Gerritsen v. Draney

351 P.2d 667, 1960 Wyo. LEXIS 58
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1960
DocketNo. 2915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 351 P.2d 667 (Gerritsen v. Draney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gerritsen v. Draney, 351 P.2d 667, 1960 Wyo. LEXIS 58 (Wyo. 1960).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice BLUME

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action to recover commission as a real estate broker. The action was filed on August 28, 1958. The plaintiff, Gerritsen, alleged that he was retained as a broker by the defendants to sell, trade, [669]*669exchange and dispose of the equity of the defendants in the Star Valley Meat Packing Company plant and a residence property, both located in the town of Afton, Wyoming; that plaintiff negotiated the sale of the aforesaid property of the defendants upon the terms and conditions suggested and agreed upon by defendants and that a written agreement was entered into, a copy of which was attached; that the purchasers of said property procured by plaintiff were ready, willing and able to complete the purchase of the property upon the terms and conditions fixed and agreed upon in writing by the purchasers and the defendants herein; and that plaintiff performed all the conditions of the contract and employment on his part to be performed. He asked judgment against the defendants for $8,000. The defendants answered, denying substantially all of the allegations of the petition, and further alleged that the contract was too indefinite to be enforceable; that the plaintiff was not a licensed broker in Wyoming; and that if plaintiff procured a purchaser pursuant to any agreement the purchaser was not qualified and was unable to perform any agreement entered into. They further alleged “for another and alternative defense” that the plaintiff misrepresented to the defendants that the Forrest Hotel mentioned in Plaintiff's Exhibit A had an indebtedness against it and was subject to liens and encumbrances not to exceed $60,000; that defendants believed the representations to be true; and that the representations were in error and not true in that instead of $60,000 there were encumbrances against the Forrest Hotel of $90,-000. The case was tried to the court without a jury and at the end of the trial the court found generally in favor of the defendants. From that judgment the plaintiff has appealed, alleging that the judgment is not supported by, and is contrary to, the evidence in the case. The parties will be mentioned herein as in the case below or by name.

On April IS, 1958, defendants listed for sale with plaintiff, a real estate broker, “6 acres w/furnish by seller” for $165,000 in cash, “Price includes home of Howard Draney in Afton, Wyo.”, with a further provision “Will Exchange for property of equal value, prefer rental property to our written approval”, whatever all this may mean. What is called by plaintiff “an earnest money receipt” and which is designated as a preliminary contract was signed April 13, 1958, by defendants and Lou Kiszak and wife, the latter being the purchasers. This instrument was drawn up in a rather slipshod manner and it is somewhat hard to determine just what the meaning is. It is hardly necessary to set it out. Apparently Lou Kiszak and wife agreed to buy for $165,000 cash the “Star Valley Meat Packing Co. W/home now occupied by Howard Draney” in Afton, Wyoming. The “Buyers are offering $60,000 Equity in Forrest Hotel as down Pmt. Forrest Hotel to be refinanced by new owners.” Certain payments to be made by buyers are set out. The property described in the contract was not the property of the sellers. Their property was known as “Draney and Sons.” In order to determine what the actual agreement was we must, we think, resort in part at least to the oral testimony herein, all of which was admitted without objection, and we must, according to a well-established rule, accept the testimony most favorable to the defendants.

Briefly the contract was as follows : The defendants agreed to sell the property above mentioned for $165,000 cash and were willing to take as part payment the Forrest Hotel at Nephi, Utah, with encumbrances thereon not to exceed $60,000. There was a first mortgage against the property of $48,000 held by the First Security Bank at Spanish Fork, Utah, which apparently was to be refinanced, the plaintiff himself undertaking to see that the loan was refinanced. Plaintiff did not do so, and in fact it was apparently impossible to refinance it because of the condition of the encumbrances against the property. The parties met in Afton, Wyoming, on May 1, 1958, in order to exchange final papers and for the Kiszaks to take possession of the property [670]*670of the defendants at Afton. An abstract of title was submitted to Mr. C. Stuart Brown, an attorney at law. Pie discovered that the encumbrances against the Forrest Hotel far exceeded the sum of $60,000. Plaintiff, as well as Kiszak, testified that the encumbrances against the Forrest Hotel amounted to $90,000 consisting of three mortgages, taxes due in the sum of about $2,000 and some other liens. One of the witnesses stated that the situation was “in a mess.” Counsel for plaintiff seem to take the position that it was the duty of the defendants to clean up this “mess.” The trial court, thinking otherwise, apparently held that it was the duty of the Kiszaks and the plaintiff to do so. We agree. Thereafter the defendants refused to deliver their property to the Kiszaks, broke off the negotiations, and refused to pay the plaintiff any commission because it was not earned. Thereupon this action was commenced. It may be well to set out some of the testimony in order to determine what the actual transaction was.

Mr. Howard Draney testified, among other things, as follows :

“Q. What can you tell us with reference to Mr. Gerritsen’s testimony that he represented to you that there would only be $60,000.00 against the hotel?
A. Mr. Gerritsen said there was an RCF loan for approximately, not to exceed $60,000.00 with the Springville bank and they would just transfer that over to our name and all we would have to do was pay that loan off.
“Q. Pay off the 60 thousand? A. Yes.
“Q. Would you have been willing to take the property shown you if it had only had 60 thousand against it? A. Yes.
“Q. Why didn’t you take the property? A. Well, after they came over home to take possession of our property, they had the abstracts on the Forrest Hotel property which was the first time I had ever seen them and Mr. Brown examined it and found that there was well over $60,000 liens against that property.
⅝ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅝ ⅜
“Q. Were you able to negotiate a new loan? A. Mr. Thomas informed us that the property had been in proceedings of receivership for approximately a year and a half and he couldn’t, at that time, turn the loan over to us.
“Q. Now, you say Gerritsen told you he needed that to protect him from Kiszak? A. Yes, that was Mr. Kis-zak’s earnest money contract.
“Q. Was anything said about you being bound under it ? A. No, he told us that the contract that we had signed —the contract that we would sign — the final and binding contract, we would get our lawyers together and draw it up and they would supply the deeds and abstract deeds and everything.
“Q. Calling your attention to his representation as to there being only $60,000.00 against the hotel, did you believe those representations? A. Yes.
“Q. Did you rely on them? A. I relied on Mr. Gerritsen’s word.
“Q. Would you have signed the contract if you had known there was more than $60,000.00 against the hotel? A. No.

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351 P.2d 667, 1960 Wyo. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerritsen-v-draney-wyo-1960.