| Colo. | Jan 15, 1894

Mr. Justice Goddard

delivered the opinion of the court.

The principal defense relied on in the court below, and the one most strenuously urged in argument before us, is the alleged misconduct on the part of plaintiffs in agreeing to divide their commission with the purchaser; and the admission of the evidence of this fact and the effect given to it by the court constitutes the principal error assigned by plaintiffs in error for a reversal of the judgment.

It is manifest, from the examination of the evidence disclosed in the record, that this fact was regarded by the court below as sufficient to defeat the plaintiffs’ recoveiy, since, aside from this, the right of plaintiffs to recover is clearly shown. It is ingeniously argued that the agreement on the part of plaintiffs to pay the purchaser one-half of the com*403mission reduced the purchase price of the property, and that the sale, though apparently, was not in fact, consummated in accordance with the terms prescribed by defendants ; and that in so depreciating the price and procuring the execution of the deed by defendants without informing them of the fact, plaintiffs perpetrated such a fraud on the defendants as precludes them from recovering the commission.

We think this position is untenable. The defendants received $3,000, the sum fixed by them as the purchase price, and that amount is recited in the deed as the consideration paid for the property. It is difficult to see how any disposition that the plaintiffs might make of their commission, whether they paid one-half or the whole of it to the purchaser, could in any manner depreciate the consideration so paid.

While the law is strict in requiring good faith and fair dealing on the part of an agent towards his principal, and will not permit him to assume a double capacity whereby his personal interests may in any manner conflict with the interests of his principal, we are unable to see wherein the conduct of plaintiffs infringes this rule in the remotest degree. Why may not an agent, in competition with other agents, make any personal sacrifice he may choose to make in order to achieve success ? May he not do what he pleases with the commissions that he is to receive from his principal ? And if he deemed it necessary to successful competition to even pay a bonus to procure a purchaser, may he not do so, if in so doing he contravenes no duty he owes to his principal? Is not sueh an act an evidence of good faith and zeal in behalf of his principal, rather than of fraud or misconduct prejudicial to his principal’s rights? We can see nothing reprehensible in plaintiffs agreeing to divide their commission with the purchaser, but regard it rather as a personal sacrifice on their part to further the interests of the defendants.

It further appears that Chew & Crow asserted some claim to the commission, and it is at their instigation that defendants contest the right of plaintiffs to compensation. While the defendants themselves do- not predicate their refusal to *404pay plaintiffs on account of any supposed liability to Chew & Crow, it is insisted by counsel that by reason of plaintiffs’ alleged fraud the defendants are placed in a position where there is a dispute, and may be subjected to a double liability.

If such a defense was asserted and relied on by defendants, it would be without merit upon the facts of the case. It is beyond question that plaintiffs produced the purchaser to whom they sold and conveyed the property, and they were not bound to inquire what part, if any, other agents had in the transaction. They could remain neutral as between competing agents, and by paying the commission to the one who brought the purchaser to them be relieved from liability to any other. As was said in the case of Vreeland v. Vetterlein, 33 N. J. Law, 247:

“ Where the property is openly put in the hands of more than one broker, each of such agents is aware that he is subject to the arts and chances of competition. If he finds a person who is likely to buy, and quits him without having effected a sale, he is aware that he runs the risk of such person falling under the influence of his competitor — and in such case he may lose his labor. This is a part of the inevitable risk of the business he has undertaken. * * * Now in this competition, the vendor of the property is to remain neutral; he is interested only in the result. But when either of the agents thus employed brings a purchaser to him, and a bargain is struck at the required price, on what ground can he refuse to complete the bargain ? Can he say to the successful competitor, this purchaser was %st approached by your rival, and you should have refused to treat with him on the subject ? There is no legal principle upon which such a position could rest. * * * And if, .therefore, it should be known to the vendor of the property that the agent who introduces a purchaser to him has, by the usual arts of competition, taken such purchaser out of the hands of his rival, I am not aware of anything in the law which would justify such vendor in a refusal to complete the contract. * * * In the absence of all collusion on the part of the vendor, the *405agent, through whose instrumentality the sale is carried to completion, is entitled to the commissions.”

It is therefore evident, upon the uncontroverted facts of this case, that defendants can in no event be held liable to Chew & Crow for a commission for the sale of the property in question. We think the court below acted upon an erroneous view of the law in admitting the evidence complained of, and in giving it the effect that it evidently did, and for this reason the judgment must be reversed.

Reversed.

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