2 E.D. Smith 372 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1854
By the Court. Daly, J.
As between Beebe and the de*373fendant, the justice appears to have discredited the denial of the latter that he made an agreement to share half the commission with Beebe and Hallet; and where there is conflicting testimony, or rather, where, as in this case, the question is one of credibility, we never interfere with the conclusion arrived at by the justice. As the case therefore stands before us, on this finding of the justice, it appears that Beebe called upon Barnard and apprised him that he had the house in question for sale, and Barnard, having applications before him for investments, agreed if a sale of the house was effected, that Beebe and Hallet should have one half of the commission or brokerage. This was a perfectly valid agreement. Apprising Barnard that the house was for sale, by means of which information Barnard was enabled to go to the owner, to whom, it appears, he was personally unknown, and effect a sale, was a sufficient consideration to support his promise to give Beebe and Hallet one half the commission; and it was entirely immaterial whether Ruckman, the owner, had authorized Beebe and Hallet to sell the house or not. According to his testimony, he did not place the sale in the hands of either of the brokers, but simply signified his willingness to sell the house for $20,000, and give Barnard one per cent., if he brought him a purchaser. The sale was brought about by means of the information communicated by Beebe; and if Barnard made the agreement, which the justice concluded that he did, it does not lie with him to refuse to carry it out because Ruckman did not authorize any person to sell the house for him. According to his own statement, Beebe, after telling him that he had the house for sale, told him that he would allow him half the commission if he would sell the Jiouse. He does not say that he refused to do so, or that he expressed any dissent to the proposition; on the contrary, it may fairly be inferred from his silence that he assented to it. Possessed of the requisite information that this house was to be disposed of—information material and valuable to a broker engaged in such a business, and especially so in the present case, as Barnard knew of a pur*374chaser—he seeks to turn this information exclusively to his own benefit, by calling upon the owner of the house, and by effecting a sale without the instrumentality of Beebe and Hal-let, to secure the whole of the commission to himself. I think the conclusion of the justice was right, that the agreement was founded upon a sufficient consideration, and that the judgment should be sustained.