Frank Crain Auctioneers, Inc. v. Delchamps
This text of 797 So. 2d 470 (Frank Crain Auctioneers, Inc. v. Delchamps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
FRANK CRAIN AUCTIONEERS, INC.
v.
Randy DELCHAMPS et al.
Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama.
*471 David F. Walker and A. Carson I. Nicolson of Miller, Hamilton, Snider & Odom, L.L.C., Mobile, for appellant.
Goodman G. Ledyard and J. Robert Turnipseed of Pierce, Ledyard, Latta & Wasden, P.C., Mobile, for appellees.
Alabama Supreme Court 1000085.
CRAWLEY, Judge.
This appeal arises out of an interpleader action commenced by Coastal Title Company, the holder of $31,900 in disputed funds, to determine the right to a real-estate commission claimed by both Frank Crain Auctioneers, Inc., and Randy Delchamps. The trial court awarded the funds to Delchamps; Crain appeals.
The evidence adduced at trial was largely undisputed. Crain is a Kentucky reale-state auctioneer that conducted an auction sale in Baldwin County on March 27, 1999. Before the sale, Crain sent out brochures describing the properties offered for sale and mailed postcards to local real-estate agents. Delchamps, a licensed real-estate broker and the owner of Randy Delchamps Real Estate Development Company in Mobile, received a postcard from Crain that stated:
"We welcome the participation of other real estate professionals in this important auction. A fee equal to two percent (2%) top bid price will be paid from the auctioneer's commission to any licensed real estate broker or salesperson whose prospect successfully closes on the property. To qualify for payment of commission, your prospect must be registered with Frank Crain Auctioneers forty-eight (48) hours prior to the auction. The broker or salesperson must attend and register his or her prospect on the day of the auction and must be present at the signing of the sales contract."
Delchamps read the postcard and asked his administrative assistant, Tracy Castillow, to "make sure that we get registered" for the auction. Castillow telephoned Crain's office, spoke to someone named "Susan," stated that she was calling on behalf of Randy Delchamps Real Estate, and inquired what she needed to do to register Delchamps for the auction. Susan took Delchamps's name, address, and fax telephone number and told Castillow that she "had [Delchamps] registered." Castillow did not say that Delchamps had a prospective buyer or that he expected to earn a 2% sales commission. Susan did *472 not ask whether Delchamps wanted to register a prospective buyer.
Delchamps attended the auction on March 27, 1999. When he arrived, David Rice, a Crain employee who was conducting the auction, gave him a bid card and a brochure on the properties to be auctioned and said, "I have you registered." Delchamps did not tell Rice that he was expecting a commission from any sale at the auction, nor did Rice tell Delchamps that he might earn such a commission.
With a bid of $1,595,000, Delchamps was the highest bidder on one parcel of property. After the auction, he gave Rice a personal check, signed "Randy Delchamps," as a deposit for 10% of the bid and signed a contract to buy the property in the name of "Randy Delchamps and/or assigns." He explained that he added the phrase "and/or assigns" because he "was not buying [the property] just for [him]self." He testified that he had a group of investors who would be interested in the property, but he did not yet know the name of the entity that would be formed to buy the property. The closing was set for 60 days after the auction. Before the closing, Delchamps and his investors formed a limited liability corporation, "D.M.M.H.K., L.L.C.," to buy the property. Delchamps owns a 25% interest and is the managing member of the L.L.C.
Sometime during the 60-day interim, Delchamps inquired about a commission; Crain refused to pay him one, stating that he had not complied with the terms of the offer. The parties agreed to have Coastal Title, the closing agent, deposit with the court the funds representing the disputed commission and to interplead the parties claiming those funds.
At trial, Delchamps claimed that he was entitled to the funds, based on theories of breach of contract, quantum meruit, work and labor done, and fraud by Crain. The trial court's judgment ordering that the interpleaded funds be disbursed to Delchamps does not specify the basis for its ruling. Crain argues that Delchamps presented no evidence supporting any of his theories. We agree.
The Breach-of-Contract Claim
Delchamps was not entitled to prevail on his breach-of-contract claim because the evidence established without dispute that he and Crain did not have a contract for Crain to pay Delchamps a real-estate commission. By its postcard, Crain made an offer to pay a 2% sales commission to any broker (1) who registered a prospective buyer 48 hours before the auction, (2) who attended the auction and registered his prospective buyer on the day of the auction, and (3) whose buyer successfully closed on the property. An offer alone, however, does not create a contract. Wright v. Schwerman Trucking Co., 555 So.2d 1119, 1120 (Ala.Civ.App. 1989). "There is no breach of contract unless there was previously an offer and acceptance." Sly v. First Nat'l Bank of Scottsboro, 387 So.2d 198, 200 (Ala.1980) (emphasis added).
Delchamps could have accepted the offer only by complying with the terms of the offer and registering his prospect, as the postcard outlined.
"It is familiar law that `the offerer has a right to prescribe in his offer any conditions as to time, place, quantity, mode of acceptance, or other matters which it may please him to insert in and make a part thereof, and the acceptance, to conclude the agreement, must in every respect meet and correspond with the offer, neither falling short or going beyond the terms proposed, but exactly meeting them at all points and closing with them just as they stand.'"
*473 Ingalls Steel Prods. Co. v. Foster & Creighton Co., 226 Ala. 122, 125, 145 So. 464, 466 (1932).
"When an offeror dictates the manner in which acceptance is to be indicated, a manifestation of assent by some other means will not usually result in the formation of a contract. See 1 Williston on Contracts, § 76 (1957)."
Hall v. Integon Life Ins. Co., 454 So.2d 1338, 1342 (Ala.1984).
Delchamps did not accept Crain's offer. He did notwithin 48 hours of the auction or at any other timeregister a prospective buyer with Crain. He did not inform Crain that he had a buyer other than himself or that he expected to be paid a commission. He signed the purchase contract in his individual capacity as "Randy Delchamps and/or assigns." Only later, after he had assigned the purchase contract to an L.L.C. he had formed with a group of investors, did Delchamps inform Crain that he wanted the commission. Although Delchamps may have thought he had accepted Crain's offer, he did not communicate his acceptance to Crain and did not comply with the manner of acceptance specified in the offer.
"Where an express acceptance is required by an offer, the fact of the acceptance must be communicated to the offeror by the offeree or his agent; a mere private uncommunicated assent will not effect a contract."
17 Am.Jur.2d Contracts § 43 (1964). See also Restatement (2d) of Contracts § 69 (1981); Corbin on Contracts § 75 at 321 (1963). Delchamps did not prove his contract claim.
The Fraud Claim
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797 So. 2d 470, 2000 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 447, 2000 WL 1006536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-crain-auctioneers-inc-v-delchamps-alacivapp-2000.