In this action plaintiff sought to recover the sum of $8,500 for services rendered to the defendants in connection with the sale of a business known as Senior Citizens Center, Inc. Defendants filed a general motion to dismiss the petition on the ground that it failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The trial court dismissed the action with prejudice and entered judgment in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff. Plaintiff has appealed. The sole and determinative question presented is whether the petition shows on its face that plaintiff’s recovery is barred by Section 339.160 1 which provides :
“No person . . . engaged within this state in the business or acting in the capacity of a real estate broker or real estate salesman shall bring or maintain an action in any court in this state for the recovery of compensation for services rendered in the buying, selling, exchanging, leasing, renting or negotiating a loan upon any real estate without alleging and proving that such person . . . was a licensed real estate broker or salesman at the time when the alleged cause of action arose.”
Plaintiff pleaded, in substance, that he was a salesman employed to travel over the state selling “custodial and pharmaceutical supplies”; that one of his customers was Senior Citizens Center, Inc., located at Mansfield, Missouri and owned by the defendants ; that Senior Citizens Center, Inc., was a licensed “nursing home operation”, and that on or about November 30, 1968, dé- *54 fendants requested that plaintiff find a buyer for the nursing home and promised to pay him a fee equal to ten per cent of the selling price if he was successful. Plaintiff, “being in the unique position of knowing the owners and operators of similar type businesses throughout his territory in the State,” found a buyer and defendants’ business was sold for $85,000. Plaintiff further alleged demand and defendants’ refusal to pay the agreed commission, and specifically averred: 1) that he was not a real estate broker or agent, and had not claimed to be or held himself out as such; 2) that he did not for compensation sell, offer to sell, buy, offer to buy, exchange or offer to exchange the real estate of others; 3) that he was not associated with any person known as a real estate broker or agent; and 4) that he did locate a buyer for defendants’ business, but took no part in negotiating the sale, and was in fact not physically present when the sale was completed. As noted, the defendants filed a general motion to dismiss ; the trial court granted the motion and entered judgment for the defendants.
The case lies before us on the petition, defendants’ motion and the judgment entered by the court. While the matter has not been briefed or discussed by either party, we have had to inquire and determine whether or not the illegality vel non of plaintiff’s contract was properly raised by defendants’ motion. The motion, as noted, assigned no specific ground of infirmity, but merely asserted that no claim was stated.
It would be inappropriate, and quite beyond the scope of this opinion, to discuss the derivation and function of Rule 55.33 generally. It is sufficient here to say that a motion to dismiss on the ground of failure to state a claim or defense performs the same function which was performed by a general demurrer prior to its abolishment in 1943, Baysinger v. Hanser,
The defendants maintain that Section 339.160 applies to all transactions which include or involve the sale of anything which could be considered an interest in real property. The term “real estate”, they say, is not qualified, limited or restricted in any manner by any of the provisions of Chapter 339. They further argue that plaintiff’s *55 original petition — which is not in the record — shows that the sale of Senior Citizens Center did include realty, and in any case, since the sale of a nursing home of logical necessity includes the transfer of some interest in real property, plaintiff’s action is barred by Section 339.160. Plaintiff’s position is that the regulatory provisions of Chapter 339 do not and were not intended to apply to this isolated transaction in which he was acting only as a “business chance broker”, that is as a broker who undertakes to sell a business as a going concern, including the good will, inventory and fixtures of the business. 2
As to defendants’ arguments, it may be conceded that our courts have construed Chapter 339 very strictly, and have trenchantly turned aside various attempts to avoid or erode the provisions of Sections 339.150 and 339.160. See, for example, Dolan v. Ramacciotti, Mo.,
As to plaintiff’s argument that the regulatory sections of Chapter 339 do not extend to this transaction, it may be granted without extended discussion that a number of statutes at least as restrictive as Section 339.160 have been held not to extend to or include the sale or exchange of businesses as going concerns, even though the sale may include some interest in realty as an incidental part of the sale. See, for a general discussion, Cary v. Borden Company,
In the case at hand, plaintiff has attempted to anticipate the defense of illegality by pleading that he is not a real estate broker or agent, that he has not claimed to be or held himself out as such, and that he does not offer to sell, buy or exchange the real estate of others for compensation. He further pleads that he is not directly or indirectly associated with any person who is a real estate broker, and although he admits he advised defendants’ purchasers of the availability of defendants’ business, and described it to them, he denies that he entered into the negotiation of the sale itself. In fact, plaintiff denies that he was physically present when the sale was completed. In short, neither the subject matter nor the terms of the actual sale can be determined or confidently inferred from the face of the petition. Plaintiff’s cause of action is imperfectly or perhaps defectively stated, but that is not a defect reached by a general motion to dismiss. Downey v. United Weatherproofing, Inc.,
There is another, additional reason why we believe the cause should be reversed and remanded. What the parties actually seek is a broad construction of the regulatory provisions of Chapter 339 as they might apply to the sale of a going business. Even in those states which have construed their real estate licensing laws rather liberally, the question of the illegality of a specific transaction is a relative matter. See, as illustrative, Hughes v. Chapman, 5 Cir.,
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Notes
. References to statutes and rules are to R.S.; (1972) and V.A.M.R. lo. (1969), V.A.M.S., Missouri Rules of Court
. This is a very general definition. For more precise definitions, see the statutes discussed in George Nangen & Co. v. Kenosha Auto Transport Corp., D.C. Wis.,
