listing contract not containing a рrovision for automatic expiration shall be void.” Bradley contends that this paragraph renders the agency agreement (and hence its obligation to pay a commission) void.because the agency agreement does not automatically expire within a definite period of time. The agreement provides that the term of the agenсy would be “Six (6) Months (unless mutually extended) commencing April 15, 1987.” -
To be blunt, it is hard to understand Bradley’s argument that the agreement does not provide for automatic termination within a fixed period of time. Grubb & Ellis was to serve as Bradley’s agent for six months from April 15, 1987, the commencement date of the agreement. The term of the agreement may be extended, of course, but only by mutuаl affirmative action; the agreement still contains a provision for its automatic expiration at the end of the six month term. This factor distinguishes this case from
Grayway Real Estate Corp. v. Dickey,
Despite this analysis, Bradley still claims that the agency agreement violates the statute because it does not remain effective for a definite period of time. Bradley contends that the duration of the agreement is *1054 indefinite because the six month agency relationship, as defined by the terms of the agreement, was to begin on April 15, thirteen days before Bradley signed the letter giving effect to the agreement. Since it is unclear whether -the six month period was to begin on April 15 or April 28, Bradley urges, the term of the agreement is indefinite and therefore violates the Act.
. Although there is little recent law on the subject, Illinois courts have, in the past, permitted the “relation back” theory of contract.effectiveness: that is, contractual terms may be effective for a period before the contract is executed, so long as such coverage is clear from the face of the contract:
,In the law of contracts, it is elementary that ordinarily a contract speaks from the day of its date, regardless of when it was executed and delivered. It is of common occurrence in connection with deeds, leases and other contracts that, while they are not in effect at all and have no legal existence until delivered, yet, in respect to the .dаte of delivery, they, in point of commencement, relate back or commence in the future. Such relation back or forward contravenes no principle of law and is determined by the intent of the parties as deduced from the instrument itself.
Monahan v. Fidelity Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
On April '28, Bradley agreed with Grubb & Ellis that the term of the agency agreеment would last for “Six (6) Months (unless mutually extended) commencing April 15, 1987.” The language of this provision is clear and is not “reasonably capable of interpretation in more than one way.”
Thompson v. Amoco Oil Co.,
B. Was Grubb & Ellis Responsible for the Sale of the Champlain Building? Does This Matter?
The district court found that the terms of the agreement between Bradley and Grubb & Ellis entitled Grubb & Ellis to a commission on any contract executed during the term of the agency, without regard to Grubb & Ellis’s rolе in procuring the sale. Order at 9 (N.D.Ill. Aug. 11, 1989). Those terms provide for commissions to be paid for sales made within the six month agency arrangement: specifically,
Commission on sales will be paid to Grubb & Ellis only upon consummation of a sale for which a contract has been entered into (a) during the term of the agency or (b) within ninety (90) days after expiration of the term provided that the prospect has been identified in writ *1055 ing by Grubb & Ellis prior to the expiration of the term.
Bradley Letter at 1. Further, the agreement states that “[i]f Grubb & Ellis is the procuring cause for bringing a qualified prospective tenant to the Champlain Building, the Owner agrees to pay Grubb & Ellis a full commission.” Grubb & Ellis Letter at 1. Curiously, the agreement also mentions that “[i]f an outside broker is involved in the sale transaction, the commission will be divided equally between Grubb & Ellis and the outside broker.” Id. at 2. Since the Art Institute contrаcted to purchase the building in early September, the district court concluded that the clear terms of the agency agreement entitled Grubb & Ellis to a one-half share of the commission, without regard to Grubb & Ellis’s role in the sale.
We review
de novo
a trial court’s legal determination that contractual terms are unambiguous.
Air Line Stewards and Stewardesses Assoc. v. American Airlines, Inc.,
We believe we have to go no further than thе clear language of the agreement to’ determine Grubb & Ellis’s right to receive a commission. That language unambiguously provides for payment of a commission to Grubb & Ellis upon the sale of the building, without regard to Grubb & Ellis’s role in the sale. See Bradley Letter at 1 (“Commission on sales will be paid to Grubb & Ellis only upon consummation of a sale for which a contract has been entered into (a) during the term of the agen-cy_”). There is no question that Bradley and the Art Institute entered into a contract for the sale of the building in early September 1987, during the term of the agency.
Indeed, the only pertinent issue regarding Grubb & Ellis’s role in the sale relates to the amount of the commission owed to Grubb & Ellis: the agreement provides for a commission of between five and six percent of the sale price (depending upon the price), but then adds that “[i]f an outside broker is involved in the sale trаnsaction, the commission will be divided equally between Grubb & Ellis and the outside broker.” Grubb & Ellis Letter at 2. The agency agreement’s express provision of a half commission 'to Grubb & Ellis when another broker is involved in the sale — in contrast to its earlier provision of a full commission if Grubb & Ellis is the “procuring cause” of the sale — undermines Bradley’s contention that Grubb & Ellis must be the procuring cause of any sale in order to receive a commission.
Further, when an agency agreement expressly provides for the payment of a commission upon sale without regard to the agent’s role in the transaction, the agent’s failure to procure the sale is irrelevant.
*1056
Bradley makes much of the fact that Grubb & Ellis played virtually no role in the sale of the building to the Art Institute and cites a number of cases suggesting that a real estate broker must be responsible for the sale in order to colleсt a commission.
See, e.g., Lord v. Melton,
One of the principles which courts created to avoid the harshness of the rule denying a broker a commission when he had brought the parties together but the actual sale fell outside the literal terms of'his contraсt was to award a commission, regardless of unfulfilled conditions, if the broker was the “procuring cause” of the sale_ That principle, however, obviously has no relevance when the sale does fall within the literal terms of the broker’s contract, and Illinois courts enforce the terms of the contract regardless of whether the broker’s acts proсured the sale or not. Hammel v. Ruby,139 Ill.App.3d 241 , 244,487 N.E.2d 409 , 412,93 Ill.Dec. 742 , 745 (5th Dist.1985); Bolger v. Danley Lumber Co., 77 Ill.App.3d 207, 210,395 N.E.2d 1066 , 1069,32 Ill.Dec. 685 , 688 (1st Dist.1979).
Bass v. Banga,
In a last-ditch effort to convince us that the agency agreement does not mean what it says, Bradley observes that Miller told Herbert that Bradley “didn’t as a policy matter give exclusive agency agreements to anybody,” Dеposition of Miller at 37 (Oct. 4, 1988) (reprinted in Supplemental Joint Appendix at Tab 7) and that he wrote to Herbert (before the parties signed the agency agreement) that Bradley would be unable “to give you [Grubb & Ellis] an exclusive [agency agreement].... ” Letter from Miller to Herbert at 1 (Mar. 30, 1987) (reprinted in Supplemental Joint Appendix at Tab 12). As a preliminary matter, whethеr we characterize the agency agreement as “exclusive” makes little difference here: the terms of the agency agreement clearly establish Grubb & Ellis’s' entitlement to a commission.
See Vanguard Telecommunications, Inc. v. Southern New England Tel. Co.,
C. Was the Sale of the Building to the Art Institute Excluded by the Agreement?
Even if the agreement provides for a commission, Bradley may avoid payment if it can prove that specific provisions of the agreement exclude Synergy’s sale of the building to the Art Institute. The *1057 agreement does eontain a Sale Exclusion clause, which provides:
Any active deals (the attached 34 contacts as submitted in your letter dated 3/30/87) which are currently in serious, on-going negotiations with Synergy Realty Group, Ltd. .and Owner shall be excluded from this agreement for a period of (60) sixty days.
Grubb & Ellis Letter at 1.
In construing this provision, again, we need go no further than its plain language. The clause does not apply to this case because the Art Institute and Bradley did not cоntract to sell the Champlain building until September 1987, well after the sixty day period had expired. Bradley’s construction of this provision — that any of Synergy’s deals commenced within the sixty day period would be excluded, no matter when the contract was eventually signed — does violence to the term “currently.” As the district court recognized, “the clear language of thе provision states that any active deal that was
currently
in progress was protected for 60 days.” Order at 8 (emphasis in original);
see Thompson,
III.
It is not our function to reform the plain language of an agency agreement to the obvious advantage of one party and to the obvious detriment of another. It is possible, of course, that Bradley wanted to pay Grubb & Ellis only if Grubb & Ellis procured the sale of the Champlain building during the term of the agency agreement. But if this was Bradley’s objective, it should have said so in the agreement. It is too late for it to say so now.
Affirmed.
