50 Misc. 546 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1906
The plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant for broker’s commissions in effecting an exchange of the defendant’s premises. The judgment was entered upon a verdict directed by the court. It was admitted upon the trial that the plaintiff brought the parties together and was the procuring cause of the contract. It was also admitted that one per cent, was the proper commission.
It is also established by the evidence that, as a result of the plaintiff’s efforts, the parties or their representatives fully agreed upon the terms of the contract the day before the contract was signed and that the contract was thereafter signed on October 5, 1905. The contract in question contained a provision that, if the vendee should reject the title of the vendor because of “bay window or stoop ledge encroachments,” the deposit should be returned and received in full for all claims. The title was rejected on the ground referred to above, and the written contract was mutually cancelled in writing and the deposit was returned on October 21, 1905. The defendant sought to defeat plaintiff’s recovery on the ground that he had no written authority to offer the property for exchange, and on the further ground that plaintiff had agreed in writing that no commissions should be paid him until and unless defendant’s title was accepted, and, as the title was rejected, the right to commissions had not accrued. The first ground urged by the appellant is not tenable. His answer admits the employment of the plaintiff as broker and that the contract of exchange was actually signed through his efforts. These facts alone, we think, would take the case out of the purview of the Penal Statute. Cody v. Dempsey, 86 App. Div. 335. Furthermore, the evidence clearly shows written authority to act as broker. Imperato v. Wasboe, 47 Misc. Rep. 150, and Get
The evidence shows that, before reaching an agreement as to the terms to be embodied in the written contract, the parties contemplated the possibility of the existence of bay window and stoop ledge encroachments. With this in view they inserted in the written contract the following provision: “ It is understood between the parties hereto that if the
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to' abide the event.
Gildersleeve and Clinch, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.