Judges: Lehman
Filed Date: 1/27/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The defendant owned some property in New Jersey, which he wished to sell or exchange. He employed the plaintiff as real estate broker to procure a purchaser for this property. There is no claim that the plaintiff was the sole broker employed by defendant. While the plaintiff’s employment was still continuing, he suggested to a man named Scoville that he might arrange an exchange of some property owned by Scoville’s wife for defendant’s property. Scoville
The plaintiff claims that he was the procuring cause of this sale* At the trial Hazlett testified that he answered an advertisement in the Telegram.which offered Mrs. Scoville’s house for sale, that Mrs. Scoville’s stepson then called on him in answer to his letter, that he sent them to the country to look at defendant’s house, and that he and the stepson arranged the details of the sale. Defendant denies that plaintiff ever offered the exchange to him, and claims that Hazlett was the broker employed by him in good faith, and that Mrs. Scoville stated that she was sent to him by Hazlett. It is conceded that, after plaintiff found out that Hazlett was acting as broker, he never notified defendant of any claim that he was the procuring cause. I do not see-how, under the circumstances, the plaintiff has shown a cause of action. Conceding that Scoville had sufficient general authority to represent his wife in authorizing the plaintiff to endeavor to arrange a sale, it was his wife, and not he, who made the contract of sale. The plaintiff apparently never saw the wife, never arranged a single term, of the contract, ,and never brought the parties together. There is not the slightest evidence that the defendant was acting in bad faith, and changed brokers in order, to deprive the plaintiff of his commission. There is not the slightest evidence that Scoville himself had anything-to do With the sale, or that he in the slightest degree influenced his wife, except that he says, that she visited the property at his instigation. The plaintiff must show that he was the actual procuring cause-of the sale. “He may have planted the very seeds from which others-reap the harvest,” but that gives him no claim, unless he actually was-the instrument by which the sale was made. Sibbald v. Bethlehem Iron Co., 83 N. Y. 378, 383, 38 Am. Rep. 441.
I think that upon a careful reading of the record the conclusion is-irresistible that Mrs. Scoville made the exchange, not through her husband, but through her son, and that her son made the contract,, not through the plaintiff’s efforts, but through Hazlett’s. A verdict of the jury should not rest on mere speculation, but upon logical inferences that.may be drawn from' the evidence. ..Unless the-plaintiff presents evidence sufficient to show that his conversations with Mrs*
Judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
GIEGERICH, J., concurs: DAYTON, J., dissents.