170 Mo. App. 555 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
Plaintiff’s action is to recover five hundred dollars, the amount of a deposit left with defendants in a proposed real estate deal. Defendants are partners in the real estate brokerage business and
It seems that plaintiff engaged defendants to procure an exchange of certain of his real property, and that defendants procured W. J. Lentell, with whom plaintiff personally entered into a written contract of exchange. The contract provided that the property of each party should he free of incumbrances save those mentioned. As the case now presents itself, these need not be set out or he referred to further.
The effect of the finding that plaintiff was entitled to recover the amount of his deposit from defendants is that the deal failed of consummation on account of Lentell, and not plaintiff, and the sole question is as to defendant’s right to a commission for procuring Lentell, who entered into the contract with plaintiff. The ground of the latter’s avoidance of his agreement to pay the commission is that Lentell was not financially able to respond in damages to plaintiff for failure to perform. The contract did not, -in terms, condition defendants’ right to a commission on Lentell’s financial ability. It set out the agreement in detail between plaintiff and Lentell, and that plaintiff agreed to pay defendants, “his agents, $500 as commission in the transaction. ’ ’
It is the law, stated in a great number of cases, that it is requisite to the earning of a commission that the purchaser produced to the vendor principal by the agent, must he one who is financially capable of making the purchase, or to- respond in damages to the vendor if he fails to do so. [Goldsberry v. Eades, 161 Mo. App. 8; Hayden v. Grillo, 35 Mo. App. 647; Love v. Owens, 31 Mo. App. 501, 510; Gerhart v. Peck, 42 Mo. App. 644, 651; Brauckman v. Leighton, 60 Mo. App. 38, 42; Chipley v. Leathe, 60 Mo. App. 15, 20.]
But in these cases, and others of like character, there is nothing said which prevents the vendor from accepting the purchaser produced, as filling the agent’s contract, and entering into a contract of sale with him. The question is an important one and received careful consideration by the trial judge, who stated that he had not found a case in this State in which the matter had been discussed; the nearest approach, he stated, was in Wright v. Brown, 68 Mo. App. 577, 583, where, in the course of the opinion, it is said that “when the purchaser is accepted and the contract executed, the principal cannot he heard to say when the agent calls on him for compensation, that, ‘You did not produce a purchaser who was financially able to perform the contract and respond in damages in case of nonperformance by him, and therefore I owe you nothing for your services.’ ” But the trial judge remarked that this statement was somewhat clouded by the further observation in the opinion that, “when the purchaser in a case of this kind, has performed (italics ours) the contract, the question of his primary responsibility is eliminated from the controversy.”
On the other hand it is held by courts of high standing and authority that the production of a person by the broker to the vendor as a purchaser, is an implied representation that he is finacially able to make the purchase, and that the mere signing a contract of purchase by the vendor would not rebut that implication. [Butler v. Baker, 17 R. I. 582.] But that case concedes, and it could not well do less, that a vendor may accept the person produced, even though he were not of present financial ability to make the purchase. Two' things are so self-evident that they may be regarded as acknowledged by all — one is that the vendor may reject, without liability to the agent, any person produced by the latter who is not able to make the purchase; the other, that he may accept such person. And the question in any given case is, what has been done by the vendor? We think the better rule — the rule which can be given the most practical application — is that when the agent presents a purchaser to the vendor and the latter enters into a contract with him, selling him the property on terms mutually agreed upon, he accepts him as a purchaser and accepts the service of the agent as performance of the agent’s contract. Otherwise, in all except cash sales, when is it, and how is it, to be determined that the purchaser has been accepted? If there are deferred payments and he fails on the last one, does
The result is to affirm the judgment.