Relying on an alleged exclusive agency agreement, the plaintiff-broker sought a ten percent commission on the sale of the defendants’ property which was effected through the auspices of another broker. The sale took place four years after the exchange of correspondence on which the plaintiff bases his exclusive agency claim.
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A judge of the Superior Court awarded the plaintiff $52,500
2
(ten percent of the sale price) although the parties had failed to specify the duration of the contract or fix the amount of the commission and although there was evidence that custom in Plymouth County treated exclusive agency agreements without a specified termination date as having a life expectancy of several months, not several years. Citing
Simons
v.
American Dry Ginger Ale Co.,
The alleged agreement consisted of two items. One was a letter of the broker dated October 2, 1981, which in relevant part stated:
“Naturally, I would like the exclusive-right-to-sell but would accept an exclusive agency agreement. In return I will advertise and give it our best efforts.
“Please let me know what the selling price would be and in general the terms you would be willing to discuss with prospects.”
The other item was the following handwritten note appended by an attorney for the defendants to the broker’s letter:
10/13/82[ 3 ]
“Dear Jim:
You are authorized to list above land on an exclusive agency agreement basis for $30,000.00 an acre. 20% Down. *574 Terms acceptable both parties. Subject to credit. You may place a sign on property at your expense.
Cordially, Bob”
The judge found that although the plaintiff had been unable to procure a purchaser for the property, it had, by placing a “For Sale” sign on the property and by producing two potential customers, reasonably performed its obligations. The 1985 sale, however, was in no way related to the plaintiff’s efforts.
We assume, for purposes of this opinion, that the October, 1981, exchange constituted a valid bilateral contract because of the broker’s agreement to advertise and use his best efforts. Compare
Des Rivieres
v.
Sullivan,
While not discussed in
Tristram’s Landing, Inc.
v.
Wait,
“(a) he produces a purchaser ready, willing and able to buy on the terms fixed by the owner, (b) the purchaser enters into a binding contract with the owner to do so, and (c) the purchaser completes the transaction by closing the title in accordance with the provisions of the contract.”
In addition, in order to protect a seller’s expectation that the commission will be generated by the proceeds of sale and that
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he will have to pay only a single commission, no commission is owing unless the seller has signed a binding agreement with the buyer procured by the broker. This is true even when the seller is responsible for the failure to enter into a binding contract.
Capezzuto
v.
John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Consistent with the requirement that the broker must clearly and specifically alert the seller to the possibility that liability may be imposed even in the event the broker does not effect a sale, this court in
Bump
v.
Robbins,
The same principle must be applied to the agreement at hand. If the broker intended to have the exclusive agency agreement continue until notified to the contrary, his was the burden to include such a provision. In its absence, the agreement was effective, at best, for only a reasonable period of time.
What is a reasonable period of time depends on the nature of the contract, the probable intention of the parties, and the attendant circumstances.
Powers, Inc.
v.
Wayside, Inc.,
343
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Mass. 686, 691 (1962).
Barclay
v.
DeVeau,
The cases relied on by the judge which led him to require the defendant to give notice of termination are not apposite. They involved employment or franchise agreements where the expected performance was continuing and indefinite as to time. Here, however, the contract contemplated a definite result and not prolonged performance. As stated in
Harris
v.
McPherson,
“Ordinarily in [exclusive brokerage] contracts the exclusive sale is given to the broker for a definite time. Where the duration of the contract is not specified, what is the life of the contract? It is to be observed that this contract is not one of a general agency employment, as that of a salesman; it is a contract to procure a purchaser for one specific piece of property, and is confined to the accomplishment of a particular transaction. The rule of law, that where there is a general employment of a servant with no provision as to the duration of the employment, the employment is at will and may be terminated by either party at any time without violating a contract, is not *577 pertinent to an employment for the accomplishment of one particular transaction. In such an employment, . . . the law implies its continuance fora... reasonable time.”
See Shaw v. Chiles, 9 Ga. App. 460, 462 (1911); 1 Corbin, Contracts § 96 at 413 (1963); Farnsworth, Contracts § 3.28 n.19 (1982); 1 Williston, Contracts § 38 (3d ed. 1957).
Since the exclusive brokerage contract had lapsed at the time of the sale, the judgment for the plaintiff is reversed and judgment is to enter for the defendants.
So ordered.
Notes
The defendants had paid $48,500 as a commission to the broker who had produced the ultimate buyer.
The parties agree that the date should have been 1981.
In the Capezzuto case the negotiations were conducted by the manager of John Hancock’s wholly owned properties and in LoPresti by the owners of an apartment complex.
The purchaser was introduced to the seller by the broker effecting the sale approximately three months before the sale took place.
