Daigle Commercial Group, Inc. v. St. Laurent

1999 ME 107, 734 A.2d 667, 1999 Me. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 9, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 1999 ME 107 (Daigle Commercial Group, Inc. v. St. Laurent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daigle Commercial Group, Inc. v. St. Laurent, 1999 ME 107, 734 A.2d 667, 1999 Me. LEXIS 120 (Me. 1999).

Opinion

DANA, J.

[¶ 1] Raymond St. Laurent appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court (Cumberland County, Mills, J.) in favor of Dai-gle Commercial Group, Inc., (Daigle, Inc.), a commercial real estate broker, on its action to recover brokerage fees on the basis of promissory estoppel. St. Laurent also appeals a summary judgment in favor of J.P. Maloney Auction Co., Inc., (Malo-ney, Inc.) on St. Laurent’s claim for contribution or indemnity with respect to damages awarded Daigle, Inc. St. Laurent argues that the court erred (1) in applying the doctrine of promissory estoppel to allow a commercial broker to recover a brokerage fee, and (2) in granting a summary judgment for Maloney, Inc. on St. Laurent’s claim for indemnification or contribution. We affirm the judgment.

*670 [¶ 2] In May 1995, Roger Daigle, president of Daigle, Inc., signed a non-exclusive listing agreement with David Green, the owner of Meadowbrook Village Shopping Center in York. Daigle found a buyer, St. Laurent, who purchased Meadowbrook from Green with an intention to “flip,” or re-sell, the property. St. Laurent and Daigle then entered an exclusive right to sell agreement for Meadowbrook on September 14, 1995. This agreement provided that Daigle, Inc. maintained a right to sell until March 14, 1996. If Daigle, Inc. provided written notice to St. Laurent by March 14, 1996, of the persons whom it had contacted and one of those persons purchased the property before September 14, 1996, then Daigle, Inc. would be entitled to a commission of $75,000. The agreement further provided that if St. Laurent in “good faith” listed Meadow-brook by means of an exclusive right to sell agreement with another real estate brokerage agency after March 14, 1996, then the requirement to pay a broker’s commission to Daigle, Inc. would be void.

[¶ 3] In October 1995, Cail Glidden, owner of the anchor tenant at Meadow-brook, terminated his lease. To find a new tenant, St. Laurent entered into an exclusive right to lease listing agreement with Commercial Properties, Inc., a real estate broker, but St. Laurent soon sought to terminate that lease listing agreement and he asked for Daigle’s assistance in doing so. Daigle convinced Commercial Properties to release St. Laurent from the lease listing agreement, and the agreement was terminated March 7, 1996. St. Laurent then urged Daigle to continue his attempts to sell the Meadowbrook and to assist in finding tenants, and before the Daigle-St. Laurent agreement terminated on March 14, 1996, St. Laurent indicated to Daigle that he “had nothing to worry about in terms of [his] commission,” and that as long as St. Laurent and Daigle were working together that St. Laurent “would protect [Daigle’s] commission under any circumstances.”

[¶ 4] On March 11, 1996, just after the termination of the Commercial Properties lease listing agreement and three days before the termination of the Daigle-St. Laurent agreement, St. Laurent entered into an exclusive right to lease listing agreement with The Kane Company, Inc. With respect to the termination of the Daigle-St.Laurent agreement, Daigle testified that:

I asked Mr. St. Laurent for a new agreement and he indicated that he was going to bring on Kane ... to do the leasing and that typically in the leasing agreements there is a clause for potential sale and he wanted to keep his options open, that I had nothing to worry about in terms of my continued work at Meadowbrook, that I would always be protected and that I didn’t have to worry about a commission, that he would never go around me, and that he wanted to keep his options open until the leasing took place so that the shopping center would be leased up and it would be attractive to buyers.

[¶ 5] Daigle received further assurances from St. Laurent after Daigle, pursuant to a separate agreement with St. Laurent, attempted to sell St. Laurent’s mobile home park, Duck-A-Way. Daigle produced a potential purchaser of Duck-AWay, but St. Laurent rejected the offer and found a buyer himself. Daigle, as the exclusive broker for the sale of Duck-AWay, contended that St. Laurent owed him a $35,000 commission on the sale. To settle the dispute, Daigle and St. Laurent reached an agreement: (1) St. Laurent would pay Daigle a commission of $15,000, (2) Daigle, at St. Laurent’s urging, would continue to attempt to sell Meadowbrook even though the brokerage contract had expired, and (3) St. Laurent would “make up the difference” in the Meadowbrook transaction.

[¶ 6] On March 28, 1996, after the termination of the Daigle-St. Laurent agreement, Daigle and David Andrews, the eventual purchaser of Meadowbrook, en *671 tered into a non-disclosure agreement for Meadowbrook. In April, pursuant to that agreement, Daigle sent information to Andrews, including financial information about Meadowbrook and a professional summary appraisal. He engaged in discussions with Andrews, exchanged phone calls, and attempted to schedule a showing and meeting between St. Laurent and Andrews. Andrews drove by Meadowbrook on his own to view the property. According to Daigle, however, St. Laurent did not seem interested in pursuing Andrews as a potential purchaser.

[¶ 7] On April 22, 1996, St. Laurent entered into an exclusive right to sell listing agreement with Kane. Daigle was unaware of this agreement — he was only aware of the Kane lease agreement — and he therefore continued to ask St. Laurent to enter into a brokerage agreement. St. Laurent refused, but he did offer to exclude Dai-gle’s prospects from the Kane lease agreement and Daigle therefore prepared a letter to St. Laurent listing Andrews as a potential buyer. St. Laurent then listed Andrews as an exclusion to Kane’s exclusive right to sell agreement (not the lease agreement) providing that if St. Laurent sold Meadowbrook to Andrews, St. Laurent would not owe Kane a sales brokerage commission.

[¶ 8] On July 17, 1996, Daigle met with St. Laurent and again asked him to renew the exclusive right to sell agreement, but St. Laurent refused. Daigle testified that after he met with St. Laurent he was “being reassured ... by Mr. St. Laurent that I did not have a thing to worry about on my commission, that he would never go around me, we had worked together for too long for him to consider doing anything like that.” Daigle testified that after July 17, 1996, the level of contact between him and St. Laurent “wane[d] off’ because he was “discouraged and disappointed” that St. Laurent was unwilling to sign an exclusive right to sell agreement.

[¶ 9] In late June or early July 1996, Andrews came in contact with Joseph Ma-loney of Maloney, Inc., a commercial broker, and they discussed a possible purchase of Meadowbrook. According to St. Laurent, Maloney then contacted St. Laurent with information that he had engaged in discussions with a “potential buyer,” but he did not reveal the potential buyer’s name. On July 18, 1996, St. Laurent— after terminating the Kane exclusive sales listing agreement on July 10 — entered into an exclusive sales listing agreement with Maloney, Inc. Maloney testified that he told St. Laurent that Andrews was the potential purchaser only after the listing agreement was signed.

[¶ 10] On July 28, 1996, St. Laurent and Andrews signed a purchase and sale agreement for Meadowbrook. Maloney received a $72,000 commission. St. Laurent did not pay Daigle a commission.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1999 ME 107, 734 A.2d 667, 1999 Me. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daigle-commercial-group-inc-v-st-laurent-me-1999.