4 Daly 243 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1872
—The original employment of plaintiffs as real estate brokers by defendant, the owner of .the premises, is conceded. It is also conceded that the defendant sold the property to Eno for the price at which he had put it in the plaintiffs’ hands. The questions remaining are: 1. Did the employment of plaintiffs by defendant continue up to the time of the sale. 2. Were the efforts of the plaintiffs the procuring cause of the sale (Chilton v. Butler, 1 E. D. Smith, 150; Briggs v. Rowe, 1 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 189, s. c. 4 Keyes, 424);
On the first point the judgment below is conclusive, because the justice so found upon conflicting evidence. Both the plaintiffs swore positively that they were not told to desist from their efforts to sell the property, and knew nothing of their signs being taken down from the premises, nor of the pictures being demanded from them. This was sufficient to sustain a finding that their original employment continued for the period in question—from April to September, 1870. ' There could be no judgment for the plaintiffs unless the justice so found, for there was no ratification, in case the original employment ceased, the defendant not being aware that Eno, the purchaser, came to him through the efforts of plaintiffs.
On the second point it seems the evidence is ample to sustain the judgment on the ground that plaintiffs were the procuring cause of the sale to Eno.
Eno was looking for a house at Newtown, and his employer, Praul, was assisting him to find one.
Although the purchaser, after being sent to view the prop
If the plaintiffs, as brokers under due employment by the owner, are the procuring cause of the sale, they are entitled to commissions although the owner may close with the purchaser in ignorance of the fact that the latter had seen the brokers, if he is not misled by any act of the broker.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment affirmed.
Present, Bait, Oh. J., Larremore and J. F. Bait, JJ.