Briggs v. Rowe

4 Keyes 424
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 4 Keyes 424 (Briggs v. Rowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Briggs v. Rowe, 4 Keyes 424 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

The testimony given on the trial tended to prove, that in June, 1857, the defendant employed Sylvester Hondlow, a real estate broker, to sell the house and lot Ho. 43 Pierrepont street, in the city of Brooklyn, with coach-house attached, and left with him the keys of the house. Hondlow placed thereon a notice or bill, For Sale — inquire of S. Hondlow & Co.”

That in the end of January, or in February, 1858, Mrs. Sarah Ravenhill called upon Hondlow, and'inquired if he had any houses to rent, and the subject of buying was mentioned. He directed her to others. She wished a coach-house attached to the premises. She made some inspection, was attracted by the coach-house privilege, and the next day she called on Hondlow for the keys, and examined the house, or had it examined by her family, and in the evening returned the keys, saying that the house was in bad order, and she did not like it.

She had given up the idea of purchasing that house, but afterward, on or about the 3d of March, her son met upon the ferry-boat, Mr. Augustus Rapelye (with whom and with whose father, Jacob Rapelye, Mrs. Ravenhill had been [440]*440acquainted for several years). Mr. Bapelye was aware that Mrs. Bavenhill was looking for a house. A conversation was had between them in regard to the premises, and Bapelye told the son that they were cheap, or that his father, Jacob Bapelye, said the premises could be bought low, and gave the son a memorandum of the street and number.

The same day the son wrote to his mother, sending her that memorandum, and advising her to call and see the property, and in the evening on asking her if she had seen the house, she said she had.

By reason of the memorandum thus received from her son, she sent to Hondlow, and procured the keys again, and went herself and examined the house, and called upon Mr. ’Jacob Bapelye, and procured him to examine the house for her, to estimate the expense necessary to.put the house in repair, and he called on Hondlow and told him he had advised Mrs. Bavenhill to offer him $12,500. The idea of purchasing the premises being thus revived in the mind of Mrs. Bavenhill, and her son requesting her to ask Hondlow to call at her house, she sent him a message of that-import, and Hondlow accordingly called upon her and her son, at their residence, and the interview resulted in an offer of $12,500 for the premises.

The next day defendant called at Hondlow’s office, and inquired about matters,” and the offer was communicated to him, he inquired who it was that had made the offer, and was told it was Bavenhill. He said, send him to me; and accordingly on the following Sunday Hondlow spoke to Bavenhill (the son) about it, and he said he would call at his (the defendant’s) store for some goods, and perhaps he (the defendant) will mention it, and" that he thought he could make the arrangement better than through Hondlow. Young Bavenhill called upon the defendant, and purchased goods—the defendant brought up the subject of the sale and purchase of the house. Negotiation (without further interference of Hondlow) was continued at the residence of Mrs. Bavenhill, by defendant, in person, and she purchased the premises at $14,000, and in due course received a deed [441]*441and took possession. The purchaser, Mrs. Ravenhill, having never seen or had any communication with the plaintiffs.

Obviously, in this narration, no instrumentality of the plaintiffs in the matter of the sale appears, and the purchaser was not aware that they had any agency in the matter. As between her and the defendant (the vendor), so far as there was any intermediate action, it was by Hondlow, the broker, who first called her attention to the house on which was his bill advertising it for sale, her- son, who was assisting in the pursuit and negotiation, young Rapelye, whose conversation prompted a renewal of the treaty, and Rapelye, senior, who examined the premises for her, and advised an offer of $12,500.

The agency of the plaintiffs, also real estate brokers, upon which their claim proceeds, was as follows:

In the fall of 1857, one of the plaintiffs called upon the defendant (having learned from one Mellen, that he had the house for sale), to ascertain the price, the size of the lot, etc. •The defendant told him that the house was for sale, and that if he (the plaintiff) sold it, or found a purchaser, he would pay his commissions.

A proposition for an exchange appears to have been procured by the plaintiff in the fall or winter, but resulted in no agreement.

After the interview between young Ravenhill and.Mr. Augustus Rapelye, above mentioned, in which the latter had had the conversation, and handed to the former the memorandum, which he sent to his mother, as above narrated, Mr. Rapelye went to the office of the plaintiffs, and the plaintiff Briggs, having learned from Rapelye, that Ravenhill wanted to buy a house, went to the defendant’s store, and defendant stated the price to be $16,000, of which $9,500 might remain on bond and mortgage. Briggs mentioned to the defendant the name of the party for whom he wanted the particulars, and the defendant stated that he knew Mr. Ravenhill.

The plaintiff then left at Rapelye’s office a card containing the price, which he afterward gave to young Ravenhill; and some days afterward the plaintiff Briggs called with [442]*442Rapelye on young Ravenhill, and was introduced to him, and conversed with him on the subject of the house and the probable cost to put it in repair; and, at a subsequent meeting with young Ravenhill, on the ferry-boat, a like conversation was had.

Upon these facts, what was the procuring cause of the sale ? and to whose agency was it due ?

This question the plaintiffs are entitled to have answered, on a motion for a nonsuit, as favorably to their claim as the testimony will warrant.

I think it should be assumed, that, for all the purposes of this case, any intercourse with Mr. Ravenhill, the son, may be taken in favor of the plaintiffs, as if it had been with the mother, the purchaser herself, however ignorant she was of any agency of theirs in the matter; and that her son may be deemed, for that purpose, her agent.

In my judgment the plaintiffs failed entirely to show either that they negotiated a sale, or procured a purchaser.

If the sale in fact made, is not to be referred directly to the agency of Hondlow, because he first directed Mrs. Raven-hill’s attention to the premises, then obviously it was the conversation of Mr. Augustus Rapelye with Mrs. Ravenhill, and the memorandum then handed to him, which set on foot the negotiation, not with the plaintiffs, but with Hondlow, which produced from Mrs. Ravenhill an offer to buy, a reference of Mr. Ravenhill to the defendant for the continuance of the negotiation and an ultimate sale by the defendant to the purchaser, Mrs. Ravenhill.

Hondlow first called the attention of Mrs. Ravenhill to the property. He was and was known to her and her son as the agent for the sale. The negotiation had ceased and she had given up the idea of buying it, but the recommendation of Mr. Rapelye, or his father, whom she knew, induced her son to advise its renewal, and upon that, induced by that, she renewed the negotiations for the purchase.

The claim of the plaintiffs seems to be that they can appropriate this act and conversation of Rapelye, and by some kind of adoption make it their own.

[443]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Keyes 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briggs-v-rowe-ny-1868.