Devereux v. Sirkus

233 P.2d 644, 105 Cal. App. 2d 340, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1474
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 10, 1951
DocketCiv. 18064
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 233 P.2d 644 (Devereux v. Sirkus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Devereux v. Sirkus, 233 P.2d 644, 105 Cal. App. 2d 340, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1474 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

SHINN, P. J.

Plaintiffs sued Jack Sirkus and wife, Harold Senter and wife, and George W. Olson and wife, to recover the amount of-two broker’s commissions claimed to have been earned in negotiating an exchange of real estate for defendants. . The demurrers of defendants Sirkus and Senter were sustained without leave to amend and judgment was entered in their favor. No judgment has been rendered as to defendants. Olson. Plaintiffs-appeal.-

The complaint contains three causes of action. It is alleged in the first cause of action that the defendants employed plaintiffs “to. obtain a purchaser- or person with whom they *342 could trade or exchange their respective real property”; that pursuant to their employment.plaintiffs, produced Géorge W. Olson and Helen G. Olson who agreed in writing tp exchange their property on Senalda Eoad in Los Angeles for Glenrock Avenue property owned by the other defendants, and to pay, in addition, a certain amount of cash; that defendants Sirkus arid -Senter entered into an escrow agreement with the Olsons for said exchange of properties on terms that were mutually satisfactory and that in and by said escrow agreement defendants Sirkus and Senter promised to pay plaintiffs a commission of $4,500, and the Olsons agreed to pay a commission of $2,250. Attached to the complaint is a copy of a receipt for $10 deposited with Devereux & Company containing an offer to exchange the Glenrock Avenue property for the Senalda Road property plus cash in the amount of the difference between the encumbrance then on the Glenrock Avenue property and $50,000. The latter provision evidently meant that if the balance of the loan was less than $50,000 the difference would be paid in cash. The offer is signed “Hal Senter.” Above his signature is the statement that he represents himself to be the owner of the Glenrock property; that he agrees to sell it on the terms stated and “. . . personally agrees to pay a commission of $4,500 to above named Broker, or one-half the deposit in the'event same is forfeited by the purchaser, provided' that' same shall not exceed the full aihount of the commission. Said commission shall be payable in full at once if sale is not completed due to my failure to comply with the terms hereof. ’ ’ The brokers were expressly authorized to act for both parties to the exchange and accept commissions therefrom.

Typewritten in the printed agreement are certain expressions which indicate there were several persons interested in the ownership of the Glenrock Avenue property, namely, “We, the undersigned, hereby agree . . . for our equity in the multiple, dwelling property located at 511 Glenrock Avenue, Los Angeles” and “The owners of the property at 511 Glenrock Avenue, Los Angeles,” etc.. Although Sirkus and wife and Mrs. Senter did not sign this writing, it was alleged in the complaint that Harold Senter in signing the same was acting as the “agent, servant and spokesman” for those defendants, and that said defendants knew he was acting for and on their behalf in signing the instrument, approved of his employment, and that they afterwards ratified, confirmed, approved, signed and delivered the said escrow instructions.

*343 It was expressly alleged that the Olsons orally agreed to pay plaintiEs a commission of $2,250. Attached to the complaint is a writing alleged to have been signed by defendants Olson, which is in the main a counterpart of the writing signed by Senter. Immediately underneath the signatures of the Olsons is án unsignéd provision that they will pay the brokers a commission off $2,250, this provision being the same, except as to amount, as the one signed by Senter. The two writings considered together constitute an agreement for the exchange of the properties. Also attached to the complaint are the escrow instructions which áre alleged to have been signed by all six defendants. These call for an exchange of the properties on the terms stated in the two writings previously mentioned. In these instructions Sirkus and wife and Senter and wife direct the escrow holder to pay “at close of escrow” commission of $4,500 to Devereux & Company, and the Olsons authorize the escrow holder to pay “at close of escrow; upon the recording of deed commission of $2,250 to Devereux & Co.”

The demurrérs were sustained without leave to amend upon the theory that there was no sufficient allegation of the employment of the plaintiffs by defendants Sirkus and Senter or any of them. In this we believe the court erred.

Respondents contend that the writing signed by Harold Senter was incomplete in that it was not to become effective as to any of the defendants unless it was signed by Mrs. Senter and Mr. and Mrs. Sirkus. If the proof should show this to be the fact the writing would not constitute an executed agreement. (McDowell v. Willis, 85 Cal.App. 496 [259 P. 765].) Although the writing on its face implies that others were to sign, we think the implication could be dispelled by proof of the other averments of the complaint, namely, those of the agency of Harold Senter, the knowledge and approval of his acts by the other owners and their recognition of plaintiffs’ right to a commission contained in the executed escrow instructions. Moreover, it is alleged that plaintiffs were employed by defendants. The proof may show that Harold Senter and some or all of the nonsigning defendants orally engaged the services of plaintiffs. The demurrer specified uncertainty as to whether plaintiffs’ employment was oral or in writing. (Code Civ. Proe., §430(10).) If there was uncertainty it could have been cured by amendment.

Under the facts alleged the escrow agreement which recognized the right of plaintiffs to receive a commission of $4,500 was a sufficient written note or memorandum of the *344 employment of plaintiffs by defendants Sirkus and Senter, as stated in the writing signed by Harold Senter. In Coulter v. Howard, 203 Cal. 17 [262 P. 751], Mrs. Howard’s son had given the broker a written agreement of employment; thereafter she executed escrow instructions calling for the payment of a commission to the broker out of funds due her at the close of the escrow. This was held to constitute a sufficient note or memorandum of employment under section 1624(5), Civil Code, and section 1973(5), Code of Civil Procedure. The decision in Coulter v. Howard was followed in Fritz v. Frost, 114 Cal.App. 602 [300 P. 454], The law on this point is thus settled to the contrary of respondents’ contention, We are of the opinion that the first cause of action stated sufficient facts to justify a recovery against defendants Sirkus and Senter.

The second cause of action is against defendants Olson and states sufficient facts for recovery of a commission from them. It does not purport to charge the other defendants with liability. It is necessary, however, to discuss the question of the Olsons’ liability, although they are not interested parties on the appeal. The third cause of action is an attempt to impose liability upon defendants Sirkus and Senter to pay any commission for which the Olsons might be obligated. It repeats by reference the principal allegations of the first cause of action, including those which set out the writings signed by the Olsons.

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Bluebook (online)
233 P.2d 644, 105 Cal. App. 2d 340, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devereux-v-sirkus-calctapp-1951.