131 A. 12 | Vt. | 1925
The plaintiffs, who are real estate brokers at Marshfield, bring this suit to recover a commission which they claim is due them on the sale of the defendants' farm situated in that town. Negotiations between the parties here relative to a sale of the farm on the basis of a five per cent. commission began early in 1922. The price of the property as then fixed by the defendants was $6,000. Later in the negotiations, the defendants reduced this price to $5,500; and finally they agreed to take $5,000 for the farm. Nothing came of the plaintiffs' effort to make a sale, until on December 5, 1923, Mr. Rogers, of the plaintiff firm, had an interview with Mr. Cole, one of the defendants, during which the latter authorized the plaintiffs to sell for *241 $5,000 if they could not get more. At this interview Cole asked Rogers what his commission for selling the farm would be, and the latter replied that it would be five per cent. Whereupon, the defendant remarked that that was "pretty steep" or that would be "making money pretty easy," or something to that effect. Nothing more was said about what the commission would be.
The defendants insist that this was not enough to bind them to pay the commission specified, and that it was error to overrule their motion for a verdict based upon this defect in proof. But in the circumstances, this evidence was enough to warrant an inference that the defendant assented to this term of the arrangement. It was not necessary for him to give his express assent; it was not necessary for him to agree in express terms to pay a five per cent. commission on the sale. It was enough that the parties mutually understood that that was to be the fee, and the evidence was sufficient to go to the jury if it fairly and reasonably warranted an inference of such an understanding. The understanding would be the contract. Such contracts are termed "contracts implied in fact" and differ from so-called "express contracts" only in the character of the evidence by which they are proved — as this Court has repeatedly said. Bliss v. Hoyt'sEstate,
That the defendants realized and understood that they had made a binding contract to pay the plaintiffs a commission is shown by the undisputed testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis, who finally bought the farm from the defendants themselves for $4,750, from which it appears that one or both of the defendants said at the time the sale was consummated that, if the plaintiff's did not make the sale, they, the defendants, would not have to pay the commission, and that they had as soon give the Lewises the commission as to give it to the plaintiffs — or that in substance.
The defendants also say that the plaintiffs failed to show performance on their part because they did not show that their customer (Lewis) would pay the $5,000 named by the defendants as the price of the farm; and this was made a basis of *242
the defendants' motion. The defendants take the position that their contract with the plaintiffs bound them to pay the commission only in case the latter produced a customer who would buy the farm at $5,000. Such a contract might have been made by these parties. Such a contract was made by the parties in Oben v.Ducharme,
It fairly appears that the plaintiffs secured Lewis as a prospective customer, introduced him to the defendants, and that the negotiations for the farm thus begun continued clear up to the time the sale was consummated — a period of about sixty days. No claim is made that the defendants terminated or attempted to terminate their contract with the plaintiffs, or that the latter abandoned it. And the rule is that where a broker is first in negotiations with the customer, he will continue in that relation until it is expressly broken off, or the matter of the purchase has ceased to be held under consideration by the purchaser. Jennings v. Trummer,
The plaintiffs' contract of employment not being conditioned *243
on their obtaining a customer who would pay $5,000, the mere fact that the defendants sold at a less price than they named to the plaintiffs does not preclude a recovery here. Ordinarily, it is the business of a real estate agent to introduce to the owner a purchaser who is ready, willing, and able to buy at the price and on the terms specified in his contract of employment; but, by the great weight of authority, he has earned his commission when he has produced a customer who buys the property either on the terms so specified or others voluntarily accepted by the owner. Among the many cases that so hold, the following are at hand: Spengler
v. Somenberg,
*244Judgment affirmed.