after stating the case: The defendants, having specified no definite time for the duration of the plaintiff's employment as their broker when they appointed and authorized it to sell the lots, had the right to terminate it at will, before any contract was effected with a purchaser, subject, hоwever, only to the ordinary requirement of good faith.
Abbott v. Hunt,
There is another principle equally as well settled. A broker who negotiates the sale of property is not entitled to his commissions unless he finds a purchaser in a situation and ready and willing to complete the рurchase on the terms agreed upon between him and his principal, the vendor.
Mallonce v. Young,
AVe held, substantially, in
Humphreys v.
Robinson, supra, following the general principles thus stated, thаt a real estate broker who fails to communicate to bis employer any facts known to him and material to tbe transaction be bad in charge was not entitled to damages for tbe failure of bis principal to comply with tbe contract made by tbe broker in bis name and on bis aсcount with a third person. ’ So here tbe plaintiff, as agent, failed to disclose to tbe defendants, who employed it to sell tbe lots, the facts аs it now claims they actually existed. Its agent reported to them a contract with Corpening andTennille entirely different from tbe one be was аuthorized to make,
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and tbe defendants bad tbe right then and there to reject the proposition and terminate the agency, which they did, according to the findings of the jury. We cannot imagine upon what principle of equity — even broadly considered — and certainly we have failed to discover any principle of law under which the plaintiff is entitled to a commission as upon a sale made by it, for surely none has been justly earned. It is now the established doctrine of the courts that, in the absence of any usage, or contract, express or implied, to the contrary, or conduct of the seller preventing a completion of the bargain by the broker, an action by the latter for his commissions will not lie until it is shown that he has procured and effected a sale of the property upon the terms fixed by the vendor. It is not enough that the broker has devoted his time, labor or money to advance the interests of his employer. Unsuccessful efforts, however meritorious, afford no ground of action. Where his acts bring about no agreement or contract between his employer and the purchaser, by reason of his failure in the premises, the loss of expended and unremunerated effort must be all his own. He loses the labor and skill used by him which he staked upon success. If there has been no сontract, and the seller is not in default, then there can be no reward. His commissions are based upon the contract of sale. Rapalje on Real Estate Brokers, sec. T5, and cases cited in the note;
Sibbald v. Iron Co.,
If the plaintiff has lost the benefit of its-commissions upon a sale that it could easily have made, the fault was its own, and no blame can attach to the defendants. The mistake it made was in trying to obtain a little better terms from its principal in respect to the time for the payment of the purchase money. It tried to make a sale, contrary to the instructions of the principal, in which payment of the larger part of the purchase money was to be dеferred, when, in fact, as it now claims, the purchaser was ready to pay all in cash. It is plain that a cash sale is what the defendants desired, and it was no doubt more advantageous to them. They had at least a right to consider it so when they made the bargain with the plaintiff. The latter was, therеfore, by every consideration of good faith, bound to communicate to the defendants the important fact that they could get cash fоr the-property. Instead of doing so, the plaintiff withheld this-information until the defendants had exercised their undoubted right to put an end to the agency.
Thе jury have found against the plaintiff upon the facts, adopting the defendants’ version of them. The instruction requested was properly refused, under thе circumstances, and the charge of the Court, which was concise and clear-cut, presented the case to the jury in its proper light.
No Error.
