214 Mass. 595 | Mass. | 1913
This is an action to recover a commission for procuring a tenant for the remainder of the term specified in the
The judge found as facts that “the plaintiff was engaged to procure a tenant . . that the plaintiff, acting solely in behalf of the defendant, secured” tenants “who were ready and willing to take a lease of the premises at the price and upon the terms fixed by the defendant, and who were accepted by him.” Many of the requests were refused because in the opinion of the judge, and we think rightly, they were rendered “immaterial and inapplicable by reason of the facts found.”
The defendant, though waiving none of the rulings requested, concedes that there “was conflicting evidence upon which the judge might find as a fact the employment of the plaintiff as a broker, and that the names submitted to the defendant, as prospective tenants, were accepted by him.” But the defendant contends that the evidence did not warrant the finding that the tenants secured by the plaintiff were ready and willing to take a lease of the premises at the price and upon the terms fixed by the defendant. He bases this contention on the ground that the lease was not executed by the tenants whom the plaintiff had secured until after the time which the defendant had fixed for its execution, and that therefore they were not ready and willing, as they were bound to be, in order to entitle the plaintiff to a commission. There is no merit in the .contention. The plaintiff was employed, as the judge found, to procure a tenant, and there was evidence warranting a finding that it was not till after the plaintiff had procured tenants who were accepted by the defendant that the defendant attempted to impose a restriction as to the time within which the lease should be executed. The plaintiff became entitled to his commission upon procuring tenants who were ready and willing to take a lease on the terms fixed by the defendant and who were accepted by the defendant. Cohen v. Ames, 205 Mass. 186, and cases cited. It was not necessary
We see no error in regard to the refusal of the rulings requested by the defendant.
Exceptions overruled.
Quinn, J.