48 Pa. Super. 280 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1911
Opinion by
■ This action was brought to recover a broker’s commission for the sale of a licensed saloon. The court below discharged a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense. On October 3,1910, the parties executed the following agreement in writing: “If David Lowenstein furnishes me with a buyer for my saloon on 3rd and Tioga Sts., I agree to pay him a commission of 5 per cent out of the sale price.” Signed William McPeak. The. defendant avers in his affidavit and in addition to the above written agreement there was a verbal understanding between the defendant and the agent of the plaintiff, as follows: •that the plaintiff was to receive his commission only in the event of the buyer, to be produced by the plaintiff, ■making final settlement with the defendant, and the commission referred to was to be paid by the defendant in-the ■final settlement betweén the defendant and the plaintiff ’s
The plaintiff produced one Myers who entered into an agreement with the defendant, by which Myers was to purchase the licensed saloon for the sum of $14,000, and he then paid in cash $500 on account of the price. The license court consented to the transfer of the McPeak license to Myers, but the transaction ended at that stage. Myers refused to make & settlement, and frankly declared his inability to do so, so that the license remained in the name of McPeak, who continued to operate his saloon under it. The reason given by Myers was that he could not secure the money, and the plaintiff promised the defendant “that he would endeavor to get him another purchaser for the place, as he could not secure the necessary cash for Myers on account of his, Myers, reputation.” These facts are set out clearly in the affidavit of defense and fully warranted the court below in refusing to enter a summary judgment. The facts as stated are to be taken as true and the intimate relation between the written and oral branches of the contract make them integral parts of one transaction.
It is clearly alleged that they were made at the same time, and each part is so indelibly associated with and relates to the other, that the oral promise must be treated as contemporaneously made, and as inducing the conclusion reached by the parties. They, however, so understood it, for when Myers failed to make final settlement, Lowen-stein endeavored to find another purchaser in his place. The buyer was not furnished as provided in the writing, and the sale price was never realized, so that there was nothing on which to found a commission.
It is good faith in making and closing a transaction of this kind that the law intends to reward, and it is always incumbent upon a broker seeking to recover his commission to prove that the sale was made to a party whom he secured as purchaser, or that the purchaser was able and willing to buy and that the failure to make the actual sale
The judgment is affirmed.