120 P. 444 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1911
The plaintiffs, constituting a copartnership, are engaged in the business of buying and selling real estate in the city of Sacramento.
One O. H. Cope was, in the year 1909, in the employment of plaintiffs, his duties being to negotiate the purchase and sale of real estate for said copartnership.
In the month of July, 1909, the defendant delivered to Cope, acting for plaintiffs, the following writing:
"I hereby agree to sell my property described as follows, to-wit: The east 20 feet of Lot 1, in the block or square bounded by L and M, 8th and 9th streets, City of Sacramento, County of Sacramento, State of California, for the sum of eighty-four hundred dollars ($8400). The payments are to be made as follows: The first payment is to be made on or before August 3rd, 1909, and is to be five hundred dollars. All other payments are to be made once a month, $50.00 per month is to be paid from the date of the first payment, together with interest at the rate of 6 per cent, on the deferred payments. At the end of one year and one-half from the date of this agreement, the sum of $5000.00 should be paid on the purchase price of the property.
"Dated: July 24th, 1909, at Sacramento, Cal.
"(Signed) WM. N. LINESS. "For Owner."
Claiming that the foregoing writing was executed by the defendant for the purpose of conferring upon them the authority to negotiate the sale of the property referred to therein for certain stipulated compensation, the plaintiffs brought this action to recover the commissions to which they claim to be entitled under said alleged agreement. The cause was tried by the court, without a jury, and judgment rendered and entered in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $400. *536
This appeal is by the defendant from the judgment and the order denying him a new trial.
The complaint is in two counts — the one upon the writing and the other upon a quantum meruit.
It is alleged that, in pursuance of said asserted authorization, the plaintiffs procured a party ready, willing and able to purchase said property on the terms prescribed by said writing, but that defendant refused to sell the same to said party upon the terms so specified.
The assault by the appellant upon the decision of the court below is founded mainly on the contention that the writing referred to and upon which plaintiffs deemed themselves authorized to negotiate the sale of the property described therein or to procure a purchaser thereof is insufficient, under the provisions of the statute of frauds, to vest such authority in plaintiffs. In other words, the contention is that, to satisfy the requirements of the statute as to agreements of the character of the one concerned in this action, the authority to sell real estate for another must be specifically conferred by the writing upon the broker or person in whom the intention of the owner of the property was to vest such authority, and that the plaintiffs, not having been by said writing expressly employed to sell the property or to procure a purchaser thereof, cannot maintain this action.
Section
It will be noted, by an inspection of the instrument under which plaintiffs sought to sell the property, that said writing, while clearly enough disclosing a willingness on the part of the defendant to sell the property to someone upon certain specified terms, does not specifically or by express language authorize plaintiffs or any other particular person to sell or negotiate the sale of said property.
The court, over the objections of the defendant, allowed the plaintiffs to prove by parol testimony that, as a matter of fact, the defendant entered into an oral agreement with them, at *537 the time of the execution and delivery of the writing to them by defendant, by which he authorized them to sell the property upon the terms evidenced by said writing.
We think it is very clear that the writing upon which plaintiffs undertook to act in the sale of the property mentioned therein does not meet the requirements of the statute of frauds and, therefore, conferred no authority on them to procure a purchaser of said property. It follows, of course, that the court erred to the detriment of the defendant in allowing parol proof of plaintiff's authorization to sell the property.
It has been repeatedly held in this state that, to entitle a broker to recover commissions for effecting a sale of real property, he must show that he was employed by or on behalf of the owner to make the sale, and that his authority, or some note or memorandum thereof, was in writing, subscribed by the party to be charged, or by his authorized agent. (Zeimer v. Antisell,
In Toomey v. Dunphy, the memorandum read: "Henry Toomey can arrange for the sale of my ranch in Nevada, as per within memorandum." The trial court excluded said memorandum as evidence on the objection that "it neither specified that the employment of plaintiff was for compensation or a commission, nor the amount of any compensation or commission, for his services." The supreme court reversed the judgment for that ruling and, among other things, said: "In each of those cases [referring to the cases cited above] it was held that no recovery by a broker or agent for effecting a sale of real estate could be had, unless he was employed, by an agreement inwriting for that purpose. But none of them involved the precise point in dispute. . . . The agreement referred to in the clause (of section
It will readily be observed, from the result reached in the foregoing case, that the provision of the statute as to the mode of evidencing the authority in a broker to purchase or sell real estate would be entirely destroyed if it were true that his employment for that purpose need not be in writing and may, therefore, be shown by parol testimony; for, since it is not necessary to specify the compensation in the agreement or the note or memorandum thereof which the broker is to receive for his services, there is left no other vital requirement of the statute as to agreements or writings of this character but the one with regard to the employment or the authority by which the broker may negotiate the purchase or sale of real property for other persons. In other words, if, as is the contention here, the employment of a broker to sell real property for another is not required by the statute to be specifically evidenced by a writing, then the provision as to such agreements would be, in view of the decision in Toomey v.Dunphy, altogether meaningless and purposeless.
The sixth clause of section
In the case at bar, as we have shown and as is clear from the writing itself upon which plaintiffs rely for a recovery, there is absolutely no language used therein expressly or specifically employing plaintiffs to sell the property described in said writing. Indeed, as before suggested, there is nothing in the writing authorizing any person to sell the property. As already stated, the language of the writing is sufficient to support the inference that the defendant was willing to sell the property upon the terms specified in said writing, but the language falls far short of warranting the inference that *539 the sale, if in point of fact one was contemplated or intended, was to be effected through the intervention of a broker or any other third party. Indeed, so far as the writing itself shows to the contrary, the proposition contained therein might have been directly submitted by the defendant himself to an intending purchaser.
Counsel for respondents have cited no authorities which support their construction of the sixth subdivision of section
We see no escape from the conclusion that the writing involved here was altogether insufficient to disclose the employment of plaintiffs by the defendant for the purpose of selling or procuring a purchaser of the land referred to in said instrument, and that it was improper and prejudicial for the court to have allowed parol testimony showing such employment under said writing.
The judgment and order are, therefore, reversed.
Chipman, P. J., and Burnett, J., concurred. *540