Greenberg v. Meyer

363 N.E.2d 779, 50 Ohio App. 2d 381, 4 Ohio Op. 3d 353, 1977 Ohio App. LEXIS 6911
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1977
DocketC-75583
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 363 N.E.2d 779 (Greenberg v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenberg v. Meyer, 363 N.E.2d 779, 50 Ohio App. 2d 381, 4 Ohio Op. 3d 353, 1977 Ohio App. LEXIS 6911 (Ohio Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This eause came on to be heard upon the, appeal; the transcript of the docket, journal entries and original papers from the Court of Common Pleas;: and the assignments of error, the briefs and arguments of counsel. '■ ] .. ’

On November 2, 1972, plaintiffs-appellants, duly licensed. real, estate brokers, entered into a three-month exclusive agency' contract with defendarits-appellees to sell certain real estate owned by the latter,for an agreed conu *382 mission of seven per cent of the listed selling price of $460,000. Several months thereafter, the sellers accepted an offer, transmitted by the brokers, from a Mr. and Mrs. Eiekenhorst to purchase the property for $461,000, and the transaction eventually was set for closing on March 22, 1973.

However, when it became apparent prior to the closing that the purchasers’ personal funds, when combined with funds to be obtained from a lending institution and" secured by a first mortgage, would be insufficient to pay the agreed purchase price, the brokers, without the knowledge or consent of the sellers whom they represented, agreed to lend the Eiekenhorsts the remaining balance of $66,000, secured by a second mortgage and consisting of (a) the $32,270 real estate commission payable by the owners on the sale of the subject property, and (b) loans of $33,730 from the personal funds of two agents of the appellant realty company.

At the March 22 closing, the attorneys for the sellers stated that they would permit neither their prorated share of the real estate taxes nor the real estate commission to be deducted from the proceeds of the sale, indicating their preference to pay the tax bills as they came due and their intention, communicated to the brokers several months earlier, to pay the real estate commission over a five-year period. A heated discussion ensued, following which an attorney for the sellers presented an executed deed to the purchasers, stating that he was prepared to exchange it for $461,0.00 in cash. When the purchasers failed to produce the requested consideration, all attempts to close the sale were terminated.

The brokers brought this action to recover the real estate commission agreed to in the exclusive agency contract with, the sellers, alleging the performance of all services required of them and the wrongful refusal of the owners to both close the. sale and pay the claimed commission. All parties filed motions for summary judgment with the trial court, which granted the motion of the defendant sellers and entered judgment thereon. -

Of the many issues presented for our consideration on

*383 this appeal, we view one to be central and dispositive. Did the trial court err in determining, as a matter of law, that the brokers had breached a fiduciary duty owed to their principals and, as a consequence, had forfeited their rights to the claimed commission? We hold that it did not. The Ohio courts have long held that a broker who, without the knowledge or consent of his employer, acts for a party whose interests in the transaction are adverse to those of his employer and who thereby breaches or is tempted to breach the duty of loyalty owed to his employer, surrenders his right to any commission which may have been payable as a result of the transaction. Bell v. McConnell (1881), 37 Ohio St. 396; Reef v. Nagle (1949), 85 Ohio App, 323; Cozine v. Goodman (1939), 30 Ohio Law Abs. 703; Shear v. Hartman (1929), 8 Ohio Laws Abs. 217; Colley v. Sampson (1927), 5 Ohio Law Abs. 511; Pagel v. Creasy (1916), 6 Ohio App. 199; Fred Tuke & Son v. Burkhardt (1958), 80 Ohio Law Abs. 267; Hughes v. Robbins (1959), 164 N. E. 2d 469. The record in the instant case reflects, in our opinion, the very type of misconduct which the aforementioned rule was intended to discourage. The appellant brokers, by secretly pledging both the sizeable commission due on the sale and a large amount of personal funds to the purchasers in an apparent effort to ensure the consummation of the sale and their eventual remuneration, inextricably entwined their interests with those of the purchasers. The brokers thus placed themselves in a position where, at the very least, they were vulnerable to a temptation to betray the sellers whose interests they had been hired to protect, and are, we conclude, as a matter of law, precluded from recovering any compensation for the effort expended by them in attempting to effect the sale. Bell v. McConnell, supra; Hughes v. Robbins, supra; Fred Tuke & Son v. Burkhardt, supra. 1

*384 The appellant brokers protest, however, that the sellers, who .were to receive a purchase price in excess of the listed selling price, from the sale, have failed to demonstrate any injury occasioned by the brokers’ breach of their fiduciary duties, and that, in the absence of such a showing,, the sellers may not assert such breach as a defense to the brokers’ claims for the real estate commission. We disagree. Based upon considerations of public policy, the rule precluding the recovery of a commission by a broker who-has violated his duty of loyalty to his employer was intended not solely to remedy actual wrongs caused by such misconduct, but to discourage the occurrence of such misconduct altogether. Thus, this court has declared that “the rule does not depend upon whether or not the principal is injured by the conduct of the agent. The wholesome rule is that the agent shall not put himself in a position where he may be tempted to betray his principal, or to serve himself at the expense of his principal.” Pagel v. Creasy, supra at 206. See Bell v. McConnell, supra; Fred Tuke & Son v. Burkhardt, supra; Hughes v. Robbins, supra. 2

The authorities cited-to us by the appellants as support for their contention that some injury to the employer must be shown before a broker’s undisclosed dual agency may be successfully asserted to deprive the latter of his claimed commission are not persuasive. Thus, in Phillip Metropolitan Colored Methodist Episcopal Church v. Wahn-Evans & Co. (1950), 153 Ohio St. 335, the Supreme Court held that before a surety could be held liable under a real estate broker’s bond in which the surety had contracted to indemnify only those persons damaged by a failure of the broker to conduct his business in accordance with statutory requirements, the broker’s principal must demonstrate some *385 actual injury occasioned by the broker’s misconduct. The absence of such limited contractual liability in the case .sub judice

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Bluebook (online)
363 N.E.2d 779, 50 Ohio App. 2d 381, 4 Ohio Op. 3d 353, 1977 Ohio App. LEXIS 6911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenberg-v-meyer-ohioctapp-1977.