15 N.Y.S. 673 | The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo | 1891
We think the conditions upon which a broker is entitled to commissions were correctly stated by this court in Slater v. Holt, 10 N. Y. St. Rep. 257: “The question whether a broker is entitled to commissions turns on the inquiry whether the things he has done, while his agency continues, have brought forth a party able, willing, and ready to accept the owner’s offer of sale. ” If the respondent did'not produce such a party, he was not entitled to commissions, and, if he failed on the trial to make it appear that he produced a purchaser answering those requirements, a new trial should be granted. The inquiry here is one as to evidence. Simon, the proposed purchaser, on his direct examination testified: “ When we were at Herman’s, I said, * Gensler, I heard you wanted to sell your house for $10,000; I want to buy it. ’ I placed $25 in bills on the counter, and he shoved it back, and said: * I don’t want to sell it. ’ I was ready to buy it for $10,000, and ready to give him the cash for it, if I had had about thirty days’ time. The $25 was for the purpose of binding the bargain. I was willing to make the bargain at that time, and went there for that purpose, and Mr. Mullenhoff got me to go there.” On his cross-examination he said: “Mullenhoff told me I could buy Gensler’s property for $10,000. I considered it worth about $18,-000, and was ready in a minute to buy it for $10,000. When we were in Herman’s place I said to Gensler that I heard that he wanted to sell his property for $10,000, and, if that were so, I wanted to buy it. I had $25 to bind the bargain. I made no offer to purchase at any other price than $10,-000. I saw he did not want to sell, and that- settled the matter. I did not have $10,000 in my pocket nor in the bank, but I have property enough, and could raise it any time; but when I found it was not for sale for $10,000, I did not wish to make a bargain.” According to the respondent’s own testimony, Gensler’s offer was to sell for $10,000 if Mullenhoff would produce a purchaser with $10,000 cash the next morning. Even if the construction to be put upon the offer was that a party should be produced the next morning with $10,000,—that is to say, able to pay $10,000,—the true meaning would seem to be that a purchaser should be produced able to pay $10,000 as soon as conveyances could be prepared and the negotiations concluded. Now, according to Simon, when he proposed to buy, Gensler told him he did not want to sell. In Hart v. Hoffman, 44 How. Pr. 168, the court of appeals held that it was not necessary, under the circumstances of that case, for the plaintiff to prove that the party produced as a purchaser had the pecuniary ability to conclude the trade. But the decision was not intended to qualify the rule that the broker must produce a purchaser “of sufficient ability.” Duclos v. Cunningham, 102 N. Y. 678, 6 N. E. Rep. 790. In Hart v. Hoffman the agent produced a purchaser, who, on being presented' to the owner, stated