112 Va. 508 | Va. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought by R. F. Vaughan, a real estate agent, to recover of Alfred and Theresa Pleasonton $2,000, commissions alleged to be due the plaintiff on a sale alleged to have been made by him for the defendants of their landed estate in Goochland county, at the price of $40,000.
There was a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendants, to which this writ of error was awarded.
The essential facts in the case are few and undisputed. It appears that on March 10, 1909, the defendants united in the following letter to the plaintiff: “You are hereby authorized to sell our farms, composed of Bolling Hall, Woodville and Pocahontas, in Goochland county, Virginia, and containing about 2,000 acres, more or less, for the sum of $50,000, and we agree to pay you five per cent. commission on said price or on whatever price we accept from your customer, said commissions to be paid out of the first cash payment, if sold through your agency.”
In pursuance of this authority the plaintiff, in the following May, submitted to the defendants an offer of $40,000 for the property, made by Thomas S. Winston, which they agreed to accept, upon certain terms and conditions. In pursuance of this understanding a contract was then prepared between all the parties, including the proposed purchaser, by the plaintiff Vaughan, the agent, which, “although not signed, was according to the testimony of .all sides, satisfactory to the Pleasontons and to Winston; the significance of this paper being that it embodied the
At the time this contract was prepared, May 31, 1909, it ■was understood that all parties should meet in Richmond on the 9th day of the ensuing June and complete the sale ,by carrying out its terms. In accordance with this understanding, the parties, except the purchaser, met in Richmond. The purchaser, who was absent on other business, designated his attorney, who was present, to act for him in carrying into final completion the terms of purchase agreed upon. When the parties met, the attorney for the purchaser presented a contract, prepared by him, for the parties to execute, which was radically different in its terms from the Vaughan contract of May 31, which all had agreed to. There was pending in the Circuit Court of Goochland county against the Pleasontons a creditor’s suit, in which there had been no decree for sale, and the new contract provided that the sale should be ratified by the court; that a special commissioner should be appointed to unite with .the proposed vendors in a deed to the purchaser; that the $25,000 which it had been agreed should be paid in cash
When this contract was presented and insisted upon by the attorney of the purchaser, the proposed vendors protested that it was not the contract agreed upon, and they refused to sign it. Thereupon the attorney abandoned further conference on the subject, and the defendants treated the proposed sale as off, and on the same day sold the property to one W. E. Harris for $42,500, Harris paying $1,000 at once, assuming certain liens on the property, and agreeing to pay the vendors the balance within thirty days, which balance was to be paid in part with a certificate for 100 shares of stock in a coal and coke company, valued at $14,900.
The essential difference between the Vaughan contract, which embodied the terms upon which all parties had met and agreed, and the contract insisted upon by the attorney for Thomas S. Winston was, that the latter contract provided that $25,000 of the purchase money should be paid upon the ratification of the contract by the Circuit Court of Goochland county, and the execution by its special commissioner and the vendors of a good and sufficient deed, and that such $25,000 should not be paid into bank to the credit of the court until the attorney of the proposed pur
“A real estate broker to be entitled to compensation must complete the sale. He must find a purchaser in a situation ready and willing to complete the purchase upon the terms agreed upon before he is entitled to his commissions. When he has found such a purchaser, who has entered into a valid contract, his right to compensation cannot be defeated by the fault of the seller, by his misrepresentation, or by his whimsical or unreasonable refusal to comply with his contract.” Crockett v. Grayson, 98 Va. 345, 36 S. E. 477.
In the case at bar, it is clear that there was no completed sale between the Pleasontons and Winston. A sale of real estate involves the adjustment of many matters besides fixing the price, and these are for the determination of the seller. These had been agreed upon in this case by the sellers and the purchaser, and had been reduced to writing by the plaintiff, who'was the agent of the defendants. These were the only terms upon which the defendants were willing to sell or had ever agreed to sell, and they were ready to carry them out. The contract which the attorney for the purchaser sought to substitute contained terms which the defendants had never agreed to, and left out terms which had been agreed upon. It is clear that the contract of sale which the plaintiff attempted to .consummate between his principals and Thomas S. Winston was not defeated through any fault of the sellers, who were neither unreasonable nor whimsical in refusing to execute the contract which was insisted upon by the attorney for the purchaser. The sale having failed of completion through no fault of the defendants, they are under no obligation to pay the plaintiff the commissions sought to be recovered in this suit.
As said in Crockett v. Grayson, supra, we do not deem it necessary to enter into a critical examination of the in
The judgment of the circuit court approving that verdict must, therefore, be affirmed.
Affirmed.