KAUS, P. J.
Plaintiff and cross-defendant Opal Barton appeals from a judgment to the effect that she take nothing by her complaint and that defendant and cross-complainants recover $16,470 as follows: cross-complainants' White Oak Realty, Inc., Macy Coffin and Geraldine Coffin, jointly-—-$4.500; cross-complainant Showcase Properties. Inc., $7,182 ; and cross-complainant, White Oak Realty. Inc., $4,788.
This litigation is the result of an abortive real estate transaction, White Oak Realty Inc. (“White Oak”) and the Coffins-owned a medical-building in Encino, California. White
Oak is also a licensed real estate broker. On January 14, 1965, Mrs. Barton signed a deposit receipt, in which she offered to buy the building for $192 500. Showcase Properties, Inc. (“Showcase”) was the broker involved. With respect to the commission, the document provides that Showcase was to receive “60% of 6%.” On January 16 the owners made a counteroffer to sell for $199,500. One of the conditions of the counteroffer read as follows: ' ' Commission is to be paid Showcase Properties on a 60/40 basis, as one of the principals is a Licensed Real Estate Broker.” Mrs. Barton accepted. On January 25, an escrow was opened and both sides signed escrow instructions. One of the instructions to the escrow holder, signed on behalf of White Oak, read as follows: “You are instructed to pay commission as follows: $7,182.00 to Showcase Properties, Inc. $4,788.00 to White Oak Realty. $11,970.00—total commission.” On May 18 Mrs. Barton wrongfully refused to complete the purchase and demanded the return of $5,000 which she had deposited in the escrow. On July 12 she sued White Oak, the Coffins and the escrow company for the return of the deposit. The escrow company interpleaded the money.
White Oak and the Coffins cross-complained as owners, claiming damages in the sum of $39,500, the alleged difference between the market value of the property and the contract price.
White Oak and Showcase, as brokers, cross-complained, claiming that in addition to the $39,500 they were entitled to their commissions in the sums of $4,788 and $7,182 respectively. After a trial the court found that the owners had not overreached themselves as much as they had thought and that the difference between the purchase price and the market value was only $4,500. It awarded' that sum to the owners and the commissions, as prayed, to the brokers. The allowance of the commissions is the only issue on appeal.
It will aid in analyzing the problems posed by this appeal to ignore, for the moment, the dual status of White Oak as an owner, as well as a broker. After stating what we believe to be
the applicable law concerning the defaulting buyer’s liability for brokers’ commissions, we will then discuss more particularly how this liability is affected by the fact that one of the sellers was to receive part of the commission.
Although the pleadings are a little vague on the point, the findings and conclusions, the judgment and, indeed, cross-complainants’ counsel’s statement to this court at the time of the oral argument, make it perfectly clear that it was—and still is—his theory, that Mrs. Barton is liable for the commissions by reason of no other fact than that the owners had decided to stand on their contract with her and to sue her for and recover damages. In this view it is immaterial whether or not the brokers had earned their commissions when the breach occurred.
In other words, to put the cross-complaint in its proper perspective, it is important to understand what it is not: it is not a suit by the brokers against the buyer on the theory that they are third party beneficiaries of a promise made by the buyer to the seller to pay the broker’s commission
(Calhoun
v.
Downs,
211 Cal. 766, 770-771 [297 P. 548];
Lane
v.
Davis,
172 Cal.App.2d 302, 308-309 [342 P.2d 267];
Watson
v.
Aced,
156 Cal.App.2d 87, 91-92 [319 P.2d 83]); it is not a suit based on a theory that the buyer’s default was a direct wrong against the brokers in that it prevented them from earning the commission;
nor, since the brokers did not sue the owners, is it their theory that, regardless of whether this successful action for damages against Mrs. Barton was brought by the owners, the commission had already been earned.
(Collins
v.
Vickter Manor, Inc.,
47 Cal.2d 875, 881 [306 P.2d 783].)
The fact that the trial court went along with the theory on which cross-complainants did try the case is clearly shown
from the conclusions of law which it signed: ' ' Cross-complainants White Oak Realty, Inc., Macy Coffin and Geraldine Coffin are entitled to recover on their cross-complaint against cross-defendant Opal Barton damages in the sum of $16,470.00
to be apportioned and paid pro rata as collected
among cross-complainants White Oak Realty, Inc., Macy Coffin, Geraldine Coffin and Showcase Properties, Inc. as follows:
“A. $4,500.00 to White Oak Realty, Inc., Macy Coffin and Geraldine Coffin, being the difference between the contract price and the fair market value of subject real property on the date of breach;
“B. $7,182.00 to Showcase Properties, Inc. for real estate broker’s commission; and
“C. $4,788.00 to White Oak Realty, Inc. for real estate broker’s commission.” (Italics added.)
Almost identical language concerning apportionment and pro rata payment of the judgment “as collected” appears in the judgment itself.
In other words, the owners, just by suing and recovering on the contract, rendered themselves liable for the commission and were entitled to be reimbursed therefor by Mrs. Barton. On no other theory can we explain the judgment against her, coupled with the pro rata apportionment of sums collected.
Cross-complainants’ theory derives wholly from
Lesser
v. W.
B. McGerry & Co., Inc.,
121 Cal.App. 193 [8 P.2d 1058] and a dictum in
Peak
v.
Jurgens,
5 Cal.App.2d 573 [43 P.2d 569], In
Lesser,
the owner had agreed to sell property for $85,375, net to him. The purchasers had agreed to pay $86,500, leaving a difference of $1,125 for the broker. The purchasers then refused to proceed. A settlement was negotiated between them and Lesser pursuant to which they paid Lesser $2,150 and assigned to him whatever rights they had in a deposit of $1,000 held by the broker. Lesser then sued for the deposit and lost in the trial court. This result was upheld on appeal.
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KAUS, P. J.
Plaintiff and cross-defendant Opal Barton appeals from a judgment to the effect that she take nothing by her complaint and that defendant and cross-complainants recover $16,470 as follows: cross-complainants' White Oak Realty, Inc., Macy Coffin and Geraldine Coffin, jointly-—-$4.500; cross-complainant Showcase Properties. Inc., $7,182 ; and cross-complainant, White Oak Realty. Inc., $4,788.
This litigation is the result of an abortive real estate transaction, White Oak Realty Inc. (“White Oak”) and the Coffins-owned a medical-building in Encino, California. White
Oak is also a licensed real estate broker. On January 14, 1965, Mrs. Barton signed a deposit receipt, in which she offered to buy the building for $192 500. Showcase Properties, Inc. (“Showcase”) was the broker involved. With respect to the commission, the document provides that Showcase was to receive “60% of 6%.” On January 16 the owners made a counteroffer to sell for $199,500. One of the conditions of the counteroffer read as follows: ' ' Commission is to be paid Showcase Properties on a 60/40 basis, as one of the principals is a Licensed Real Estate Broker.” Mrs. Barton accepted. On January 25, an escrow was opened and both sides signed escrow instructions. One of the instructions to the escrow holder, signed on behalf of White Oak, read as follows: “You are instructed to pay commission as follows: $7,182.00 to Showcase Properties, Inc. $4,788.00 to White Oak Realty. $11,970.00—total commission.” On May 18 Mrs. Barton wrongfully refused to complete the purchase and demanded the return of $5,000 which she had deposited in the escrow. On July 12 she sued White Oak, the Coffins and the escrow company for the return of the deposit. The escrow company interpleaded the money.
White Oak and the Coffins cross-complained as owners, claiming damages in the sum of $39,500, the alleged difference between the market value of the property and the contract price.
White Oak and Showcase, as brokers, cross-complained, claiming that in addition to the $39,500 they were entitled to their commissions in the sums of $4,788 and $7,182 respectively. After a trial the court found that the owners had not overreached themselves as much as they had thought and that the difference between the purchase price and the market value was only $4,500. It awarded' that sum to the owners and the commissions, as prayed, to the brokers. The allowance of the commissions is the only issue on appeal.
It will aid in analyzing the problems posed by this appeal to ignore, for the moment, the dual status of White Oak as an owner, as well as a broker. After stating what we believe to be
the applicable law concerning the defaulting buyer’s liability for brokers’ commissions, we will then discuss more particularly how this liability is affected by the fact that one of the sellers was to receive part of the commission.
Although the pleadings are a little vague on the point, the findings and conclusions, the judgment and, indeed, cross-complainants’ counsel’s statement to this court at the time of the oral argument, make it perfectly clear that it was—and still is—his theory, that Mrs. Barton is liable for the commissions by reason of no other fact than that the owners had decided to stand on their contract with her and to sue her for and recover damages. In this view it is immaterial whether or not the brokers had earned their commissions when the breach occurred.
In other words, to put the cross-complaint in its proper perspective, it is important to understand what it is not: it is not a suit by the brokers against the buyer on the theory that they are third party beneficiaries of a promise made by the buyer to the seller to pay the broker’s commission
(Calhoun
v.
Downs,
211 Cal. 766, 770-771 [297 P. 548];
Lane
v.
Davis,
172 Cal.App.2d 302, 308-309 [342 P.2d 267];
Watson
v.
Aced,
156 Cal.App.2d 87, 91-92 [319 P.2d 83]); it is not a suit based on a theory that the buyer’s default was a direct wrong against the brokers in that it prevented them from earning the commission;
nor, since the brokers did not sue the owners, is it their theory that, regardless of whether this successful action for damages against Mrs. Barton was brought by the owners, the commission had already been earned.
(Collins
v.
Vickter Manor, Inc.,
47 Cal.2d 875, 881 [306 P.2d 783].)
The fact that the trial court went along with the theory on which cross-complainants did try the case is clearly shown
from the conclusions of law which it signed: ' ' Cross-complainants White Oak Realty, Inc., Macy Coffin and Geraldine Coffin are entitled to recover on their cross-complaint against cross-defendant Opal Barton damages in the sum of $16,470.00
to be apportioned and paid pro rata as collected
among cross-complainants White Oak Realty, Inc., Macy Coffin, Geraldine Coffin and Showcase Properties, Inc. as follows:
“A. $4,500.00 to White Oak Realty, Inc., Macy Coffin and Geraldine Coffin, being the difference between the contract price and the fair market value of subject real property on the date of breach;
“B. $7,182.00 to Showcase Properties, Inc. for real estate broker’s commission; and
“C. $4,788.00 to White Oak Realty, Inc. for real estate broker’s commission.” (Italics added.)
Almost identical language concerning apportionment and pro rata payment of the judgment “as collected” appears in the judgment itself.
In other words, the owners, just by suing and recovering on the contract, rendered themselves liable for the commission and were entitled to be reimbursed therefor by Mrs. Barton. On no other theory can we explain the judgment against her, coupled with the pro rata apportionment of sums collected.
Cross-complainants’ theory derives wholly from
Lesser
v. W.
B. McGerry & Co., Inc.,
121 Cal.App. 193 [8 P.2d 1058] and a dictum in
Peak
v.
Jurgens,
5 Cal.App.2d 573 [43 P.2d 569], In
Lesser,
the owner had agreed to sell property for $85,375, net to him. The purchasers had agreed to pay $86,500, leaving a difference of $1,125 for the broker. The purchasers then refused to proceed. A settlement was negotiated between them and Lesser pursuant to which they paid Lesser $2,150 and assigned to him whatever rights they had in a deposit of $1,000 held by the broker. Lesser then sued for the deposit and lost in the trial court. This result was upheld on appeal. The court first conceded that if Lesser had done nothing after the purchasers’ default, the broker would not have been entitled to his commission “there being no legal duty upon the seller after default by the buyer to take legal steps to enforce the contract for the brokers’ benefit.” (121 Cal.App. at p. 196.) If, however, the seller takes the initiative to enforce the contract “he should not be permitted to ignore and sacrifice the brokers’ interest in the contract and enforce it solely for his own benefit.” Then, likening the settlement to a suit on the contract, the court reasoned as follows:
“If the contract had been fully performed, respondents would have received $1125 thereunder, and
in a suit against the buyers for its breach that $1125 would have entered properly as an element of damage.
Appellant having undertaken to settle the damages by way of compromise, the same damages must be held to have been in contemplation of the parties. ...” (121 Cal.App. at pp. 197-198. Italics added.)
For the present, there is no need to quarrel with
Lesser
to the extent that it talks about the rights between the seller and the broker. The most that can be read into the case is a dictum
that by enforcing the contract by an action against the buyer for its breach, the seller makes himself liable for a commission which, because of the breach, had not theretofore been earned. Cross-complainants, however, go one giant step further. They contend that because by suing and recovering on their contract they became liable for the commission, the defaulting buyer in turn became liable to them. This only follows if, as a general rule, a defaulting buyer must pay a commission for which the seller has become obligated in spite of the fact that the sale was not consummated. If this unarticulated major premise of cross-complainants’ argument is wrong, its entire structure collapses. Examination of the law discloses that they are demonstrably in error.
To date the alpha and omega of the law concerning the nature and extent of the liability of the defaulting buyer for expenses caused by his default is
Royer
v.
Carter,
37 Cal.2d 544 [233 P.2d 539], The facts were as follows: Carter had agreed to buy Royer’s house for $24,000. She defaulted. Three months later Royer resold the property for $18,500. The trial court awarded Royer the difference between $24,000 and $18,500, plus expenses incurred in connection with the sale to Carter, less a down payment which Royer had retained. The Supreme Court first held that the retention of the deposit was
not inconsistent with Royer’s right to hold Carter liable for damages, but because the trial court based its finding of market value on the time of the resale, rather than the time of Carter’s breach, the judgment had to be reversed. The court then turned to the question of expenses. It first noted that all the seller was entitled to was to be made whole. Royer therefore could not recover expenses which would have come out of her pocket, had the deal been consummated.
On the other hand merely giving a seller the difference between the purchase price and the market value, does not really make him whole, because in an action for damages the court cannot turn his land into cash. To be placed in the position in which he would have been had the buyer not defaulted, he must be allowed the expenses of a resale at the market value at the time of the breach.
Application of these principles to
Royer
was as follows: the broker’s fee in connection with the first sale would have been $1,200, but Royer had paid only $420—slightly less than half of what was left of the deposit after proved expenses—a saving of $780. This saving was to be treated as a credit. “. . . On retrial, the trial court, in computing the additional damages caused by defendant’s breach, should allow an amount equal to the difference between the
cost of selling the property at its value at the time of the breach
and $780, the amount the anticipated expenses of the first sale were reduced by defendant’s default.” (37 Cal.2d at p. 551. Italics added.)
The important thing to note is that the court, in the italicized portion of the quote, is not talking about the actual resale of the property, but about a hypothetical resale at the market value at the time of the breach. The fact that there had been a resale was immaterial.
While the
Royer
formula is a good deal more complicated than the simple notion that the defaulting buyer is liable for expenses incurred in connection with the original sale, it makes a lot more sense. If the seller recovers expenses, including commissions, which he himself would have been obligated to pay, and recovers the difference between the purchase price and the market value to boot, he is prima facie placed in a better position by the buyer’s default. This result is directly prohibited by section 3358 of the Civil Code.
On the other hand, not to award him such expenses, nor to take into account the fact that the buyer’s default leaves the seller with land that he had contracted to convert into cash—or other 'property—is to ignore the realities of the situation.
Cross-complainants’ major premise—that the damages against Mrs. Barton may be increased by the exact amount of expenses for which they became obligated in connection with the abortive sale to her—is thus directly contradicted by
Royer.
The real significance of such obligations is that Mrs. Barton cannot claim them as a credit against the expenses of a hypothetical resale.
We must now inspect the correctness of cross-complainants ’ minor premise, that the very recovery of damages for the breach obligated them to pay the commission for the sale to Mrs. Barton.
If cross-complainants are correct, the language in
Boyer
concerning the saving of $780 was quite illusory, since by the very act of suing and recovering damages for the buyer’s breach, Mrs. Royer precluded any such saving. We cannot assume that our Supreme Court laid down a rule for a situ
ation which, in law, cannot occur; nor can we say that the rule is limited to the facts in
Royer
because there it just might have been the case—the opinion is silent on the point— that the broker had relinquished any right to the full commission he would have earned under the theory advanced by cross-complainants here. If that had been the ease, the court would surely have circumscribed its holding.
Nor may we assume that the court impliedly held that by accepting about half of the buyer’s deposit the broker had waived any additional right to a commission which might be coming to him under cross-complainants’ theory. Such an implied holding would have been peculiarly inappropriate in a ease which also held that the seller’s retention of the deposit was not inconsistent with her right to damages.
There is of course a great deal of plausibility to the
Lesser
theory that the seller should not be able to enforce the contract and retain for himself what he would have had to pay the broker, had the buyer performed. This reasoning, however, becomes untenable once it is the law that an expense which the seller did not incur because of the default is precisely what he does not recover when he sues for damages.
Lesser
and
Royer
simply cannot coexist in the same jurisdiction.
The judgment below must therefore be reversed for two reasons:
1. The trial court never determined the expenses, including but not limited to a commission, which would have been incurred in connection with a hypothetical resale at the market value at the time of the breach; and
2. The trial court assumed as a matter of course that by suing and recovering damages for Mrs. Barton’s breach, and for no other reason, the owners made themselves liable to the brokers for the commission.
At a retrial, under proper amended pleadings, the trial court will, of course, not be precluded from determining whether the brokers had otherwise earned their commission at
the time of the breach,- a fact which would preclude any credit against the judgment. There is no need to retry the issues of breach, ■ the difference between the purchase price and the market value and any questions in connection with expenses other than the commission. (See
Brewer
v.
Second Baptist Church,
32 Cal.2d 791, 801-803 [197 P.2d 713].)
We now turn to the problems posed by White Oak’s dual capacity as an owner and as a broker. At the retrial the question will arise to what extent, if any, the 40 percent of the commission payable to White Oak should figure in the application of the
Royer
formula. The record, which contains a directive by White Oak to the escrow holder instructing it to credit both White Oak and the Coffins with the full amount of the commission due White Oak ($4,788), strongly suggests that the owners were merely using White Oak’s license as a device to hold Showcase’s commission down to 60 percent of 6 percent, or 3.6 percent. Counsel for cross-complainants suggests that the record is not conclusive in that respect and he may be right. It is immaterial. Whether or not, as between the Coffins and White Oak, White Oak did earn or would have earned a larger share of the proceeds of the sale than it had coming merely by virtue of being a co-tenant, is strictly a matter of accounting between it and the Coffins.
The fact is, that White Oak’s 40 percent of the commission will be an irrelevant factor at the retrial. If, at such trial, the court should find that at the time of the breach the commission had been earned, no question of any credit in favor of Mrs. Barton can arise. It simply is none of her business how the sellers and the brokers adjust their obligations. If, on the other hand, it should be found that the commission had not been earned, the maximum credit to which she will be entitled is that portion of the commission which would have been paid to Showcase—3.6 percent. If she were allowed more, she would be getting a credit for an expense which the owners did not, in fact, save.
The judgment is reversed insofar as it decrees the recovery $7,182 plus interest by the cross-complainant Showcase Properties, Inc., and $4,788 plus interest by the cross-complainant White Oak Realty, Inc. and the trial court is directed to retry the issue of brokers’ commissions in accordance with the views herein expressed. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed. Bach side is to bear its own costs on this appeal.
Stephens, J., and Reppy, J., concurred.