27 N.Y.S. 885 | New York City Court | 1894
The plaintiff alleges in his complaint that he employed defendant, as his broker and agent, to negotiate for him a purchase of lots in Flatbush, and that, in violation of the good faith devolved upon defendant as such broker and agent, he fraudulently, to his own advantage, induced plaintiff to purchase the same for $14,000, whereas defendant could have secured them for $12,000, and plaintiff demands damages therefor. The case was sent to the jury, who gave plaintiff a verdict for $2,170. This is an appeal from the judgment entered thereupon and the order denying the usual motion for a new trial.
The question whether there was sufficient evidence to make out &jprima facie case that plaintiff employed defendant as his broker and agent to negotiate for the purchase of these lots was duly raised by the motion for nonsuit, to the denial of which the defendant duly excepted. This requires a careful and critical examination of the evidence. The testimony of the plaintiff, his wife, the defendant Woods and Egerton fairly shows that Woods, being the owner of these lots in and prior to November, 1891, placed them, in the early part of that month, in the hands of Egerton, a real estate broker, to sell for him at the price of $17,500 for the plot; that Egerton shortly afterwards put them in the hands of defendant Sands, another real estate broker, to sell at the same figure (which seems to be a somewhat common practice with real estate brokers), and that Sands placed them on his books of properties that he had .for sale; that shortly thereafter Mrs. Lazarus, the plaintiff’s wife, called at Sands’ real estate office in relation to two other lots in Flatbush which she or her husband had previously bought from some one else for $1,600, when, according to her testimony, he told her that he had on his books.,these lots, which he could sell her or her husband cheaper than $400 per lot, and she, according to her husband’s testimony, informed him that Sands offered to sell her these lots very reasonably; that Sands and plaintiff then met and went together to examine the property, and the former offered them to the latter for $250 a lot, $17,500 for the plot, assur
The foregoing statement covers substantially all the evidence bearing upon the question of the employment of Sands. We do not think the expression of Sands, that “he .had bought the property for ” him, when he reported to plaintiff that his bid of $14,000 had been accepted, was sufficient to carry to the jury the question of the employment of Sands by plaintiff, in view of the circumstances that plaintiff and his wife knew Sands was a real estate broker and were told by him, in the very inception of the negotiations, that he, as such real estate broker, had these lots belonging to another on his books for sale, and would sell the lots to them cheaper than they had bought previously two adjoining lots, and in face of the recital, in the written contract of purchase,' that
Judgment and order must be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Osborne, J., concurs.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.