Judges: Church
Filed Date: 12/23/1873
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This action is for brokerage upon the sale of valuable real estate situated on Long Island.
The plaintiff claimed $50,000 as agreed compensation, and the principal points litigated were whether such agreement had been made or whether the plaintiff was in fact the efficient cause of the sale. The jury found against the special agreement, but found for the plaintiff a verdict which allowed him a commission, probably of two and a half per cent upon the amount of the sale. Upon the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendants moved for a nonsuit upon the ground that the plaintiff had not shown himself to be the efficient cause of the sale, which was denied, and this is now claimed to have been erroneous.
A person claiming a commission upon- a- sale of real estate must show an employment, and that the sale- was made by means of his efforts or agency. An owner may employ several brokers for the-sale of the same property, and is of course only liable for-commissions to the one who effects the sale. And although- he employs one or more brokers he may negotiate and sell the property himself without liability to any one for commissions. (49 N. Y., 563.) The undertaking
The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to prove that the plaintiff acted as a broker for the seller of the property to the defendants, and from motives of personal friendship to them was anxious that they should purchase, as he believed it was a good speculation; that he claimed from them a part of the commission upon that sale, which they declined to pay, but told him to get what he could from the seller and he should have a part of the profits when they sold; that he also suggested to the defendants the mode of disposing of the property to realize the most money; that he procured some maps from the seller which he put up in different places, and also procured signs to be painted and put up near the premises, and inserted an advertisement of the property in the Long Island Star, which referred to the plaintiff as a broker, and which was recognized and paid for by the defendants; that sometime afterward a sale of the property was negotiated by the defendants with one Marwig, acting in behalf of an association of bricklayers, at $420,000. Marwig was introduced to the defendants by one Eekersdoff, a real estate broker, and the evidence of the plaintiff tended to show that both he and Marwig were attracted to this property by the maps and signs and advertisements which the plaintiff put up and caused to be made. It is shown that they frequently spent their evenings in a saloon where the plaintiff had put up a map, and talked about the property; that Marwig and another person went to look at the property,
The point is made, that there was no evidence of the rate of commissions nor of the value of the plaintiff’s services. The plaintiff claimed a specific sum agreed upon, and the evidence was mainly directed to the question whether
The learned counsel for the defendants also insists that, inasmuch as the complaint is upon a contract for a specific sum, the plaintiff could not recover as upon a quantum meruit. This point is not tenable for several reasons.
1. The complaint contains sufficient averments to enable the plaintiff to recover the value of the services rendered, without reference to the allegation of an agreed compensation. 2. At most it was only a variance between pleading and proof, which might be disregarded unless it misled the defendants, which was not pretended. (Code, § 169.) 3. This objection was not taken at the trial. The exception to that part of the charge authorizing the jury, if they found that no specific sum was agreed upon, to find the value of the services, was too general to raise this question. The attention of the court should have been called to the point, as, if valid, it might then have been obviated by an amendment.
So, whether the defendants had realized profits from the sale was immaterial. When the defendants made the contract of sale the duties of the plaintiff ceased, and his right to compensation was then fixed, whether the defendants ever realized profits or not. The offer only contemplated profits then realized, without taking into account the unpaid purchase-money. Besides, the question of profits could only be material under the special contract, which was not found to exist.
We do not find that any substantial error of law was committed on the trial, and the judgment must be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.