254 Mass. 216 | Mass. | 1926
The question to be decided is, whether the trial court was right in sustaining a demurrer to the declaration and ordering judgment for the defendants.
Upon the allegations in the declaration, the plaintiff, a corporation engaged in the real estate business, was employed by the owner to procure a purchaser for certain property in Newton. The attention of the defendant Rae was directed to the property by one of the plaintiff’s representatives, who proceeded in the usual way to induce him to purchase it, with the result that Rae was willing to pay $15,500, a price acceptable to the owner. Had the sale been made on that basis, the plaintiff would have been entitled to a commission of approximately $500.
It is alleged that, at this point in the negotiations, the defendant Rae conspired with the defendant Futurity Thread Company to deprive the plaintiff of its commission, by an arrangement between themselves that the defendant company should go to the owner of the property, represent to him that it desired to purchase the same, that no brokers were in any way concerned with the proposed purchase, and offer to purchase the property at the price Rae had decided he would be willing to pay, less the amount of the broker’s commission. They further agreed that, in the event of securing the property on these terms, a transfer should be taken in the name of the defendant company but for the benefit of the defendant Rae. The Futurity Thread Company then represented to the owner that it desired to purchase the property upon its own account, and that no broker was interested in the transaction, without disclosing the fact that the purchase
Neither the owner nor Rae refused to perform any agreement with the plaintiff. At the time of the alleged conspiracy Rae might have refused to be a buyer without violating any duty to the plaintiff or interfering with any contractual rights between the plaintiff and the owner. The broker had not then earned a commission. If it should appear that its employment as a broker continued and that its efforts were the efficient cause of the sale, it has not been deprived of its commission but is entitled to it. Gleason v. Nelson, 162 Mass. 245. Cohen v. Ames, 205 Mass. 186. In that event, the alleged acts of the defendants instead of depriving it of its commission have assisted in making it possible for the plaintiff to receive one. The gist of the action is not conspiracy, but the alleged deceit or fraud causing damage. New England Foundation Co. v. Reed, 209 Mass. 556, 560. On any theory the allegations of the declaration do not show that the plaintiff has suffered damage. Upon the facts in this case it is distinguishable from Henry W. Savage, Inc. v. Wheelock, 230 Mass. 111, and Gormley v. Dangel, 214 Mass. 5.
The orders sustaining the demurrer and for judgment were right, and are affirmed.
So ordered.