114 Ga. App. 102 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1966
Lead Opinion
Where, as in this case, in a suit to recover $1,000 earnest money paid to the defendant real estate broker under a written offer to purchase certain described realty, one count of the two-count petition contained allegations appropriate to an action for money had and received, in that it alleged that the plaintiff had paid such sum to the defendant, and that the defendant retained said sum of money, and where the instrument attached as an exhibit showed that it was merely an offer on the part of the plaintiff to purchase the described parcel of real estate, which offer had never been accepted by the owner, it was error for the trial court to grant the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit, when, upon the trial of the case, the plaintiff introduced the written instrument offer
Judgment affirmed on the main appeal; reversed on the cross appeal.
Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
The main appellant, the plaintiff in the cross action in this case, in a motion for rehearing, insists that this court committed error in ruling, as we have, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the $1,000 earnest money paid, and that the plaintiff in the cross action was not entitled to recover the balance of the commissions which it alleged it would have earned had the sale in question been consummated. Counsel’s chief contention -is that it is not essential under the statute of frauds in order for a contract for the sale of realty to be enforceable that it should have been signed by both parties. In support of this content ion movant cites the cases of Fraser v. Jarrett, 153 Ga. 441 (112 SE 487); Wright v. Brown & Leacy, 29 Ga. App. 687 (116 SE 341); and Pierce v. Deich, 81 Ga. App. 717 (59 SE2d 755). Those cases are clearly distinguishable on their facts from this case. In the Wright case it affirmatively appears that there was a contract for the purchase and sale of land entered into between the owner of the property and the purchaser. The Pierce case was plainly and simply a suit by a real estate broker to recover commissions
The instrument under consideration in this case, which was attached to the original petition of the plaintiff as an exhibit and which was introduced in evidence, appears to be a standard real estate sale contract form. It recites that the purchaser has paid to the agent the sum of $1,000 as earnest money which is to be applied as part payment of the purchase price “at the time the sale is consummated.” It contains, among others, the following provisions: “In negotiating this contract Broker has rendered a valuable service, for which reason the Broker negotiating this contract is made a party to this contract to enable Broker to enforce his commission rights hereunder against the parties hereto. . .” It further provides that if the sale is not consummated by reason of the fault of the seller, the seller will pay broker his commissions, and the broker will return purchaser’s earnest money, but, if the purchaser shall without reason refuse to consummate the transaction, the broker might apply the earnest money toward the payment of his commissions. The instrument further provides that it constitutes the sole and entire agreement between the parties, and that no modification thereof will be binding unless attached thereto and signed by all the parties. Finally, it contains the following provision: “This instrument shall be regarded as an offer by the Purchaser or Seller who first signs to the other and is open for acceptance by the other until
As we view the rights of the parties in this case, they plainly and simply hinge upon one question and one question only, to wit: Did Webster Cason & Associates, Inc., as agent, negotiate a contract between the proposed purchaser and the owner or owners of realty so as to be entitled to receive commissions, notwithstanding the ultimate failure of one of the parties to the proposed contract to consummate the sale? Certainly, insofar as the cross action is concerned, the burden was on the plaintiff therein, be
Furthermore, nowhere- in the cross action is it alleged that the defendant was a duly licensed real estate broker, and it is well established that a petition in the nature of a cross action seeking to recover a real estate broker’s commissions which fails to allege
The purchasers, having in their main case made out a prima facie right to recover the $1,000 which they had paid as earnest money by introducing evidence showing that their written proposal had never been accepted, it was essential before the defendant therein could successfully overcome this prima facie case that it introduce evidence to show that, notwithstanding the absence of the signature of anyone as seller on the sale contract, it had in fact negotiated a contract by showing something else amounting to a binding acceptance by the owner or owners of the property of the offer to purchase. So far as appears from the record before this court this was not done.
Motion for rehearing denied.