The relevant facts in the instant appeal are as follows: Appellant-plaintiffs entered into a contingency contract to sell certain real property. As to this contract, appellee-defendant Century 21 Realty Center, Inc. was the listing broker and appellee-defendant Golden Key Realty, Inc. was the selling broker. When the sale failed to close, appellants brought suit not only against the prospective purchasers, but also against appellees. As against appellees, it was alleged that they had “negligently breached their fiduciary obligation by deliberately ignoring their primary obligation to sell [appellants’] residence . . . .” After discovery, appellees moved for partial summary judgment as to their liability for punitive damages, “special expenses,” and attorney’s fees and expenses of litigation. The trial court granted partial summary judgment in favor of appellees and appellants appeal.
1. When construed most favorably for appellants, the evidence of record demonstrates that appellees did not intentionally and wilfully induce the prospective purchasers to breach their contract to purchase appellants’ real property. The most that the evidence shows is that, acting in the erroneous belief that the contingencies would not be met, appellees misinformed the prospective purchasers that they were “out of the contract” and prematurely returned the prospective purchasers’ $1,000 earnest money to them. This evidence shows, at most, that, in their capacities as appellants’ agents, áppellees were negligent in their interpretation of the prospective purchasers’ contractual liability to appellants and that, as a result, appellees negligently released the earnest money to the prospective purchasers prematurely.
“[A]n agent ... is responsible for negligence to his principal . . . . [Cits.]”
Cabral v. White,
Since the evidence of record, when construed most favorably for appellants, demonstrates, that the acts attributed to appellees were, at most, negligent breaches of the duties owed as agents, the trial court correctly granted partial summary judgment as to appellees’ non-liability for punitive damages.
2. The trial court did not indicate the basis for its grant of partial summary judgment in favor of appellees as to the issue of the recover-ability of “special expenses.” However, in the trial court and on appeal, appellees have relied exclusively upon the holdings in
Quigley v. Jones,
Quigley
and
Denny
state the applicable measure of damages in a breach of contract action between the seller and the purchaser. However, the instant action is
not
such an action. It is a tort action brought by a principal against his allegedly negligent agents. See
Ellis v. Taylor,
Since the grant of partial summary judgment was presumably based upon Quigley and Denny, the issue of whether the “special expenses” sought by appellants would be recoverable in a tort action has never been addressed in the trial court. Accordingly, we do not hold that appellants are entitled to recover “special expenses,” but only reverse the ruling that such a recovery in the instant case is necessarily precluded by Quigley and Denny.
3. The trial court correctly granted partial summary judgment in favor of appellees as to attorney’s fees and expenses of litigation. The uncontroverted evidence of record shows the absence of bad faith on the part of appellees and the existence of a bona fide controversy as to appellees’ liability and the amount of damages, if any, recoverable by appellants.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
