110 N.Y.S. 909 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is a real estate broker and agent; that as such real estate broker and agent he was employed and retained by the defendant to manage and control on behalf of said defendant the premises known as 135 Fifth avenue, borough of Manhattan, city of Dew York, of which premises defendant is the
The complaint was verified on the 12th day of June, 1907, which would fix the date of the authority alleged to have been received “ about five years ago,” in the year 1902. The complaint was amended upon the trial by striking out the words “as the defendant promised and agreed ” and inserting in lieu thereof “ for which the plaintiff was to receive the customary commission of one per cent.” The complaint further alleged the sale of the premises to the Century Bank through the efforts of the plaintiff for the sum of $400,000 and demanded judgment for his commission thereon, to wit, $4,000.
In order to recover upon a claim for broker’s commissions the broker must establish the employment. Commencing in 1898 the plaintiff had acted as agent for the defendant in the management of certain real estate owned by the defendant. The defendant denied employing the plaintiff to sell. The plaintiff alleged a specific employment in 1902 which continued unrevoked. He testified as follows : “ I am certain that the conversation that I had in mind in this complaint took place in the year 1902. It didn’t take place in 1903. There were others, perhaps, in 1903. I am certain that I had a conversation which resulted in a contract by which I was employed to sell this property in 1902 and that has not been revoked.”
The defendant offered in evidence a letter from the plaintiff dated June 26, 1903, which states: “ In accordance with our conversation to-day I beg to state hereby my understanding of our agreement as to the commissions we are entitled to for the management of your properties, now in our charge, being 135 Fifth Ave., & 812 Greenwich street.” Then follow the terms of the commissions and the duties to be performed, with no statement, however, in respect to sales. To this the defendant replied by letter of June 29, 1903: “ Beferring to your favor of the 26th inst., in reference to the commissions, etc., for handling my property at §135 Fifth Ave. and 812-14 Greenwich St., Hew York
These two letters were offered in evidence by the defendant and excluded by the court upon objection, except the clause above quoted, which the court admitted. Exception was duly taken to the refusal to admit the two letters. Bearing in mind that the plaintiff and defendant had since 1898 occupied the mutual relation of principal and agent for certain purposes, and that the plaintiff alleged a specific contract of employment as a broker to sell in 1902 which remained unrevoked from that time to the transactions in 1907, the subject of this action, which contract of employment the defendant denied, and that these letters, with careful and precise detail, set forth the exact terms of the employment between the parties, and expressly excluded the selling of the property, and reserved the right to deal therein to the defendant, I think it was error to exclude the whole of the letters, which was not cured by the admission of the one paragraph in regard to sales.
As the plaintiff’s case upon the making of the contract alleged in the complaint depended solely upon his own evidence, which was controverted by the evidence of the defendant, the defendant was entitled to have the whole of this correspondence submitted to the jury for the purpose of showing the exact relations existing between the parties one year after the alleged contract. The paragraph admitted in evidence, standing by itself, loses much of its effect when deprived- of its context. .The defendant had the right, it seems to me, to present all the facts from which it might have been argued that so 'careful an expression and limitation of the entire relation existing between the parties excluded the probability of the continued existence of the alleged verbal contract of employment to sell made in 1902. I know of no principle which permits the admission in evidence of an isolated paragraph of a contract to the exclusion of the whole paper, which may explain, modify or affect the isolated paragraph admitted.
The broker has the burden of proving not only his employment,
So that up to this time the bank had offered $375,000 ; Ferguson had said he would take $425,000. The plaintiff had not succeeded in getting Mr. Chapman up to the defendant’s figures and does not seem to have exerted himself to that end, but upon his own testimony to have been endeavoring to get Mr. Ferguson to come down. While now claiming to have been employed by Ferguson, and owing loyalty and duty to him, he yet testifies, “ I told Mr. Chapman that I was perfectly certain that Mr. Ferguson would accept $400,000. * * *
I am going to see Mr. Ferguson; I am going to get him to say so, or at least get it so far that you will have to buy this at $400,000,” and this in view of the fact that on May twenty-seventh he wrote to Mr. Ferguson, “ I have been using my best endeavors to bring the Century Bank people up to the figures you have mentioned as being the lowest for 135 Fifth Ave., but have not met with success.”
Thereafter, in June, Mr. Ferguson had a personal interview with Mr. Chapman, and after going over the building together and certain defects having been pointed out by Chapman to Ferguson, they agreed upon a sale at $400,000. The defendant testified positively that the plaintiff never brought him an offer for this property for more than $375,000.
It seems to me that a verdict based upon the proposition that the plaintiff was the inducing cause of this sale to a purchaser procured by him upon the terms propounded by the defendant is against the weight of evidence. He was not employed to negotiate this particular sale. He did not introduce the purchaser. The first suggestion came from the defendant in an incidental talk to the plain
The judgment and order appealed from should, therefore, be reversed, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Ingraham and Laughlin, JJ., concurred; Houghton and Scott, JJ., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.