170 Mass. 479 | Mass. | 1898
It has been held by us in two recent cases that' a broker who does not have the exclusive sale of real estate does not become entitled to a commission merely by bringing the property to the attention of the person who finally buys it, but he must also show that his services were the efficient or effective means of bringing about the actual sale. Dowling v. Morrill, 165 Mass. 491. Crowninshield v. Foster, 169 Mass. 237. Where two or more brokers are employed, there is no implied contract to pay more than one commission, and it therefore becomes necessary to lay down a rule for determining which one of different possible claimants is entitled to be paid. A similar rule exists in the law of insurance, stated thus in Phil. Ins. (5th ed.) § 1132: “ In case of the concurrence of different causes, to one of which it is necessary to attribute the loss, it is to be attributed to the efficient predominating peril, whether it is or is not in activity at the consummation of the disaster.” And again, in § 1137: “ If, where different parties, whether the assured and the underwriter, or different underwriters, are responsible for different causes of loss, which concur in the loss, and the damage by each cause cannot be distinguished, the party responsible for the predominating efficient cause, or that by which the operation of the other is directly occasioned as being merely incidental to it, is liable to bear the loss.” This latter rule is expressly accepted as correct in Howard Ins. Co. v. Norwich &
The instructions of the learned judge to the jury laid special stress on the inquiry whether the sale would have been made but for the efforts of the plaintiffs. He said : “ The real question is here, whether you are satisfied that this sale to Wentworth would not have been made but for the efforts which the plaintiffs had made to induce him to buy it. That is the real question.” And afterwards: “ The real question is, and it is the crucial question in my judgment, whether the sale would have taken place without the efforts made by the plaintiffs. If it would, then the plaintiffs have not made the sale, and they cannot recover the commission unless they have. If, however, you are satisfied this sale as made would not have taken place unless the plaintiffs had done what they did, and that what they had done
Exceptions sustained.