213 P. 265 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1923
Lead Opinion
Plaintiff, a realty broker, brought this action to recover the commission earned by him in the sale of defendants' apartment house. Judgment passed for plaintiff and defendants appeal.
The first point advanced by appellants against the judgment is more technical than meritorious. [1] The complaint alleged and the trial court found that defendants employed plaintiff to find a purchaser for the "furniture, furnishings and equipment" of the apartment house. Defendants, who had leased the house from the owner, held a five-year lease thereon. Plaintiff, as the proof showed, was employed to find a purchaser of the lease as well as of the furniture and equipment. It now is claimed that the finding that plaintiff was employed to sell the "furniture, furnishings and equipment" is not supported by the evidence, for the reason that plaintiff's employment extended to the procurement of a purchaser of the lease as well as of the furniture and equipment. We can see in this objection no good reason for disturbing the judgment. The gist of plaintiff's cause of action is the performance of certain services in bringing about a sale of defendants' property. The fact that the allegation in the complaint and the finding of the court did not describe all that was to pass to the purchaser in the event that a sale should be effected through plaintiff's efforts could not have misled defendants as to the nature of the services which plaintiff was employed to perform and for which he now is seeking compensation; and we are unable to see how defendants could have been injured by the failure of the complaint and findings to make mention of the lease. Under the familiar and oft-cited sections of the code and *454
constitution (Code Civ. Proc., sec.
[2] Appellant's second point is that the contract of employment, which was oral, was invalid under that provision of our statute of frauds which provides that an agreement employing an agent or broker to sell "real estate" for a compensation or commission is invalid unless the same or some note or memorandum thereof be in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged, or by his agent. (Civ. Code, sec.
If we return to the definitions which are to be found in our code we shall be led to the same result. An estate is an interest in real property. (Civ. Code, sec.
If the term "real estate," as used in this subdivision of our statute of frauds, were held to include a lease for years, a singular anomaly might arise. Neither an agreement for, nor the actual transfer of, a lease for one year or less need be in writing. This is because our statute of frauds, by appropriate qualifying language, in effect exempts from its operation all leases for a term not longer than one year. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1973, subd. 5; Civ. Code, sec.
We are, of course, aware that there is a reverse side of the picture which we have painted of an anomalous situation, and that under our construction of the words "real estate" an oral employment of a broker to secure a purchaser of a lease for a term longer than one year will be valid, although the lease which is the subject matter of the employment must be in writing in order to be valid. But because either construction of the words "real estate" will involve what appears to be somewhat of an anomaly, we think there is all the more reason why those words should be construed in the light of our code definitions — definitions which, as at common law, make all chattels, real as well as personal, to fall within the definition of personal property.
There is nothing in Commercial Bank v. Pritchard,
The words "real property," as defined by section
We think it clear that whether we look to the common law or to our code definitions, the term "real estate," as used in subdivision 6 of sections
The judgment is affirmed.
Works, J., concurred. *458
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. In doing so it will serve no useful purpose to write an extended opinion, or one which will more than outline my reasons.
Unquestionably the term "real estate" has been construed as of narrower or broader meaning according to the context in which it is used. This is true of words of similar application, as "conveyance" and "grant." (San Pedro etc. R. R. Co. v.Hamilton,
It is true that in the opinion of Mr. Justice McFarland, concurring, the meaning assigned the term by the opinion of the court was justified only because of sections