319 Mass. 116 | Mass. | 1946
In this action to recover a commission for procuring a purchaser for the defendant’s real estate in New Bedford the trial judge found for the plaintiffs, but the Appellate Division ordered judgment for the defendant. The plaintiffs appeal.
On the issue whether the plaintiffs produced a customer ready, willing, and able to buy on terms satisfactory to the defendant the evidence in its aspect most favorable to the plaintiffs tended to show that the plaintiffs interested one Frechette in the property; that the defendant said he would let the property go for $8,000; that one of the plaintiffs told the defendant’s wife that “the Frechettes would pay $8,000”; that the defendant’s wife arranged for the parties to meet at an attorney’s office “to have an agreement drawn for the sale of the property and to make sure that they were
The defendant’s price of $8,000, whether a commission was to be paid out of it, as the plaintiffs insisted, or whether it was to be net to the defendant, as he seems to have insisted, in the absence of any other qualification upon it, was an offer to sell for cash down in full. Lawrence v. Rosenberg, 238 Mass. 138, 141. There was no evidence that Frechette ever in fact made to the defendant or to the plaintiffs an offer of $8,000 cash down, whatever one of the plaintiffs may have told the defendant’s wife “the Frechettes would pay.” There was no evidence that the defendant’s wife was the defendant’s agent to receive offers coming through the plaintiffs. There was no evidence that Frechette had more than $4,200 in cash or that he could get the remaining $3,-800. A finding was tiot warranted that Frechette was ready, willing, and able to pay $8,000 in cash. Even if such a finding could have been made, there would still have been no evidence that Frechette’s readiness to pay that sum in cash had been communicated to the defendant before the defendant had insisted that he receive the $8,000 free of commission. In short, the evidence would not warrant a finding that the plaintiffs had ever produced a purchaser ready, willing, and able to buy on terms satisfactory to the defendant. The defendant’s request numbered 6 should have been granted.
Some of the trial judge’s findings lead us to suspect that there may have been more evidence on some points than appears in the report, but the report states that it contains all the material evidence, and we can make no use of findings that go beyond the evidence reported.
Order of Appellate Division affirmed.
This request was as follows:
“So long as the terms of the alleged agreement to sell the defendant’s premises remained in a state of qualified acceptance, the plaintiffs did not produce a customer ready, willing and able to become the purchaser of the premises on defendant’s terms.”