44 N.J. Eq. 378 | New York Court of Chancery | 1888
This is a suit for the specific performance of a contract to convey lands. The complainant asks that the defendant be compelled to convey certain lands to him, situate in the city of Newark. The contract on which his action is founded was not made by the defendant in person, but by a person representing himself to be the defendant’s agent. The defendant denies that this person was his agent. Whether the court can give the complainant what he asks or not, will depend entirely upon whether the proofs show such a delegation of power to the person who assumed to act as agent, as gave him authority to make a written contract which imposed upon the defendant the obligation to convey. The delegation of power was made by parol. No other is shown. This is sufficient. Mr. Justice Van Syckel, in Long v. Hartwell, 6 Vr. 116, 121, said, in substance, the cases, both in England and this country, agree that authority to an agent to make a contract in writing to convey land need not be in writing, but may be created by parol.
The person assuming to act as agent in this case entered into a written contract with the complainant. The contract is unilateral. It imposes no obligation whatever upon the complainant. Although made by a person assuming to act as the defendant’s agent, and without previous consultation with the defendant about the contract, he seems to have proceeded upon the notion that he would faithfully discharge his duty to his principal by
It is not disputed that the defendant, at one time, authorized the person, who assumed to act as his agent in this transaction, to find a purchaser for him, and that the defendant stated to him the terms upon which he would sell his property. The proof of delegation of power, on the part of the complainant, comes alone from the mouth of the person who claims to have been the donee
“ ‘ You must try and sell my property for me; I will sell it for $40,000 ; I will allow $25,000 to remain on bond and mortgage, and require only $15,000 cash.’ Then I asked him how long that could remain, and he said-five or ten years, or any length of time; I do not want the money. He said they might have it at five per cent. — it might remain at five' per cent., and that he would give a clear title.”
He also testified, that although the defendant afterwards asked him many times whether he had found a purchaser, he never subsequently restated or repeated the terms on which he would sell. On the 12th of January, 1886, the agent, in order to make his right to commissions sure, in case he effected a sale, procured the defendant to sign a contract in these words:
“ I agree to pay O. Bried two and a half per cent, on the price of my house on Broad street, if he sell or is instrumental in selling the same for me at a price I accept.”
The defendant admits that he gave his property to this person to sell, in November, 1885, as he did to several other persons, and that he told him he would sell for $40,000 — $15,000 cash and $25,000 on bond, secured by a first mortgage on the property, with interest at five per cent. — but he swears that nothing was said about the time for which the mortgage was to run, nor about the kind of a title which he would make.
But, suppose it be admitted that the defendant gave the agent just the authority which the agent says he did, the question, which this state of facts would present for decision, would be, had the agent authority to bind the defendant by a written contract ? He was a special agent, constituted to do a specific act — ■ to negotiate a sale, or to find a purchaser who was willing to purchase on the terms specified. The rule with regard to such agents is settled. Their acts do not bind their principals unless they pursue their authority strictly, and those who deal with them are chargeable with notice of the extent of their authority. Cooley v. Perrine, 12 Vr. 322; S. C. on error, 13 Vr. 623. The
But a further defence exists, namely, that the authority of the agent was revoked prior to the making of the contract upon which the complainant’s action rests. The defendant swears, that on the 14th of April, 1886, when he executed the power of attorney to Goeller, he told his agent he would not sell his property. The agent, however, on the contrary swears, that nothing at that time was said about the sale of the property. The circumstances attending the preparation and execution of the power of attorney render it highly probable that something was said. The defendant was about to leave the country; his •object in executing the power of attorney was to place this particular property in charge of an agent to do for him, in respect to it, what his absence from the country would prevent him from doing for himself; among the powers which he gave his attorney, was one authorizing him to exercise general control •and supervision over the property; the direction to insert this .power would almost necessarily, as it seems to me, have provoked the draftsman of the power of attorney — who it will be remembered was the agent — to inquire of the defendant whether .he intended to give Mr. Goeller authority to sell the property, or
The fact that the power was abrogated before the contract in
The complainant’s bill must be dismissed, with costs.