delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an appeal from a judgment entered by the Circuit Court of Tazewell County in favor of the defendants, denying to the plaintiffs a recovery of a commission for selling real estate. The defendants, Avie Cohen and Robert Muzzy, each owned an interest in certain real estate located in Pekin, Illinois on which they built an apartment house in 1967. Haas & Hodges Real Estate Agency operated by the plaintiffs, Robert Haas and John Hodges, appellants, had engaged in activity in respect to the property since 1967, both as a rental agency for the leasing of the apartments and as a broker to sell the real estate.
Cohen, who lived in Peoria, did business both in Peoria and in Pekin, while Muzzy lived in Wheaton and only visited Pekin occasionally. Cohen had handled all matters concerning the construction, the leasing and the negotiations for the sale of the property. In 1967, soon after the apartment house was built, Cohen first signed a listing agreement with the plaintiffs’ agency, which Muzzy did not sign although he did have knowledge of it. Three years later in 1970, the listing contract in issue in this case was signed by the plaintiffs’ agent, Mayhugh, and by the defendant, Cohen. The real estate agency agreed to try to find a purchaser for a price of $236,000 with a commission of $16,000 to be paid to the plaintiffs upon consummation of the sale. The following month a prospective buyer, Robert Fuller, who was procured by the plaintiffs, offered to buy the real estate and a detailed offer to purchase signed by Fuller was submitted to Cohen and accepted by Cohen by placing his signature thereon. The defendant Muzzy had not signed the listing contract or the offer to purchase. When the deal was ready to be closed, Cohen and Muzzy refused to perform. The defendants urged that both the listing contract and the offer to purchase were subject to a condition precedent and unenforceable.
At the trial Cohen testified that both the listing contract and the offer to purchase were “subject to Muzzy’s signature” and that he had only signed in his own behalf. The plaintiffs’ agent, Mayhugh, and Hodges, one of the plaintiffs, testified that nothing had been said about obtaining Muzzy’s signature at the time Cohen signed the agreements. Muzzy denied having any authorization to Cohen to act as his agent in the sale of the property, although he did admit knowledge that Cohen had fisted the property with Haas and Hodges.
The defense of a conditional execution was supported by Cohens testimony, to which the plaintiffs objected at the trial. Ordinarily parol evidence is not admissible to vary, alter or contradict the terms of a written contract, which also would include a situation where a condition which is not provided for in the contract is imposed by parol. (Green v. Ashland Sixty Third Bank,
It is well settled that a party asserting a fact or issue generally has the burden of proof as to such fact or issue. (Noyes v. Gold,
Cohen, having admitted that he signed the listing agreement, said that he intended it to be binding in his own behalf although conditional on Muzzy’s signature. One month later, however, Cohen alone signed the contract for sale with the prospective buyer without even inquiring of the plaintiffs, who submitted the offer to purchase, whether Muzzy had signed the listing agreement. Cohen claimed again that his acceptance of the offer to purchase was conditional on Muzzy’s concurrence.
Also there was evidence that after Mayhugh had severed his relationship with the plaintiffs and after this litigation had commenced, Cohen offered to let Mayhugh sell the property, if he could “recall” that Muzzy was to approve the listing agreement. Cohen, called as an adverse witness by the plaintiffs under Sec. 60, admitted calling Mayhugh after this litigation commenced. He neither admitted nor denied making the offer contingent on Mayhugh’s memory, merely indicating that he could not remember such offer. He did, however, concede that he may have offered to list the property if Mayhugh’s testimony would be favorable. All of these facts are inconsistent with any allegation that there was a condition precedent to the existence of the listing agreement.
The plaintiffs in their complaint alleged that Cohen had acted for Muzzy in signing the listing contract and the offer to purchase. Muzzy denied his liability based on the fact that he did not sign the contract himself nor did Cohen sign as his agent. Muzzy testified that he had never authorized Cohen to act as his agent in listing the property for sale nor in signing the proposal to purchase. Also he testified that there was no partnership agreement between them. Sufficient evidence was not presented to prove any agency, partnership or a joint venture relationship between the co-owners of the property. The trial judge, therefore, properly found for the defendant Muzzy since he could find from the evidence that the plaintiffs had not proved that in signing the listing contract Cohen was also signing for Muzzy.
The fact that the person employing a broker owned only a part interest does not relieve him from liability to the broker for commissions whether or not he had authority to contract for his co-owner. (Stone v. Deahl,
It was contended by Cohen that the brokers were not entitled to their commission because the offer to purchase was unenforceable. Where a broker enters into a listing agreement with the property owner and he procures a purchaser ready, willing and able to purchase upon the terms proposed by the seller, the broker is entitled to his commission. (Fox v. Ryan,
The plaintiffs had produced a buyer who remained ready, willing and able to purchase up until the time when the defendant refused to perform. The fact that the seller may not be the sole owner of the property neither renders the sales agreement unenforceable nor affects the sellers liability under the listing agreement where the broker has performed according to its terms. According to the rule set forth in Goldstein v. Rosenberg,
For the foregoing reasons, we find no error in the judgment of the Circuit Court of Tazewell County in favor of defendant Muzzy, but we do believe the court erred in its judgment finding Cohen not liable. Accordingly, the judgment in favor of Cohen is reversed and remanded with directions that the trial court proceed in accord with the views expressed herein.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part and remanded.
SCOTT, P. J„ and DIXON, J., concur.
