Eckley v. Colorado Real Estate Commission

752 P.2d 68, 12 Brief Times Rptr. 304, 1988 Colo. LEXIS 50, 1988 WL 12200
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 22, 1988
Docket86SA170
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 752 P.2d 68 (Eckley v. Colorado Real Estate Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eckley v. Colorado Real Estate Commission, 752 P.2d 68, 12 Brief Times Rptr. 304, 1988 Colo. LEXIS 50, 1988 WL 12200 (Colo. 1988).

Opinion

LOHR, Justice.

The Colorado Real Estate Commission (commission) charged appellant Gordon E. Eckley, a real estate broker, with eight counts of professional misconduct arising from his actions and omissions in arranging the sale of a tavern in Denver. The alleged misconduct consisted of violations of various state real estate licensing laws and commission rules. After an extensive evidentiary hearing, a hearing officer concluded that the commission had proved charges contained in five of the first seven counts and that in each instance the misconduct demonstrated unworthiness or incompetency to act as a real estate broker in violation of section 12-61-113(l)(n), 5 C.R. S. (1985). 1 The hearing officer recommended that the appellant’s real estate broker’s license be suspended for three years. The commission, in its final order, affirmed the hearing officer’s findings and conclusions, but determined that the appellant’s license should be suspended for one year instead of three. On appeal, the district court affirmed the commission’s order. 2 The appellant sought review by the Colorado Court of Appeals, and the case was subsequently transferred to this court because the appellant challenged the constitutionality of section 12-61-113(l)(n). We affirm the judgment of the district court.

I.

We summarize the facts from the findings of the hearing officer. The appellant, Gordon E. Eckley, has been a licensed real estate broker in Colorado since 1949. At all relevant times, the appellant was engaged in business as an individual broker under the name of the Denver Real Estate Company.

In August 1981, the appellant acted as the broker in the sale of the White Horse Lounge (lounge) in Denver. The transaction was structured as a sale of all of the outstanding stock in 5130 W. Alameda, Inc., the owner of the lounge, by its sole shareholder, David Garcia, to the purchas *71 er, Zelma Clark. As a result of the appellant’s conduct during the transaction, the Colorado Real Estate Commission brought the charges against him that are at issue in this case.

A brief history of the ownership of the lounge is necessary to place the sale out of which the charges arose in its proper context. Between 1971 and 1980, the lounge was sold four times. The appellant acted as selling agent and received a commission in each of these transactions. Each of the sales involved one or more promissory notes executed by the purchaser in favor of the seller. Beginning with the second transfer of ownership, outstanding notes in favor of prior owners were not paid. Instead, the new notes wrapped around the outstanding debts. 3 By 1981, the lounge was in severe financial trouble. At that time, the lounge business was owned by 5130 W. Alameda, Inc. The corporation did not own the real property on which the tavern was situated, but instead leased it from a prior owner, Richard Senst.

Beginning in July 1981, the corporation was unable to make monthly rent payments and was forty-five days in arrears on two promissory notes originally made payable to a previous owner, Teresa Cooper. The first note was in the original amount of $110,000, payable in monthly installments of $1,550 including interest at 10% per year. The second note was in the original amount of $15,000, payable in monthly installments of $150 including interest at 10% per year. Cooper, who had owed a broker’s fee to the appellant’s brokerage company, continued to hold the first note but had assigned the second note to the appellant’s wife in payment of that fee.

On August 15, 1981, David Garcia, the sole shareholder in 5130 W. Alameda, Inc., entered into an oral agreement with the appellant whereby the appellant was to act as selling agent for the lounge. At the time of the agreement, Garcia informed the appellant that the business was near bankruptcy. He also told the appellant of a threat by Cooper to take legal action to collect her promissory note and by Senst to terminate the lease.

In late August 1981, Clark contacted the appellant’s brokerage company, indicating that she wished to purchase a tavern in the Denver area. Clark had been attempting to buy a tavern for approximately one year but had not previously dealt with a broker. Clark was not sophisticated in business matters and was not knowledgeable about the types of financial transactions involved in the purchase of a tavern. She wished to acquire the tavern so that it could be run by her son and his girlfriend.

On August 25 or 26, 1981, employees of the appellant showed Clark a bar known as the Tumbleweed Inn. On August 28, Clark signed an offer to purchase that bar, drafted by the appellant. On the same day, however, the appellant informed Clark that the Tumbleweed Inn needed too much work before it could be opened for business. The appellant then voided the offer with Clark’s acquiescence. Later that day, the appellant’s employees showed Clark the White Horse Lounge, and Clark decided to purchase it shortly after seeing it.

On August 28, 1981, Clark signed a “Receipt and Option Contract,” drafted by the appellant, which provided that Clark would purchase all of the corporate stock in 5130 W. Alameda, Inc. The contract also provided that the corporation would continue as lessee of the tavern premises. The agreement conditioned the completion of the sale on approval of the ownership change by the Denver liquor licensing authorities. 4 In addition to other financial provisions, the contract required that Clark immediately deposit $15,000 with the broker. Clark paid this money to the appellant on August 28.

*72 The appellant also drafted a disbursement agreement, which Clark signed on August 28. The agreement authorized the appellant to pay out of the $15,000 “escrow deposit the money for the whiskey, wine and beer the payments due on the loans and the September rent, utilities and etc. [sic].” At the time the disbursement agreement was signed, the appellant did not know the extent of the outstanding business obligations of the lounge, and made no representation to Clark on that subject.

Prior to the time Clark signed the contract documents, the appellant told her that the lounge was operating at a deficit, specifically that the rent was in arrears, as was payment on the Cooper note, and that Garcia needed $2,000 immediately to avoid bankruptcy. The appellant stated further that the lounge was a good business, potentially profitable and had made money in the past.

The appellant did not place the $15,000 deposit in a trust or escrow account. Instead, he deposited the money in his broker operating account. The appellant made twenty-four disbursements, totaling more than $10,000, from the account. All of the disbursements were for payment of outstanding obligations associated with the lounge business and for repairs necessary to bring the premises into compliance with building code and lease requirements. In addition, after the Denver liquor licensing authorities approved the transfer of ownership of the lounge in November 1981, the appellant paid his own commission from the escrow deposit.

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Bluebook (online)
752 P.2d 68, 12 Brief Times Rptr. 304, 1988 Colo. LEXIS 50, 1988 WL 12200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eckley-v-colorado-real-estate-commission-colo-1988.