132 N.Y.S. 942 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1912
Plaintiff, a real estate broker, brought this action against the defendant to recover the sum of one and one-fourth per cent, commission for the services rendered in procuring a customer who entered into an enforcible contract with the defendant for the purchase of the property owned by the defendant.
After the plaintiff had rested his case the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that plaintiff was not entitled to recover said commission, and on the further ground that he failed to prove a cause of action. The motions were denied by the court. The defendant then rested. Then, on motion of the plaintiff, the jury was directed to find a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $291.50, inclusive of interest. The defendant then moved for a new trial on all the grounds specified in section 999 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which motion the court entertained.
The motion for a new trial is based upon the contract
There is quite a distinction between contracts of brokers containing the condition that commissions are only to be paid, viz., “ when deed is actually delivered ” or “ title closed,” or “ when title is passed,” or “ on closing of title,” or “ commissions not to be due or payable until title is passed.” There can be found expression of opinions in the books covering all such conditions wherein a broker can or cannot recover' unless an enforcible contract is fully carried out, and also holding to the effect that the payment of the commissions is suspended until the certain event has happened. But each case must be decided upon its own facts.
In the case at bar, was not the plaintiff entitled to his commissions as agreed upon when the contract of sale was consummated, or was it suspended until the title actually passed ? The title failed to pass, not by the act of the purchaser, but by reason of the defective title of the defendant. The question now arises: . Is the plaintiff estopped from making a claim that his commissions should not be paid because the title never passed or closed? Was the clause in the agreement, “ and do hereby agree to .pay him one and one-fourth per cent commission on the total selling price when the title is passed,” a condition precedent before plaintiff could recover said commissions ?
The defendant, to sustain this contention, cites, among
“ The plaintiff claims that his right to commissions was earned at the time the contract was executed between the defendant and the vendee and that, as the failure to convey was wholly the fault of the defendant, he is entitled to maintain this judgment. Ordinarily that would be'true; but, in the case at bar, the plaintiff- has expressly agreed that his commissions shall not be ‘ due and payable until title shall he passedThis agreement was made at the time an en-f orcible contract “between the vendor and vendee had been entered into, and, presumably, was for the purpose of evidencing in. writing the agreement made between the plaintiff and the defendant regarding the payment of commissions * * It is reasonable to assume that, if the plaintiff regarded his commissions as having been due or earned at the time the contract between the vendor and vendee was executed, he would have entered into no agreement that the same should not be due or payable until the title passed, thus making his commissions dependent upon the occurring of that event.” But in Meltzer v. Straus, 61 Misc. Rep. 250, 253, the same court held-: “ Where a contract for the sale and purchase of real estate has been made, the broker, who, upon employment by the owner, procured á purchaser, is entitled to recover his commissions.” A provision in the agreement with the broker that his commis
The general rule undoubtedly is that a real estate agent is entitled to his commissions when he finds a purchaser ready, willing and able to purchase on the proposed terms laid down by the vendor; and, when the vendor makes a contract of sale with the proposed purchaser, his agent is entitled to his commission, irrespective of whether the contract is ever carried out by conveyance of the property and payment of the purchase money. The same would be true if the vendor should decline to make a contract, of sale when the proposed purchaser is produced. It is no fault of the broker if the vendor’s title is defective and he is unable to convey; and, when a vendor inserts in th'e broker’s -contract a provision for the payment of his commissions “ when the title is passed,” the addition of these words merely fixes the time when the contract is to be performed, and the actual closing of title is not a condition precedent to suspend the payment of the commissions. Upon the failure of the
Defendant’s motion for a new trial denied.