Plaintiff William A. Maxwell sued defendant Michael P. Doyle, Inc., alleging that he was entitled, under an oral agreement, to half of the commission received upon the sale of an apartment complex. At trial, the court granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiffs evidence. Because we hold that plaintiff presented sufficient evidence of breach of an enforceable agreement to withstand a motion for a directed verdict, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
Facts
William A. Maxwell is a real estate broker and agent specializing in commercial properties in the Cumberland County market. Defendant Michael P. Doyle, Inc. is a corporation located in Charlotte that provides commercial real estate brokerage services. Michael Doyle is the president and sole stockholder of the company and a licensed commercial real estate broker.
.Plaintiff’s evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, tended to show the following. Beginning as early as 1997, Doyle had attempted to convince Tom Wood, the owner of the Cambridge Arms Apartments in Fayetteville, to allow Doyle to attempt to sell the apartments. On 13 August 1997, Doyle wrote to Wood concerning the apartments, but did not receive a response. Doyle subsequently telephoned Wood a number of times to try to interest him in selling the apartments. Although Wood did not always return Doyle’s telephone calls, Doyle did speak with Wood on the telephone approximately five times. Nevertheless, Doyle’s efforts proved unsuccessful and Wood refused to sell the apartments.
On 13 September 2000, Doyle called Maxwell to discuss the Fayetteville real estate market. The two met in Fayetteville the following day and toured several properties. Later that day, Doyle asked if Maxwell knew Tom Wood. Doyle, who was called by Maxwell as an adverse witness, explained:
I wanted to see if Bill Maxwell could give me some help on a property called Cambridge Arms, that I had failed to sell. And so I said to Bill... if you can make Mr. Tom Wood — the person that I had been talking to on and off for three or four years . . . —-a seller — meaning he would sell his apartments — you and I can split a fee.
Maxwell testified that Doyle offered to split any commission from a sale of the apartments if Maxwell arranged a meeting with Wood and gave Doyle access to his Cambridge Arms files.
After agreeing to the proposition, Maxwell made his file available to Doyle, who removed
Although no commission agreement was signed at the 19 September 2000 meeting, Doyle, unbeknownst to Maxwell, subsequently did obtain a listing and commission agreement from Wood for the sale of the Cambridge Arms. Wood telephoned Doyle approximately ten days after the 19 September meeting and the two met in early October. As a result of this meeting, Doyle prepared a listing and commission agreement that Wood signed on 15 October 2000. Doyle signed the agreement, which provided for a two percent commission upon the sale of the Cambridge Arms, on 21 November 2000.
The Cambridge Arms was sold on 29 March 2001 for $14,000,000.00. Defendant earned a commission of $280,000.00 on the sale. Although Doyle and Maxwell had remained in contact during that time frame regarding other real estate matters, Doyle never informed Maxwell of his subsequent contacts with Tom Wood. Maxwell did not learn of the Cambridge Arms sale until he read about it in the newspaper. When he called Doyle and requested half of the commission, Doyle refused to pay him anything.
Plaintiff filed this breach of contract action against defendant on 27 September 2001 and the case was tried before a jury at the 30 September 2002 session of Cumberland County Superior Court. At the close of plaintiffs evidence, the trial court granted defendant’s motion for directed verdict and dismissed plaintiffs claims.
Standard of Review
When considering a motion for a directed verdict, a trial court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, giving that party the benefit of every reasonable inference arising from the evidence.
Clark v. Moore,
As our Supreme Court has explained, questions concerning the sufficiency of the evidence to withstand a Rule 50 motion for directed verdict “present only a question of law; that question is whether substantial evidence introduced at trial would support a verdict in favor of the nonmoving party.”
In re Will of Buck,
Nonetheless, defendant urges us to apply an abuse of discretion standard, citing prior decisions of this Court. We are confident that those decisions did not intend to hold, contrary to well-established Supreme Court precedent, that a decision regarding the sufficiency of the evidence, a question of law,
Thus, we apply a
de novo
standard of review in considering the merits of plaintiff’s appeal as to the motion for a directed verdict. This Court’s review is limited to “those grounds asserted by the moving party at the trial level.”
Freese v. Smith,
Discussion
At the outset, we note that the parties devote much of their briefs to strenuous argument over whether the contract required plaintiff to be the “procuring cause” of the sale. Defendant argues that plaintiff was required to show that he was the procuring cause of the sale and that he failed to do so. Plaintiff contends either that the terms of the contract altered the strict application of the procuring cause rule, or, alternatively, that his evidence was sufficient to establish that he was in fact a procuring cause of the sale. We find that these arguments are beside the point.
Our Supreme Court set forth the procuring cause rule in
S & W Realty & Bonded Commercial Agency, Inc. v. Duckworth & Shelton, Inc., 274 N.C.
243, 250-51,
Ordinarily, a broker with whom an owner’s property is listed for sale becomes entitled to his commission whenever he pro-, cures a party who actually contracts for the purchase of the property at a price acceptable to the owner. If any act of the broker in pursuance of his authority to find a purchaser is the initiating act which is the procuring cause of a sale ultimately made by the owner, the owner must pay the commission provided the case is not taken out of the rule by the contract of employment.
The Court explained the basis for the rule: “The law does not permit an owner to reap the benefits of the broker’s labor without just reward if he has requested a broker to undertake the sale of his property and accepts the results of service rendered at his request.”
Id.
at 251,
The procuring cause doctrine as adopted in S & W Realty thus relates to a dispute between the seller of property and the broker. Likewise, the question in the cases cited by the parties is whether the plaintiff broker was entitled to a commission from the defendant seller. This analysis has no application to circumstances such as those presented here: a breach of contract dispute between two brokers regarding a split of a commission already paid by the seller.
North Carolina courts have not previously discussed this issue specifically. Significantly, however, the few decisions addressing disputes between brokers over a commission do not mention the concept of procuring cause, but rather apply general contract principles.
See, e.g., Smith v. Barnes,
Decisions from other jurisdictions have expressly held that the procuring cause rule does not apply to disputes between brokers
[W]here one broker sues another for a share of commissions after an agreement between them to that effect and the subsequent sale of the property involved[,] . . . the issue was not who was the “efficient producing cause” of each sale, but rather what were the terms of the agreement between the parties regarding the distribution of commissions earned.
De Benedictis v. Gerechoff,
To entitle a broker to recover his share of compensation under the terms of a particular fee-splitting arrangement, he must show that he performed the services required of him in accordance with the terms of the contract. . . . [including] when he is required to merely initiate the transaction or otherwise assist in consummating the deal.
John D. Perovich, Annotation,
Construction of Agreement Between Real-Estate Agents to Share Commissions,
In light of the explanation of the procuring cause doctrine by our Supreme Court in S & W Realty, we agree with the jurisdictions cited above and hold that a broker suing another broker for a division of a commission pursuant to an agreement between the brokers need not establish that he or she was a procuring cause of the sale. Instead, the question is whether there was a breach of an enforceable contract between the brokers.
We must, therefore, determine whether Maxwell offered sufficient evidence of a breach of a valid, enforceable contract with Doyle for division of a commission. To be enforceable, the terms of a contract must be sufficiently definite and certain.
Brooks v. Hackney,
According to Maxwell’s testimony, Maxwell and Doyle agreed:
If it materialized into a sale — and we shook hands on this in the beginning, that we were going to co-broker on a 50-50 basis — that we would work the Cambridge Arms on the same basis, because, even though he had known about them, he had not been able to make any headway, and since I know Mr. Wood, since I knew the apartments — and we shook hands and had a meeting of the minds right there — that if it materialized into a sale and there was a commission paid and a closing takes place, that I would get fifty percent of the commission and that I was to assist him by letting him go through my files ... of all the materials.
Doyle subsequently sent a memo to Maxwell dated 18 September 2000, that stated:
After reflecting over the weekend regarding a potential fee schedule for us and a sale price, I strongly believe that we should increase Mr. Wood’s price by $500,000.00 to $16,500,000.00 and obtain a Commission Agreement for 3%, of which we would split equally.
I can be there Tuesday or anytime you can arrange meeting face to face with Tom Wood for lunch or any other reason. I’llplan on Tuesday if you think you can get us a visit.
In arguing that plaintiff’s evidence did not establish sufficiently definite and certain contract terms, defendant relies largely on the fact that Maxwell used different phrases to describe the arrangement, such as “finder’s fee” or “co-broker.” Defendant does not, however, point to any evidence or cite to any authority establishing what these
labels mean or how they might render the contract indefinite.
See, e.g., Beasley-Kelso Assoc., Inc. v. Tenney,
Defendant also points to the fact that there was no agreement as to the time for performance. Our courts have, however, long held that “where a contract does not specify the time of performance . . ., the law will prescribe that performance must be within a reasonable time and that the contract will continue for a reasonable time, ‘taking into account the purposes the parties intended to accomplish.’ ”
Rodin v. Merritt,
The determination of what cpnstitutes a reasonable time for performance presents a mixed question of law and fact:
If, from the admitted facts, the Court can draw the conclusion as to whether the time is reasonable or unreasonable, by applying to them a legal principle or a rule of law, then the question is one of law. But if different inferences may be drawn, or circumstances are numerous and complicated, and such that a definite legal rule cannot be applied to them, then the matter should be submitted to the jury. It is only when the facts are undisputed and different inferences cannot be reasonably drawn from them, that the question ever becomes one of law.
Hardee’s Food Systems, Inc. v. Hicks,
We believe that Maxwell’s evidence was sufficiently definite as to the material terms of the agreement: (1) he was required to arrange a meeting with Wood and allow Doyle access to his files; and (2) if a sale resulted within a reasonable period of time, he was then entitled to a 50-50 split of any commission. Defendant has not specified any other material terms necessary to the enforcement of the contract that were missing or indefinite and, after reviewing the record, we have been unable to identify any.
Since Maxwell offered evidence of the material terms of the agreement, that he performed his obligations under the agreement, and that Doyle later brokered the sale of the apartment complex and earned a sizeable commission that he failed to split with plaintiff, we hold that there was sufficient evidence of a breach of contract for this case to
Because the question may arise again, we address Maxwell’s argument, in the alternative, that he is entitled to recover the reasonable value of his services under a theory of
quantum meruit.
We hold that the trial court properly granted a directed verdict as to this claim. Although we note that it appears plaintiff expressly abandoned this claim at trial, recovery in
quantum meruit
is not, in any event, available when, as here, there is an express contract.
Beckham v. Klein,
Finally, Maxwell argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to compel production of defendant’s corporate bank statements and tax returns for the relevant period. The trial court reviewed the materials in camera, denied the motion on the ground that the materials were not relevant, and ordered the materials sealed for the purpose of appellate review.
Rule 26(b)(1) of the Rules of Civil Procedure provides that a party “may obtain discovery regarding any matter, not privileged, which is relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action, whether it relates to the claim or defense of the party seeking discovery or to the claim or defense of any other party[.]” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 26(b)(1) (2003). A trial court’s determination regarding relevance for purposes of discovery may be reversed only upon a showing of an abuse of discretion.
Adams v. Lovette,
Reversed in part, affirmed in part, and remanded.
