Thе issue in this bankruptcy case is whether an agreement to pay a brokerage commission, contained within the same document as a purchase and sale agreement, is a separate and distinct contract from the purchase and sale agreement. The district court, reversing the bankruptcy court, held that the agreements were not separate and distinct. We reverse the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
On February 11, 1985, the debtor, Gardi-nier, Inc., filed a voluntary petition for reorganization relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. Before filing its petition, Gardinier had agreed to sell a parcel of land known as the Goldstein tract to Boyd Burley. The terms and conditions of the purchase and sale agreement were memorialized in an instrument entitled “Contract for Sale of Real Estate.” The purchase price for the Goldstein tract was $5,117,000, and the earnest money deposit was $100,000. In paragraph eight of the *975 contract, Gardinier agreed to pay the broker, Kilgore Real Estate, a 10% commission for its “services in making sale of said property ... at the time of closing this transaction by the delivery of deed as aforesaid.” Paragraph eight further provided that if the buyer failed to perform, the seller and the broker would divide the deposit, less certain expenses, between themselves. If the seller failed to perform, it still had to pay the full commission to the broker on demand. Burley signed the instrument on October 4, 1984, and Gardinier and Kilgore signed it on October 8, 1984.
On March 22, 1985, pursuant to sections 363(b) and 365 of the Bankruptcy Code, Gardinier filed a motion with the bankruptcy court for entry of orders approving the assumption of the real estate contract and аpproving the sale of the Goldstein tract. At the same time, Gardinier sent notice to its creditors and other parties of interest that it intended to sell the Goldstein tract. At the hearing on the motion, held on April 13, 1985, the Unsecured Creditors Committee (the “Committee”) raised an objection to the payment of Kilgore’s brokerage commission on the ground that the brokerage agreement, although contained within the same instrument as the contract for the sale of the Goldstein tract, was a distinct, separate and fully executed agreement that could not be assumed post-petition. The court did not consider any evidence on this issue during the hearing. Instead, it approved the assumption of the contract for sale between Gardinier and Burley and the sale of the Goldstein tract, but blocked disbursement of the brokerage commission to Kilgore pending a final determination on the issue raised by the Committee.
On June 3, 1985, the bankruptcy court entered an order sustaining the Committee’s objection to Gardinier’s assumption of the brokerage agreement on the ground that it was a separate, fully executed agreement that could not be assumed post-petition [
II. DISCUSSION
We agree with the trustee and the bankruptcy court that the brokerage agreement was separate from the purchase and sale agreement.
2
As the trustee cor
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rеctly noted, the intention of the parties is the governing principle in contract construction,
Edward J. Gerrits, Inc. v. Astor Electric Service, Inc.,
Although thеre is only one document memorializing this transaction, there is otherwise no clear indication from the face of the instrument that the parties intended to make only one contract. Instead, the terms of the instrument demonstrate that the parties intended to make two separate contracts. In its order, the bankruptcy cоurt noted three aspects of the transaction that we agree are persuasive evidence of this intent. First, the nature and purpose of the agreements are different. One agreement addresses the sale of property and the other contemplates an employment contract related to the sаle of the property. Second, the consideration for each agreement is separate and distinct. Burley agreed to pay Gardinier in excess of $5 million in consideration for the Goldstein tract. Gardinier separately agreed to pay Kilgore a commission as consideration for services rendered in making thе sale of the property. There was no consideration flowing between the broker and the buyer.
See Liebowitz v. Wright Properties,
In its order, the bankruptcy court cited
Florida Mortgage Financing, Inc. v. Flagler Plaza Corp.,
Although we agrеe with the result reached by the bankruptcy court, we note that its reliance on
Flagler,
and the resulting emphasis by it and the district court on “interdependence,” is misplaced. The issue in
Flagler,
and in other cases cited by the parties for the same proposition,
6
was whether numerous promises, each between the same promisor and рromisee and contained within one instrument, constituted one or more contracts, and not, as here, whether two promises, each with a different promisor and promisee, constitute one or more contracts. Neither of the courts below nor either party cites any case suggesting that if promises between different parties are dependent or conditioned on one another, it is evidence that the parties intended the agreements to actually form one contract. Moreover, none offers any convincing reason why this should be so. Contracts are often conditioned upon the com
*978
pletion of totally separate agreements.
See, e.g., D.L. Walker & Co. v. Lewis,
III. CONCLUSION
Our decision allows the trustee to assume the contract for the sale of land and reject the separate brokerage agreement, relegating Kilgore to the status of a general unseсured creditor. 11 U.S.C. §§ 365(g), 502(g). As a result, Kilgore will be paid from its share of the estate’s assets instead of from the proceeds of the sale of the Goldstein tract, and will most likely reap only a percentage of its $500,000 commission. This, however, is the harsh reality of bankruptcy. Because Kilgore has not demonstrated that its agreement with Gardinier еntitles it to special treatment, it must suffer the consequences of Gardinier’s bankruptcy along with the other general creditors.
The order of the district court is REVERSED.
Notes
. Although the district court cited no authority for this proposition, it is well supported in the case law.
See, e.g., Richmond Leasing Co. v. Capital Bank, N.A.,
. The bankruptcy court also found that the brokerage agreement was nonexecutory and thereforе nonassumable, and both parties addressed this issue in their briefs to this court. For the following reason, we decline to decide whether or not the brokerage agreement was executory. The Bankruptcy Code provides that a trustee may assume or reject an executory contract, subject to court approvаl. 11 U.S.C. § 365(a). The language of the code is permissive; it is up to the trustee to decide whether to assume or reject an executory contract.
Id.; see also In re Charter Co.,
In light of the trustee’s position in this case, it is almost certain that if the brokerage agreement were found to be executory, he would elect to reject it. Furthermore, since rejection of the brokerage agreement would be beneficial to the estate and therefore indicative of sound business judgment on the trustee’s part, a court would approve the rejection.
See Bildisco,
. The bankruptcy court concluded that paragraph eight of the instrument dictated that the broker was entitled to a commission regardless of whether the sale closed. That paragraph provided that if the deal failed to close through the seller’s fault, the broker would still be entitled to a 10% commission, and that if the deal failed to close through the buyer’s fault, the broker would be entitled to one-half the deposit less expenses.
. The district court disagreed with the bankruptcy court’s construction of the instrument. Relying on paragraph two, which provided that if incurable title defects were discovered then all rights and liabilities under the contract would terminate, the district court reasoned that the sale did have to close in order for the broker to be assured of its commission. As discussed in more detail later in this opinion, the resolution of this particular disagreemеnt between the two lower courts would not shed light on whether the parties intended the agreements to be separate or not. Since only the issue of separateness is before this court, we decline to offer any opinion on which lower court was correct regarding the interdependence of the two agreеments.
. The district court attempted to support this conclusion by asserting that because the preamble to the contract states that the seller agrees to sell and the buyer agrees to buy upon certain terms and conditions, and because paragraph eight, the brokerage agreement, is not explicitly excluded as one of those conditions, it follows that the buyer would be excused if the seller did not pay the broker a commission. We do not think that the language of the contract is clear enough to support the drastic conclusion reached by the district court — that the buyer would be absolved of its obligations if the seller did not pay the brоker a 10% commission from the sale proceeds.
. United States v. Bethlehem Steel,
In addition, the appellee cites
Smith v. Codos,
. The appellee cites
In re Steelship Corp.,
