Edwards v. Johnson

8 Del. 435
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Del. 435 (Edwards v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Johnson, 8 Del. 435 (Del. Ct. App. 1867).

Opinions

ASSUMPSIT with the usual pleas. The action was on a contract for the sale of a house in the City of Wilmington, through the agency of a real estate broker, to Edwards, the plaintiff, by Johnson, the defendant. William Bright was the broker, to whom the defendant had spoken in the summer or fall of 1865, about selling a house owned by him on Walnut below Third Street, and said that he wished him to sell it for him, and that he wanted $2800 for it. Afterward the plaintiff went to Bright, as the agent for the sale of it, and wanted to buy it at that price, *Page 436 and stated the terms of payment on which he desired to purchase it, which were $100 cash on the day of sale, $1300 on or before the 25th of March 1866, the possession of it then to be given to him, and the balance to be secured by bond and mortgage on the property with the interest thereon, payable semi-annually. Bright then had one or two interviews with the defendant on the subject, who at first dissented as to the proposed terms of payment, and was inclined to require a larger cash payment on the day of sale, and mentioned $1300 as the amount of it, but finally assented to the terms offered by the plaintiff, with whom Bright afterward met and concluded the bargain with him on the terms stated, when he received from him the $100 in cash, and gave him a receipt for it, stating the terms of the contract, under his signature as agent of the defendant for the sale of the property, which was as follows: "Received Nov. 29th 1865 of Mr. John Edwards, one hundred dollars as part of the purchase money of a three-story brick house on Walnut Street below Third Street, west side, I have this day sold to him as agent for C. P. Johnson for the sum of twenty-eight hundred dollars clear of all incumbrances. He is to pay thirteen hundred dollars more in cash on or before the 25th of March next, and give a bond and mortgage on the property for fourteen hundred dollars, being the one-half of the purchase money with interest from the 25th of March next, payable half yearly, with the policy of insurance transferred with the mortgage. The deed to be made as soon as the balance of the money is paid and the mortgage is given."

Signed, W. M. BRIGHT, Agent.

Patterson, for the plaintiff, after proving the same, offered it in evidence.

Lore, for the defendant, objected to the admissibility of it; first, because the contract contained in the instrument was not signed by either of the parties to be charged *Page 437 therewith, much less by the defendant who was now sought to be charged with, and who was alleged to be bound by it. And in the second place, because no proof had been produced that the person by whom it purports to have been signed as the agent of the defendant, had any authority to sign any written contract on his behalf as his agent for the sale of the property to the plaintiff. No broker, nor any other person having the power merely to make or close a bargain for the sale of real estate, has authority to sign the name of his principal to a written contract for the sale of it, and is not an agent for the actual sale of it within the meaning of the provision of the statute of frauds, which only allowed the name of the vendor to be subscribed to a contract for the sale of any other kind of property by an agent lawfully authorized to do it, and when it was not necessary that his authority to sign the contract as agent, should be in writing and signed by his principal. Coleman v. Garrigues, 18Barb. 60. The power conferred upon the agent to contract for the sale of real estate, must embrace the act of signature to it by the agent; for if it extends only to the power of negotiating the terms of the agreement, or taking notes, or reducing the contract to writing, or to doing anything else which is merely preliminary to the signing and execution of the contract by the principal himself, it is insufficient to authorize the agent to sign it, and if he does, the principal is not bound by it, and it is not his contract. Bro. on Frauds, sec. 370. Hil. on Vend. sec. 39.

Patterson. It is not necessary that the agent signing a contract for the sale of land, should be authorized in writing to do it, in order to bind his principal, but he may be appointed and duly authorized by parol to do it. Ch. on Contr. 70. Story onAgency, 45, 50, note 1. 8 M. S. 844. Hil. on Vend.sec. 257. 2 Kent's Com. 612, 614.

Whitely, for the defendant. Without proof, which had not yet been produced, of verbal authority, at least, from *Page 438 Mr. Johnson to Mr. Bright to sign such a contract as his agent, the instrument itself, which did not pretend to show that fact, was not admissible in evidence.

Patterson then withdrew the instrument, and said he would not offer it in evidence until he had produced further testimony on that point. Which was, in addition to the facts of the case before stated, that the agent went that day or the next morning to the defendant, and told him he had sold his house to the plaintiff on the terms upon which he had authorized him to sell it to him, and repeating the terms as set forth in the receipt and contract signed by him as agent, and had received the payment of $100 down, to which the defendant said nothing at all, until he produced a receipt prepared by him for his signature, for the $100, less his commissions on the sale, when he for the first time, looked up and asked what his commissions were, and when informed that they were two per cent. he peremptorily refused to pay them. Considerable talk then ensued between them on the subject which ended with the declaration of the defendant that he would not sign the receipt or carry out the agreement, unless one half of the purchase money was then paid in cash.

Whitely then renewed the objection to the admissibility of the contract in evidence.

By the Court. As it has been conceded by the counsel for the defendant, that a verbal authority from him to Bright to conclude and also to sign as his agent, the instrument and agreement in question, would be sufficient for that purpose, whether there was such authority in fact given to him by the defendant in this case, was a question of fact to be determined alone by the jury upon all the evidence they have before them in regard to the matter. The question of the admissibility or relevancy of evidence in any case before the court, is, of course, a *Page 439 question of law which the court is to consider and determine, but the effect, weight, or, sufficiency of it when admitted, is a matter alone for the consideration and decision of the jury, subject to the instructions and directions of the court as to the rules and principles of law applicable to the proof before them in any case. The majority of the court is, therefore, of the opinion that the receipt and instrument drawn and signed by Mr.

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Related

Coleman v. Garrigues
18 Barb. 60 (New York Supreme Court, 1854)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Del. 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-johnson-delsuperct-1867.