128 Minn. 217 | Minn. | 1915
Plaintiff, a corporation engaged in the real estate business in St. Paul, brought this action to recover $5,000 claimed as commissión upon a sale of real estate belonging to defendant. The case was tried to the court without a jury, and the decision was that plaintiff take nothing hy the action. A motion for a new trial was denied and plaintiff appealed from the order.
Plaintiff’s claim of a right to commissions is based upon these facts. On September 1, 1910, defendant gave to plaintiff the following writing:
“In consideration of the efforts of the Sperry Realty Company to sell the same, the privilege of making a sale of the following described tract or parcel of land lying and being in the county of Ramsey, state of Minnesota, to-wit: The north sixty-five (65) feet of lots 6, 1 and 8, of block twenty-three (23), St. Paul Proper, at any time within ten (10) days, from date hereof for a consideration of
This “privilege of making a sale” or “option” was dated September 1, and was signed by an agent of defendant by its authority. There is no question that it was effective to give plaintiff the privilege of making a sale of the property at the price, on the terms and within the time stated, to either of the persons named.
On September 9, plaintiff notified defendant’s agent that it had sold the property to A. M. Thompson, one of the persons named, and asked that the deed be prepared and abstract brought down to date and delivered to plaintiff. The abstract was procured and delivered by defendant. Thompson discovered therefrom that the property was encumbered by a 12-foot easement across the easterly end thereof, and for that reason refused to carry out the contract he had made with plaintiff for the purchase of the property. This contract was made September 9, and by its terms plaintiff in its own right and not otherwise agreed to sell and convey to Thompson and the latter agreed to buy, the property in question for the sum of $55,000. Defendant knew nothing of the terms of this contract until October 20, 1911, after Thompson raised the objection of the easement. Plaintiff never entered into any contract with Thompson in which it acted as agent for defendant and for and on behalf of defendant, and never brought Thompson to defendant so as to afford defendant an opportunity to itself enter into a contract with him. No sale to Thompson was ever consummated.
It is clear that plaintiff, in its contract with Thompson, assumed to act as the owner of the property, and not as agent of the owner, and that it contracted in its own name to sell the property at an increased price. The theory of plaintiff is that it is entitled to recover the difference between the price named in the option agreement and that named in its contract with Thompson. This theory is un
Order affirmed.