E. A. Strout Western Realty Agency v. Gregoire

225 P.2d 585, 101 Cal. App. 2d 512, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1144
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 28, 1950
DocketCiv. 7819
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 225 P.2d 585 (E. A. Strout Western Realty Agency v. Gregoire) 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
E. A. Strout Western Realty Agency v. Gregoire, 225 P.2d 585, 101 Cal. App. 2d 512, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1144 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

*513 VAN DYKE, J.

Appellant herein, a corporation, as plaintiff, brought action against respondents, Robert Gregoire and Veronica Gregoire, his wife, basing its action upon a contract in writing executed by respondents, giving it brokerage rights in respect of the sale of real property owned by the respondents. The parts of the contract pertinent to the issues presented here are as follows: The respondents employed appellant “to procure a purchaser ready, willing and able to buy” the property and authorized appellant to make in respondents’ name a binding contract for the sale thereof. If a customer was so procured respondents agreed to pay appellant a commission of $150 plus 5 per cent of the selling price. The price was stated to be $60,000. The contract declared that the listing of the property and the continued endeavor of the appellant to sell the same should constitute sufficient consideration for the agreement. By an amendment to the contract, appended thereto, but executed on the same day, it was agreed that the contract should be amended “in that it give to the E. A. Strout Western Realty Agency, Inc., the sole and exclusive right to procure a purchaser” for the property for a period of twelve months. It was alleged in the complaint that upon the execution of the contract appellant commenced extensive advertising in an effort to sell the property and thereon expended large sums of money advertising the property in metropolitan newspapers. It was further alleged that appellant through its efforts secured several prospective purchasers for the property and that on December 6, 1948, approximately three and a half months from the time the agreement was signed, appellant exhibited the property to a customer procured by it, and brought the customer to respondents; that the customer then orally offered to buy the property for $45,000, whereupon respondents asked for time to consider the offer; that on the day following respondents orally notified appellant of their acceptance of that offer; that thereupon appellant communicated the acceptance to the customer by telephone and on December 9th received a telegram from him, confirmed by letter of the same date, instructing appellant to proceed with the sale; that the customer in the letter enclosed a deposit check for $500 ; that on December 10th respondents orally notified appellant they would not consummate the sale and further notified it that they had sold the property to one Babu Singh; that *514 respondents refused to pay any commission whatever and that appellant thereby sustained damages in the sum of $2,400.

Respondents answered and upon the issues thereby raised the cause went to trial before the court without a jury. The court made findings of fact as follows: It found the corporate capacity of appellant and that it was duly licensed as a real estate broker in this state; it found the contract to have been executed as alleged; concerning the allegations as to the customer found by appellant the court found that appellant did not bring the customer and respondents together at any time and that the customer did not offer to buy the property for $45,000 or for any sum; that respondents did not ask for time to consider any offer and did not notify appellant of any acceptance. It further found appellant did not communicate any acceptance to the customer nor did the customer instruct appellant to proceed with the sale nor did he enclose a deposit on the purchase price of the land. Further findings were to the effect that respondents did not orally or in writing or in any manner notify appellant they would consummate a sale with its customer; that respondents sold the property to Babu Singh and refused to pay a commission, but that appellant did not sustain any damage thereby. Judgment was decreed in favor of respondents and from that judgment appellant takes this appeal.

Appellant first contends that by virtue of the contract made, respondents, by selling the property during the term of the agency, became liable to pay damages, measured prima facie by the amount of the commission that was provided for by the contract, and this without regard to whether or not appellant in the meantime had produced a purchaser ready, willing and able to buy upon the terms offered by respondents. Appellant says that the contract entered into was a contract giving to it the exclusive right for the agreed period to sell the property as distinguished from the creation of an exclusive agency. The claimed distinction between a brokerage contract creating an exclusive agency for a definite period and one which, for such definite period, grants to the broker an exclusive right to sell such property has been the subject of conflicting decisions throughout the country. Some courts recognize no such distinction and declare that in either case the owner by implication reserves the right to make a sale during the agreed term of the agency without becoming obligated for a commission under the contract or being guilty of a breach thereof. The reasoning of these courts is well illus *515 trated by the case of Sunnyside Land & Investment Co. v. Bernier, 119 Wash. 386 [205 P. 1041, 1043, 20 A.L.R. 1261], where the court held that a contract which gave the broker “the exclusive right” for a stated time to sell certain property owned by defendants did not entitle the broker to a commission where the owners themselves sold the property within the life of the contract to a purchaser of their own procuring. The court refused to adopt the broker’s view that the phrase “exclusive agency” has not the same meaning as the phrase “exclusive right to sell.” The court said:

“But we cannot think there is any essential difference in the contract, no matter which of the phraseologies is used. Primarily the contract is in each instance one agreeing to pay a commission in case the broker procures a purchaser for the listed property, able, ready, and willing to take it on the terms the owner offers it for sale, and if the grant of an exclusive agency for that purpose means, as the rule adopted by us presupposes, that the owner will not list the property with another agent during the life of the agency, the grant of an exclusive right can mean no more.”

But our appellate courts have long recognized the distinction and declare that under an exclusive agency the principal might still sell through his own efforts to his own customer without breach of the agreement or liability for the agreed commission. In Golden Gate Packing Co. v. Farmers’ Union, 55 Cal. 606, the court said:

“We are unable to discover anything in the agreement which forbade the selling of its goods by the plaintiff to whomever would purchase them in any part of the world. It could not, under that agreement, establish any other agency than that of defendant for the sale of its goods east of the State of California. And there is no evidence tending in any degree to prove that it did. It is not stipulated that the defendant should have the exclusive sale of the plaintiff’s goods within the territory mentioned, and there is nothing in the agreement from which we can infer that such was the intention of the parties.” (Italics added.)

Snook v. Page, 29 Cal.App. 246, 247 [155 P. 107], was a ease recognizing the distinction.

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Bluebook (online)
225 P.2d 585, 101 Cal. App. 2d 512, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-a-strout-western-realty-agency-v-gregoire-calctapp-1950.