271 Mass. 410 | Mass. | 1930
This is an action to recover a broker’s commission alleged to be due for procuring a customer for the sale of certain real estate owned by the defendant. A building on the land consisted of three stores on the street floor and six tenements above. One of these stores was occupied by J. W. Sullivan Company, a corporation controlled by the defendant and engaged in the shoe business. The plaintiff approached the defendant and informed her that he had a customer who wanted to purchase the property. The rights of the parties depend wholly upon two conferences between them held on March 3, 1926 — the first at the plaintiff’s office, the second at the office of the defendant’s attorney — which related to the sale of the property by the defendant and its purchase by one Covich. They are recited at length in the bill of exceptions.
It is the contention of the plaintiff that an agreement was reached with the defendant respecting the provisions of the lease of the store in the present building, and in the building to be erected by the prospective purchaser, and that all terms and conditions of the sale were agreed upon by the parties. It is the contention of the defendant that in several respects the terms of sale imposed by her were not agreed to by the prospective purchaser.
Before any mutual agreement for the sale of the property had taken place, the parties, and others present at the first interview, on the same day went to the office of the defendant’s attorney and had a further conversation concerning the terms of sale. A draft of a contract in in-completed form between the parties was produced and examined by the defendant’s counsel who stated that it did not cover the lease of the shoe store, that he wanted everything definitely included, and that a new contract should be drawn. He then dictated one, which defined the terms
It was understood that the title was to be taken in the name of one Kelly, a straw man who represented Covich. Before the parties left the office of the defendant’s counsel, Covich’s check for $1,000 was handed to the defendant’s counsel, who gave it to the defendant, and it was left on the desk. At that meeting the following instrument was typewritten by the defendant’s counsel and signed by the plaintiff and one Reynolds who was in the plaintiff’s employ: “ Boston, March,' 1926 In the matter of sale and conveyance of real estate 345-355 West Broadway and 3-4 Church Avenue, South Boston, it is agreed that no commission shall be charged, claimed or collected, unless and until deed shall be actually delivered to and accepted by Michael F. Kelly, or his nominee. In the event of such delivery and acceptance of deed the sum of eleven hundred dollars shall be paid to Anthony Ivas as full compensation for all services relating to such sale and conveyance.”
Covich’s counsel on the following day submitted to the defendant’s counsel a contract which the plaintiff contends contains the terms of sale as previously agreed upon by the parties. About a week later the defendant returned the contract to Covich’s counsel, together with the $1,000 check, and a letter in which she stated that she had decided not to sell the property to Covich. It is the contention of the defendant that the contract submitted to her is not in accordance with the terms of sale as previously, orally, agreed upon but is at variance therewith in many particulars.
It cannot be said, as the plaintiff argues, that the execution of the written agreement was intended by the parties only as a convenient memorial or record of a contract which they had previously consummated. In the absence of fraud, of which there is no evidence, the defendant could refuse to sell the property to Covich unless a deed was executed and delivered to him. Fitzpatrick v. Gilson, 176 Mass. 477, 479. Woods v. Matthews, supra. Doten v. Chase, supra. Elliott v. Kazajian, 255 Mass. 459. Goldstein v. Ziman, 259 Mass. 430. Flax v. Sovrensky, 262 Mass. 60. Goldman v. Goodman, 265 Mass. 347. Upon
Exceptions sustained.
Judgment for the defendant.