Fitzgerald v. Southern Farm Agency

94 S.E. 761, 122 Va. 264, 1918 Va. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 24, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 761 (Fitzgerald v. Southern Farm Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzgerald v. Southern Farm Agency, 94 S.E. 761, 122 Va. 264, 1918 Va. LEXIS 93 (Va. 1918).

Opinion

Kelly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 30th of May, 1914, J. H. Fitzgerald, desiring to sell his farm, entered into a written contract with William Beasley, a real estate agent doing business under the name of Southern Farm Ageiicy. Fitzgerald resided in Buckingham county, where the farm was situated. Beasley’s .real estate office was in the city of Lynchburg, and the contract 'was signed and delivered there. It was as follows:

■ “To* the Southern Farm Agency: Gentlemen: We hereby authorize you to sell and execute the customary preliminary contract of sale for the within described property (referring to an accompanying written description) being the same land conveyed by deed duly recorded, at the price of $35,000 payable $..........cash and balance in equal installments, payable in one, two and three years, the deferred [266]*266payments to carry interest at the rate of six per centum per annum, payable annually, and to be secured by deed of trust on the property..
“If the property is sold at and on the foregoing price and terms or such different prices and terms as may be agreeable to the owner by you or as the result .of your influence or introduction, you are to have a commission of five per centum of the selling price, which is hereby assigned to you, and is to be paid out of the first money coming from the purchaser.’ If the property is exchanged, you are to have five per centum commission on the above valuation. We reserve the right to sell the property ourselves or through other agents to any one whose attention was not called to the property by you.
“You. are to be given fifteen days’ written notice of the withdrawal of the property, but if at any time it is sold to a party whose attention directly or indirectly was called to it by you, you are still to get your commission. We hereby waive our exemption as to these obligations.”

Beasley brought the property to the attention of one C. E. Dawson, a citizen of Illinois, and after considerable time and labor expended in negotiations and in trips to Buckingham county with Dawson to visit the farm and its owner, Beasley obtained from Dawson a written offer of purchase at the price of $27,000, subject to certain terms and conditions specified in the offer and not necessary to be repeated here.

This offer was written and signed in Nelson county where Dawson was temporarily located, and was carried by Beasley to Fitzgerald in Buckingham county, where the latter accepted the same, subject to certain conditions set out by him in his written acceptance. On this occasion, however, he informed Beasley that if the sale was made at $27,000, the commissions thereon would have to be reduced [267]*267from 5%; as fixed in the original contract of agency, to a flat sum of $1,000. Beasley agreed to this, and thereupon he and Fitzgerald signed the following agreement:

“It is hereby agreed that in case sale is m,ade of J. H. Fitzgerald’s farm to C. E. Dawson for $27,000 the Southern Farm Agency is to have a- commission of $1,000 in full of all. claims for commissions against said Fitzgerald, but leave is‘given said Southern Farm Agency to price and sell the property for any sum over $27,000 they may see fit and all excess over $26,000 that they get is to go to them as their commission.”

Beasley returned to his office in Lynchburg, where he met Dawson the next day and procured from him a slightly qualified acceptance of the conditions imposed on his original offer by Fitzgerald. Dawson and Beasley then proceeded again to Buckingham county, where they met Fitzgerald, and where, after some further parleying, Dawson withdrew all qualifications from his acceptance of the conditions insisted upon by Fitzgerald, and the contract between them: was thus finally closed.

Subsequently, Fitzgerald claimed that he was mentally incompetent to make the contract, and declined to convey the farm in accordance therewith. Dawson was ready to perform on his part, but decided to end the matter so far as he was concerned, and did so by a letter to Fitzgerald,' in which, among other things, he said: “I am unwilling to become involved in any litigation with you about the matter, though I am advised that I could easily force you to live up to the contract and let me have the land, so I hereby notify you that the deal between you and me is off, and I have this day been paid by the Southern Farm Agency the $500 which I placed in their hands on account of the cash payment of your land.”

Beasley claimed that he had done all his contract required to entitle him to his commission, but Fitzgerald refused to [268]*268recognize the claim, and Beasley then brought this action of assumpsit in the Corporation Court of the city of Lynch-burg. There was a verdict and judgment in his favor for $1,000, to which this writ of error was awarded. For convenience, we shall hereafter designate the parties, respectively, as plaintiff and defendant, in accordance with their position in the lower court.

The first assignment of error calls in question the action of the trial court in dismissing the defendant’s plea in abatement No. 1, which set up as a defense, “that the supposed cause of the said action did not, nor did any part thereof, arise in the said city of Lynchburg, but that the supposed cause of the said action and every part thereof, did arise within the county of Buckingham, and at the time of the issuing of the said writ in this cause, the said defendant did not reside in the said city of Lynchburg, but that he did then reside, and has ever since resided, and does now reside, in the county of Buckingham.”

Issue was joined upon this plea, and the court found, upon a submission to it of all matters of law and fact thus arising, that the cause of action, or a part thereof, arose in the city of Lynchburg, and that, therefore, under section 3216 of the Code, authorizing the bringing of an action “in any county or corporation wherein the cause of action, or any part thereof, arose, although none of the defendants reside therein,” the plea was bad.

It is conceded, as of course it must be, that there was no error in this ruling if the court was right in finding as a fact that the cause of action or some part thereof arose in Lynch-burg. Counsel for defendant have presented us with an argument, ably and resourcefully constructed, to show that the cause of action and every part thereof arose, as the plea alleges, in Buckingham county. This argument rests upon the contention that Beasley’s right to commissions depended upon his agency contract with Fitzgerald and his produc[269]*269tion of a purchaser thereunder bound by a valid contract, and upon the further contention that both the contract of agency and the contract of sale were made wholly within the county of Buckingham. The infirmity in the argument lies, as we think, in the latter contention. We are unable to regard the written agreement between the parties, entered into in Buckingham county, whereby the selling price and the commissions were changed, otherwise than as a modification of the original agency contract; and the parties evidently so understood it. The prospective purchaser had been secured under the authority of the original, which in terms contemplated the possibility of a less price than that expressly named therein; and the only, purpose of the supplemental agency agreement was to prevent the original from operating, as it.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 761, 122 Va. 264, 1918 Va. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-southern-farm-agency-va-1918.