78 N.J.L. 541 | N.J. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff below (a real estate broker), in a suit brought by him to recover brokerage commissions, declared upon, and, at the trial, produced and proved in support of his declaration, a written agreement and authority, dated November 11th, 1903, signed by the defendant, authorizing the fornler, as his agent, to offer for sale or exchange several lots of land in Jersey City, N. J., and thereby agreed to pay him, in case of their sale, two and one-half per centum commission on a purchase-price of $45,000. The defendant, by the express terms of this paper, asserted his ownership of the lots, calling them therein his “property.” While it subsequently transpired that they were not his property, and he had never been seized of the legal estate in the lands, being but a mortgagee thereof, yet, it was conceded at the triai, through his counsel, that no advantage could be taken by him of such fact, as against the plaintiff, presumably for the reason that the recital of ownership in the agreement upon which the latter had been led to act estopped the defendant from denying it. The trial was held before the Hudson County Circuit Court and a jury, and the plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that he had brought about the introduction of the buyer to the defendant, and had been efficient in obtaining a purchaser for the property at the price named; that a sale had finally resulted from his negotiations, and a deed of conveyance, dated October 31st, 1905, executed by the defendant’s son (who was the real owner of the property) to one Louis Resnick, had been delivered in pursuance of such sale; that the defendant had then received the purchase-price of $45,000, but had refused to pay plaintiff the agreed upon
The counsel of the plaintiff in error now urge, as their principal ground for reversal, that the trial judge erred, in refusing their motion, to direct a verdict in favor of their client, insisting — to use the words of their brief — that “the plaintiff was not the efficient procuring cause of the sale, that his sole connection with the affair was to hand to each of the brothers Besniek a list of the properties, including Gampbell’s, to describe the Campbell property and give Neil Campbell’s name and address.”'
Without stopping to consider whether, even under this very
The refusal of the trial court to charge certain requests of the defendant below is next made the subject of several assignments of error. All of them seem to me to seek to introduce into the case propositions of fact and law which were foreign to tiie issue on trial, and have been, in effect, sufficiently, I think, disposed of by what has been said above. Rut, assuming for the sake of the argument, they were within the issue, their merits may be more satisfactorily understood by further consideration.
The other broker, to whom this request presumably refers, was Abram Resnick, who apparently had a written authority to sell the property, purporting to have been executed by the defendant on December 31st, 1903, the very day on which he also signed the contract of sale. How a broker, acting in good faith in the usual course of that business, could have had sufficient opportunity, on the same day of his appointment, to negotiate and also consummate at once, by contract with the owner, so important a sale, must have been -viewed with suspicion by the jury. But admitting its possibility as a matter of fact, the legal conclusion to be drawn from it is clear that Abram could not be both broker and purchaser at the same moment. As soon as he became a purchaser, or principal, his agency ceased, and his legal authority to act as a broker, ipso facto, became inconsistent and invalid. He' could not legally act in such dual relations, however great his agility to turn a somersault. The plaintiff, therefore, had the only agency in which any right to commissions from the defendant could inhere. Hinds v. Henry, 7 Vroom 328; Somers v. Wescoat, 37 Id. 551, and cases cited below.
Such right corxld not be defeated by any default of his principal. Ryer v. Turkel, 46 Vroom 677. Nor did the latter, in fact, recognize the right of any other broker to commissions. He paid none to anyone, and the jury had a right to infer from his admissions in the proofs, that he had successfully exempted himself from such payment to Abram Resnick, the only person, other than the plaintiff, who pretended or claimed to be entitled to brokerage commissions. The evi
Another refused request reads as follows, viz.: "An interest by parol of Abram Besnick in such purchase did not give the plaintiff a right to commission even though it may have been through plaintiff that Abram came into negotiation with defendant. To effect that right in such a case it would have been necessary that defendant should have been offered a binding contract with Abram himself, and not with other persons with whom Abram was secretly interested.”
To the proposition of law embodied in this request to the effect that the plaintiff was bound to show, in order to recover, that the defendant had been offered a binding contract with Abram himself, and not with other persons with whom Abram was secretly interested, we do not assent. If that proposition be sound law, the principle, as established and approved in the cited case of Vreeland v. Vetterlein, must have been incorrectly laid down. Such a rule would leave it in the power of the owner to act in collusion with the real purchasers, who, after obtaining a profitable bargain and availing themselves of the services of the broker to that end, might, by a secret arrangement with the owner, in respect to the formal parties
The further denied requests to charge were made in the following terms, viz.: “'A real estate broker not having an exclusive agency, irrevocable until withdrawn, has no claim for commission on a sale unless he introduces the purchaser to his client in such a way as to make it evident that such purchaser comes from him.”
“Where property is placed with a real estate broker, for sale for a definite price, not to be modified except with his client’s consent, he cannot claim commissions on a sale negotiated by his client for a less sum, either in reduction of price or by way of commissions to another broker, if the client has no knowledge that the person to whom he makes the sale was sent to him by the broker with whom he had put the property for sale.” But it is settled by the authorities that the plaintiff’s right of recovery is not dependent upon the knowledge of the defendant that the purchaser came to purchase in consequence of information obtained through the plaintiff. Vreeland v. Vetterlein, supra; Derrickson v. Quimby, 14 Vroom 373; Somers v. Wescoat, 37 Id. 551, 553; Sussdorf v. Schmidt, 55 N. Y. 320.
Also it must be remembered that the testimony in the case justified the jury in finding that the defendant possessed such knowledge. The judgment below should be affirmed.
For reversal — None.