139 N.Y.S. 383 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
■ The appeal is from an order setting aside the verdict of a jury rendered in the plaintiff’s favor. The action was instituted to recover broker’s commissions alleged to have been earned by the plaintiff’s assignor, a corporation of which the plaintiff was an officer, in connection with the sale of real estate owned by the'defendant on Long Island. Evidence was adduced from which the jury would have been warranted in finding the following facts: The plaintiff had a client, a Mrs. Palmer, who was desirous of purchasing a home, and to whom on behalf of his corporation he showed the defendant’s place. Mrs. Palmer stated that she was much pleased with the property and offered to pay $75,000 for it. Plaintiff communicated this offer to the defendant, who refused it, but authorized the plaintiff to put the property on the corporation’s books for sale at $87,500. Thereupon the plaintiff disclosed the name of his client to the defendant because he thought he could trust the defendant, who was an old friend of his. Subsequently plaintiff succeeded in getting Mrs. Palmer to offer $80,000, which offer was also refused by the defendant. Finally, after considerable labor by the plaintiff, Mrs. Palmer, on May 6, 1910, told him that she realized that she must pay $87,,500 to get the property; that she would see her adviser, a Mr. Livingston,'in a few days upon his return from Atlantic City; and that if he did not object she believed that she would take the property at $87,500. On May ninth the defendant telephoned the plaintiff and inquired about the situation, and was then informed that Mrs.
I think the determination of defendant’s good faith in canceling the authority of plaintiff’s assignor and almost immediately thereafter selling through Medbury to Mrs. Palmer was, on the conflicting evidence in the case, a question of fact for the jury and that their verdict should not have been disturbed. In its opinion setting aside the verdict the learned Trial Term cited the cases of Willard v. Ferguson (125 App. Div. 868, 872), Cole v. Kosch (116 id. 715) and Gardner v. Pierce (131
On the facts in the case at bar the jury might have found that the withdrawal of the property from plaintiff’s assignor, followed by its almost immediate sale to the same client produced by plaintiff’s assignor and on the original terms of sale, was merely a dishonorable device, designed to deprive the plaintiff’s assignor of its commission, or, as was well expressed by Judge Pryor in the former New York Court of Common Pleas in Ames v. McNally (6 Misc. Rep. 93, 95), they might have found “that the pretended withdrawal of the property, and the subsequent sale to the very purchaser produced by plaintiffs and on substantially the terms proposed through them, were nothing more .than an expedient for cheating them of their commission.”
In any view which can reasonably be taken of' the case it would seem that the issue of good faith on the part of the defendant was one of fact for the jury and not of law for the court.
The order should be reversed, with costs, and the verdict of the jury reinstated, with costs.
Burr, Thomas, Carr and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with costs, and verdict of jury reinstated, with costs,