92 Pa. Super. 213 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1927
Argued October 11, 1927. The plaintiffs, real estate brokers, have judgment on a verdict for commissions for obtaining a buyer of defendant's real estate. She complains that her motion for judgment n.o.v. was refused. She asserts that while plaintiffs were authorized to find a buyer on terms and conditions satisfactory to her, she did not approve the terms and conditions submitted. The plaintiffs assert that she did approve and that her approval was communicated to them by her granddaughter, who, they say, was her agent for the purpose. Whether the evidence of authority of the granddaughter was sufficient, is the only point involved on this appeal.
The averments of the statement of claim and the evidence put in by the plaintiffs were to the effect that the agency was special and not general. In Hoffman v. Marano,
Agency cannot be proved by evidence of the alleged agent's declarations alone (Mahoning V.B. Co. v. R.R. Co.,
As the authorities quoted above hold, plaintiffs took the risk of the granddaughter's accurate transmission of the messages. Now instead of finding any evidence offered in defense which supplements plaintiffs' evidence of the declarations of the granddaughter sufficiently to bind defendant in the respect in which they differed, we find none; on the contrary both she and the defendant deny she had any instructions or authority to advise plaintiffs that the terms of sale were satisfactory to defendant if her son-in-law approved the form of the agreement, instead of approving the terms of sale generally as defendant contended. The record was therefore destitute of evidence essential to go to the jury to bind defendant.
A word may be added about the alleged admissions in the pleadings referred to in argument. The statement charged that plaintiffs were authorized to sell. That fact is admitted in the affidavit, but neither allegation nor admission covered the terms of the sale; they remained for consideration and approval by defendant when a prospective purchaser was found. The statement also alleges that plaintiffs informed the granddaughter of the terms of sale and that "defendant *218 instructed [her] to tell plaintiffs that defendant accepted said offer provided the buyer paid $5,000 on account of said consideration." The affidavit of defense does not admit that averment; it admits the offer but specifically denies that defendant gave the alleged instructions to her granddaughter, and, in short, avers that she instructed the granddaughter that the offer would first have to be submitted to her son-in-law for his approval because he had charge of her real estate. She also avers that plaintiffs presented the offer to her son-in-law and that he declined to approve, whereupon she rejected it. In the opinion filed below refusing judgment n.o.v. it is said: "Under all of the testimony, particularly in view of the admissions of the affidavit of defense, we have not the slightest doubt that the only question in the case was whether Mrs. Wescoat stated to the plaintiffs that the acceptance of the offer was conditional upon her father's approval; this was for the jury; though if she did not mention the condition as directed by defendant, it would not necessarily follow that the latter could escape liability, since she admittedly put her granddaughter in a position to deal with the plaintiffs, who had a right to rely upon what she said." With that conclusion we cannot agree. The admissions in the affidavit have been stated, and they limit the scope of the agency. As we have said the only testimony offered to support plaintiffs' claim of the granddaughter's authority to act with regard to the terms of sale was the evidence of one of the plaintiffs, who testified only to declarations made by the granddaughter; as there was nothing more in the record on that subject, the law does not permit recovery.
Judgment reversed and here entered for defendant. *219