Church v. Lawyers Mortgage Investment Corp.

51 N.E.2d 450, 315 Mass. 1, 1943 Mass. LEXIS 896
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 51 N.E.2d 450 (Church v. Lawyers Mortgage Investment Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Church v. Lawyers Mortgage Investment Corp., 51 N.E.2d 450, 315 Mass. 1, 1943 Mass. LEXIS 896 (Mass. 1943).

Opinion

Dolan, J.

This is an action of contract to recover a commission, alleged to be due to the plaintiff as a real estate broker in connection with negotiations for the sale of certain real estate. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The judge, under leave reserved, entered a verdict for the defendant and reported the case to this court, with provisions that if his action was correct judgment is to be entered for the defendant on the verdict so entered, but that if he was in error the case is to be remanded to the Superior Court for action upon a motion for a new trial, filed by the defendant.

The evidence would have warranted the jury in finding the following facts: In February or March of the year 1937, the defendant through one Beck, who represented it in the handling and sale of its real estate, gave the plaintiff, a real estate broker, a list of several of its parcels of real estate with the understanding that, if the plaintiff submitted a proposal for their purchase that was acceptable to and was approved by the defendant corporation, a regular commission would be paid him. Thereafter the plaintiff on behalf of a client, one Zieman, negotiated with the defendant for some time, submitting several different propositions which were not acceptable to the defendant. In submitting one of the foregoing propositions the plaintiff enclosed a check for $500, a deposit, which check was kept either by the defendant or by Beck. On March 29, 1937, as a result of a conversation between Beck and the plaintiff, the latter, by a letter dated the same day, “retracted” all previous offers and submitted a so called “final proposition” for the sale of four designated parcels of real estate, with reference to which the following terms were specifically set forth: the purchase price, the amount of cash payments or deposits, the amount and length of time of the mortgages, the rate of interest on the mortgages and the terms of amortization — interest, taxes and principal payments to be made in monthly instal[3]*3ments. Beck submitted the offer to the executive committee of the defendant, meeting on that day, March 29, and the committee voted to accept the offer. The offer, which was approved and accepted by the executive committee of the defendant, was the identical offer made by the letter of the plaintiff dated March 29. On the following day, Beck telephoned to the plaintiff and informed him that “the proposition which he submitted had been approved by his corporation and everything was O’K.” The plaintiff replied he was glad to hear it, and asked Beck to have the agreements drawn up and he would have them signed by Zieman. At that time Beck informed the plaintiff that a $1,000 additional deposit was to be required as part of the transaction in addition to the $500 previously deposited, to which Zieman agreed. Beck also told the plaintiff to have the agreements drawn up. On March 30, 1937, the plaintiff wrote a letter confirming the conversation with Beck of that day “relative to acceptance of your Committee of offer made by me under date of March 29, 1937,” in which he further stated that “in behalf of my client ... I would appreciate having your attorney prepare the necessary agreements, upon receipt of which I will have same duly executed together with additional deposit of $1,000. as per agreement.” Several days later Beck called up Church and informed him that “my corporation voted to sell you the four parcels which you agreed to buy, and we find out now that we are unable to convey one of the parcels due to the fact that we don’t own it. It is owned by one of the subsidiaries of our corporation.” Beck asked the plaintiff to prevail upon Zieman to accept three of the parcels with the further understanding that “when we do get the Malden parcel ... we will give it to you under the same terms and conditions as set forth in your approved offer if we get it.” The plaintiff took this matter up with Zieman who agreed to accept Beck’s suggestion, and such assent on Zieman’s part was confirmed by a letter from the plaintiff to- Beck, dated April 2, 1937, in which the plaintiff stated that “my client . . . "has authorized me to accept your suggestion, and that agreements drawn covering the three parcels ... on basis set forth in [4]*4. . . [plaintiff’s letter of March 29], leaving . . . [the fourth parcel] in abayence [sic] to such a time as your Corp. can deliver same on terms submitted. Kindly have agreements drawn covering the above, with the understanding that a regular brokers commission is to be paid by the Seller, upon receipt of which I will have same duly executed by Mr. Ziman.” There was further evidence that on April 2, the matter of the plaintiff’s commission was figured out to be $5,050. This was a regular broker’s commission on the amount of money involved in the sales in question. On April 2 all the terms of the sale that had been discussed had been agreed upon, including the specific properties to be sold, the price, the amount of the cash deposits, the terms of the mortgages, the rate of interest and the apportionment of taxes. There was evidence that there was nothing left to be done under the oral arrangement except to embody the terms of the sale in a written agreement and for Zieman to make, the additional deposit of $1,000, that the parties had talked about insurance, that Zieman wished to place his own insurance on the premises, and that this was satisfactory to Beck.

On April 10 or 12, Beck turned over to the plaintiff a written agreement of sale, dated April 5, 1937, which had been prepared by an employee of the defendant. Up to that time, there had never been discussion between Beck and the plaintiff with reference to the time of passing papers. The time for passing papers was fixed in the written agreement as of May 5, 1937. It also contained a provision that the premises were to be kept insured by the defendant. Upon being shown the agreement, Zieman said it- was satisfactory to him with the exceptions that the time was unreasonably short for the passing of papers, that, “in order to arrange the necessary financing and so forth, he wanted to have the date of passing papers June 5th instead of May 5th as provided by the agreement,” and that he wanted to place his own insurance. Beck said that there was “nothing doing.” The jury could have found that the defendant had previously agreed that Zieman could place the insurance on the property and, as already noted, that [5]*5the time for passing papers had never been discussed in the negotiations prior to the preparation of the written agreement by the defendant. Further negotiations proved unsuccessful and the written agreement was never executed. On May 15, 1937, the defendant sold one of the parcels in question to the Slater-Glasser Realty Corporation through another broker, one Segal, who had an office with Beck’s son. The purchase price was $1,000 more than that offered by Zieman and a commission of $2,200 was paid by the defendant to Segal. ' In July, 1937, the other two parcels in question were sold through Segal, who received a commission of $1,500 as to one parcel and one of $1,200 as to the other.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E.2d 450, 315 Mass. 1, 1943 Mass. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-v-lawyers-mortgage-investment-corp-mass-1943.