169 Mass. 86 | Mass. | 1897
As the case was tried without a jury, the finding for the plaintiff, if supported by any fair view of the evidence, and not shown to have been affected by any error in law, will stand.
The defendant was lessee, at an annual rent of $7,800, of a building in Boston which he sublet, and about four years of his term were unexpired. Wishing to be freed from his tenancy he availed himself, upon terms which were in dispute, of the plaintiff’s services as a broker. The plaintiff found a firm willing to become lessees of the building for ten years at an annual rent of $6,000, and obtained from the firm the covenant set out in the declaration,
The evidence is not stated in full, nor is it said that all material evidence is given. It appears that the testimony of the plaintiff and that of the defendant was conflicting, both as to the terms of the plaintiff’s employment and as to subsequent occurrences, and also that there was a conflict of testimony between the defendant and one of the proposed lessees as to what statements were made by the defendant as to the subleases before the making of the covenant. The evidence would justify a finding that, if the plaintiff produced a suitable customer willing and ready to become lessee on terms satisfactory to the owner and to the defendant, it was the defendant’s concern to procure the cancellation of his own lease, which must of course be extinguished before the new lease could be made, and also that the reason why the plaintiff’s customers did not execute the new lease was that the defendant had misinformed them as to the duration of the subleases.
The evidence would justify a finding that the defendant agreed to pay a .full commission if the plaintiff should induce a satisfactory customer to engage to take a new lease on terms assented to by the defendant and the owner of the building, and also a finding that the plaintiff had performed that service. That
It is true that; as asserted in the defendant’s requests,
^Exceptions overruled.
The material part of this covenant, which was signed by Clarence II. Knight for the firm of Mills, Knight, and Company, was as follows: “ For value received we hereby agree to make a lease for ten years from the first day of September, eighteen hundred and ninety-six, of the building at the
The rulings requested were as follows:
“ 1. The plaintiff cannot recover commission without proof either of the making of a lease to Mills, Knight, and Company, or of the making of an agreement, which bound both the Boston Real Estate Trust Company [the owner of the building] and Mills, Knight, and Company to become parties to a lease of the premises described in the declaration. ■
“ 2. The evidence in the case does not warrant either finding.
“ 3. The plaintiff cannot recover without proving that Mills, Knight, and Company were willing and offered to execute a lease in accordance with the agreement set out in the declaration, without qualification or condition.”