147 Va. 1009 | Va. Ct. App. | 1926
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs’ testimony as to the character of their employment is found in the evidence of H. E. Ferguson:
“Q. When Dr. Garnett came to you about selling the house did he authorize you to sell at a specific price in advance, or did he employ you to get him a purchaser and submit the offers you got to him?
“A. He had an idea of what he wanted and he told me to see what I could get, and I would submit what I did get to him.”
“Q. What price was that?
“A. $13,000.00 one day and $12,000.00 the next.
“Q. Either $12,000.00 or $13,000.00?
“A. At that time, yes. He said he would like to get $13,000.00. I told him we could not doit. I dickered with him a day or two and he suggested a price of $12,000.00, and so on down it went.”
On cross examination Mr. Ferguson says:
“Q. What is the lowest price at which Dr. Garnett authorized you to sell his property?
*1012 “A. The lowest price he ever gave me was $11,000.00 to $12,000.00. The lowest price he ever authorized straight out.
“Q. You never were authorized to sell it for anything less than $11,000.00?
“A. Dr. Garnett was evidently hard pressed financially. He came to me every day or two to know if I could get a better offer.
“Q. Just answer the question, please. I understand you to say he never authorized you to sell it for anything less than $11,000.00.
“A. I believe that was the lowest proposition that he made. It was right around that.
“Q. That was the lowest one, you say? Did he ever make one lower than that?
“A. If he did, I do not recall it, and when the question arose in my conversation with Mr. Mitchell, it led me to believe * * * *.
“Q. I do not care about that. He never did authorize you to sell it for $11,000.00?
“A. I think that is right.”
In regard to his offer of the property to the purchaser, he testifies:
“Q. What did you offer the property to Mr. Mitchell at?
“A. I told Mr. Mitchell it could be bought around $12,000.00. We were negotiating, but so far we could not get together. Dr. Garnett was anxious to sell and he liked the location.
“Q. What was the lowest price you gave Mr. Mitchell on it?
“A. I do not know that I can answer that question. I told him I would do the best I could. If he would make an offer on it, I would be glad to submit it, but I never offered it to Mitchell at a price of less than $11,500.00.”
On the first trial of the case four instructions were granted at the instance of the defendant, namely “A, B, C and D,” and “E” was given to the jury on the court’s own motion, to all which the plaintiffs, by counsel, excepted:
“Instruction A. The court instructs the jury that before they can find a verdict for the plaintiff in this case, they must believe that the plaintiff found a purchaser able, ready and willing to buy the house, sold at the price the plaintiffs were authorized to sell the place for by the defendant, or at a price satisfactory to the defendant.
“Instruction B. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that there was an agreement between Patton, Temple & Williamson, Incorporated, and Dr. R. W. Garnett," under which Dr. Garnett was to pay the said Patton, Temple & Williamson, Incorporated, a commission, provided they sold his house at either $13,000.00 or $11,000.00, and further believe that said Patton, Temple & Williamson, Incorporated, failed to make a salé at either of these prices, and that after they had failed to make the sale and their authority was revoked, Dr. Garnett himself made the sale at a reduced price to a man with whom Patton, Temple & Williamson, Incorporated, had been negotiating at a different price, then the said Patton, Temple & Williamson are not entitled to recover any commission for the sale, and the jury should find for the defendant.
“Instruction C. The court instructs the jury that Dr. Garnett had the power to revoke the agency of*1014 Patton, Temple & Williamson, Incorporated, to sell Ms home, and that if they believe from the evidence that Dr.' Garnett notified said Patton, Temple & Williamson, Incorporated, he no longer needed their services in selling his home, and that no sale at the price fixed between Patton, Temple & Williamson, Incorporated, and Dr. Garnett, or satisfactory to him, had been effected up until time said notice was received, then the said Patton, Temple & Williamson, Incorporated, are not entitled to any compensation for subsequent sale made by Gr. Garnett.
“Instruction D. The court instructs the jury that before Patton, Temple & Williamson, Incorporated, are entitled to recover commissions sued for in this case, they must show by the preponderance of the evidence either that it completed the sale of the house and lot formerly belonging to Dr. Garnett to Mr. Mitchell, at the price of either $13,000.00 or $11,000.00, or that it produced to Dr. Garnett a party able, ready and willing to buy the said property at a price satisfactory to Garnett.
“Instruction E. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that plaintiff found a purchaser who was ready, willing and able to pay $10,000.00 for the property, and submitted this offer to Garnett, with the name of the purchaser, and that Garnett determined to accept said offer, then he had no right to revoke the authority of plaintiff to sell, merely in order to avoid the payment of reasonable compensation to the agents for their services. And if they believe the revocation as made was not bona fide, but was made to avoid paying for plaintiff’s services, they should find for the plaintiff and allow reasonable compensation for their services.
“If the jury, however, believe that such revocation*1015 was made bona fide without any such purpose, and a sale thereafter effected by Garnett personally, they should find for the defendant.”
Mitchell, the purchaser, testifies that Ferguson was the first man who interested him in the property, and he gave Ferguson to understand he would not pay more than $10,000.00 for the property; that the lowest price Ferguson offered it to him was $11,500.00; that Dr. Garnett saw him Moiiday, November 26th, about buying the property and on that day he made a contract to buy it at $10,000.00.
Dr. Garnett testified that on Saturday, November 24th, he wrote a letter to the agents telling them that he revoked their authority as they “had been unable to make sale for me at the price I fixed.” This letter was received by the agents on the same day.
Instruction E, given by the court of its own motion, was in hopeless conflict with the other instructions. The basis for this instruction was evidence to the effect that Garnett had consulted a lawyer as to his right, without incurring liability for commissions, to sell to Mitchell at $10,000.00, the agents not having been able to procure a purchaser at $11,000.00 or more, in Mitchell or any one else, as they had contracted to do; and the contention by the plaintiff that it might be inferred from the testimony that Garnett had revoked the agent’s authority in order that he might take advantage of a willingness on the part of the purchaser to buy for $10,000.00. Dr. Garnett denied that he revoked the authority for this purpose, and said he did not decide to negotiate with Mitchell for a sale to him at $10,000.00 until Monday morning.
The principles of law governing the case are fairly well settled in Virginia. It is established by our decisions that when a broker is employed under a
It is further settled law in Virginia that in such a contract as the one we are considering, the owner has a right to terminate it by revocation at any time. As said in Rucker & Co. v. Glennan, 130 Va. 511 (on page 519), 107 S. E. 725, 728: - “If the agent holds at will, it may be revoked at any time, with or without reason, unless coupled with an interest or the agent has proceeded with the performance; for if the agent has partly executed his authority, and then the principal revokes the unexecuted part, causing . him damage, he must indemnify the agent to the extent of the damage caused.”
In the instant case there is no pretense that Mitchell, the proposed purchaser, would have given $11,000.00 for the property; the evidence is affirmatively to the contrary effect.
Instruction E, given by the court, is plainly erroneous as it assumes that the agent could earn his commission by procuring a purchaser at $10,000.00, and proceeds to tell the jury that if “Garnett determined to accept said offer he could not revoke,” etc.
If the instruction was applicable to the case at all, Garnett’s right to revoke was not dependent upon an unexpressed mental desire or determination, and this phrase should have read “and Garnett had accepted said offer.”
There was no such deceit or fraud in this case as comes within the purview of those words as used in the decided cases. In the case reported in 138 Ya., 511, 121 S. E. 883, supra, Judge Prentis says:
“In the absence of deceit or fraud on the part of the owner, the broker is entitled to no commissions unless he finds such a purchaser, and such a special contract should not restrain the owner from seeking, in good faith, to find a purchaser for his property on different terms.” The views expressed by Judge Prentis in his opinion show distinctly that what is meant by fraud and lack of good faith was such con*1018 duct on the part of the owner as to show an intent to deprive the agent of his commissions, although he had or was about to procure a purchaser at the stated price. Under the doctrine announced in the opinion (pages 516-517 [121 S. E. 883]) Garnett here was clearly justified in revoking the agency and selling directly to Mitchell, as by so doing he in no way interfered with the performance of their undertaking by the agents. As there said (page 515 [121 S. E. 884]): “A broker is never entitled to commissions for failing to perform his contract. To entitle him to his commissions he must succeed, and he takes the entire risk of failure for his reward comes only as a consequence of his success. He may devote his time and labor and expend his money with ever so much devotion to the interests of the owner, and yet if he fails to procure a purchaser, abandons his efforts, or his authority is fairly and in good faith terminated, he does not earn his commissions.”
In the instant case the owner did not terminate the authority in bad faith, as the agent does not attempt to show that he did so in order to prevent him from earning his commissions on at least $11,000.00, and unless he can show that the risk of failure was his, and reward could only come as “a consequence of his success.”
When the defendant made his motion for a new trial, the judge of the trial court very properly set aside the verdict of the jury, as he could only in that manner correct his error in giving instruction E.
As no question is raised concerning the subsequent proceeding in the case, the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.