Barney v. Lasbury

107 N.W. 989, 76 Neb. 701, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 326
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1906
DocketNo. 14,262
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 107 N.W. 989 (Barney v. Lasbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barney v. Lasbury, 107 N.W. 989, 76 Neb. 701, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 326 (Neb. 1906).

Opinion

ALBERT, O.

This is an action on a quantum meruit to recover for time expended by the plaintiffs in procuring a purchaser for certain lands belonging to the defendant. After the allegations that the plaintiffs are engaged in the business of buying and selling lands and conductors of a general real estate business, and that the defendant is the owner of certain real estate in Sarpy county, the petition contains the following: “(3) That said defendant employed these plaintiffs to find and secure for her a purchaser for said land at a price fixed by said defendant. That said plaintiffs expended considerable time in finding a buyer for said land' and on or about the 8th day of September, 1904, secured for said defendant a purchaser for said land at the price named and agreed by said defendant and these plaintiffs; and said defendant entered into an agreement with said purchaser to sell to him the said land at the price named, and said purchaser paid to said defendant a part of said purchase price. That said purchaser was able, ready and willing to pay the balance of said purchase money upon the delivery to him of a deed conveying the title to said real estate as promised and agreed by said defendant, but, notwithstanding the fact that said purchaser so found and secured by these plaintiffs was ready, able and willing to carry out his part of the contract to and pay to said defendant the agreed price for said land, said defendant has refused to carry out her part of the contract to convey to said purchaser the title to said above described real estate. (4) Said plaintiffs say that the time expended by them in securing for said defendant a purchaser for her said land, and in aiding and assisting the closing up of said deal was and is reasonably worth the sum of $350. That said defendant has refused and now refuses to pay. [703]*703said plaintiffs for said time so expended by them in securing for her a purchaser for said land and there is now due said plaintiffs from said defendant the sum of $850.” A demurrer to the petition was interposed, which was oyer-ruled by the court, whereupon the defendant answered, denying that she ever employed the plaintiff to find a purchaser for the land. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and judgment went accordingly. The defendant prosecutes error.

We are satisfied that the demurrer should have been sustained. The alleged agreement was oral. Section 74, ch. 73, Comp. St. 1905, is as follows: “Every contract for the sale of lands, between the owner thereof and any broker or agent employed to sell the same, shall be void, unless the contract is in writing and subscribed by the owner of the land and the broker or agent, and such contract shall describe the land to be sold, and set forth the compensation to be allowed by the owner in case of sale by the broker or agent.” The foregoing section has been before this court several times, and the uniform holding has been that there can be no recovery by a real estate agent or broker on a verbal contract for the sale of real estate. Allen v. Hall, 64 Neb. 256; Spence v. Apley, 4 Neb. (Unof.) 358; Baker v. Gillan, 68 Neb. 368; Covey v. Henry, 71 Neb. 118; Danielson v. Goebel, 71 Neb. 300. In Blair v. Austin, 71 Neb. 401, and Rodenbrock v. Gress, 74 Neb. 409, a recovery in each case was sought on a quantum meruit for services rendered by a broker to the owner of real estate in. procuring a purchaser therefor, and the rule applicable thereto is thus stated in the head-note: “Services as a real estate broker, rendered for the owner of the land without a written contract, cannot be recovered for as such upon a quantum meruit.” The present action, however, is grounded on the following, taken from the body of the opinion in the Blair case:

“In this case it does not seem possible that plaintiffs can have any recovery of commissions for making a sale. If they have incurred expenses in the transaction at [704]*704defendant’s request, and which have redounded to his benefit, they could doubtless recover for it as money laid out and expended for his benefit and at his request. If they have shoAvn an absolute loss of time which could and would have been valuably employed, except for its iise at defendant’s request upon his employment, they could probably recover for that as time devoted to defendant’s profit at his request, but for services as a broker in selling land, reckoned in percentage as commission, a written contract seems to be necessary under this statute.”

The plaintiffs contend that, while the rule embodied in the head-note to that case would prevent a recovery for the reasonable value of their services as real estate brokers, the language taken from the body of the opinion authorizes a recovery for time expended for the defendant in their efforts to bring about a sale. In other words, that, while the express contract between themselves and the defendant is void under the statute, she is liable on an implied undertaking t.o pay them the reasonable value of the time they expended in her behalf in their efforts to find a purchaser for the land. This contention, we think, cannot be sustained. The object of the statute in question is well known, and is thus set forth in Covey v. Henry, supra:

“The reasons which impelled the legislature to pass that act are well known to the courts and the profession generally. Innumerable suits were being instituted, from time to time by agents and brokers, after the owners of land had sold the same, claiming a commission, on the ground that they had been instrumental in securing the purchaser; and, in many cases, owners of land were compelled to pay double commission on account of such claims. In order to prevent such disputes and protect property owners under just such cases as the one we are now considering, the legislature passed the act.”

The fact that the statute requires the compensation to be set forth in the written contract is significant, and shows that the legislature had no intention of allowing a recovery on an implied contract. Nor do the plaintiffs escape the [705]*705statute by seeking to recover for tbe reasonable value of tbe time expended instead of tbe reasonable value of tbeir services as real estate brokers. Tbe value of tbeir time, of necessity, would be measured by tbe value of tbe services that could be rendered within that time by an ordinary person engaged in tbe same business. Hence, in whatever language tbe cause of action may be couched, for all practical purposes it is an action for compensation for services rendered as real estate brokers, and comes within tbe rule announced in tbe head-note to Blair v. Austin, supra.

This conclusion in nowise conflicts with tbe quotation hereinbefore taken from tbe body of tbe opinion in that case. What is there meant is not that there could be a recovery for tbe loss of time expended in attempting to carry out tbe verbal contract by tbe broker, but that there might be a recovery for the time or money expended in accordance with specific directions of tbe owner of tbe land, as, for example, where tbe owner of tbe land specifically requests tbe broker to procure an abstract, advertise tbe land for sale, show it to a prospective purchaser, or tbe like. There is no doubt a recovery could be bad for tbe time and money expended in carrying out such specific directions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 N.W. 989, 76 Neb. 701, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barney-v-lasbury-neb-1906.