Hale v. Brown

99 So. 645, 211 Ala. 106, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 427
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 7, 1924
Docket6 Div. 17.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 99 So. 645 (Hale v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. Brown, 99 So. 645, 211 Ala. 106, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 427 (Ala. 1924).

Opinions

*108 THOMAS, J.

The plaintiff was C. H. Brown, and the defendant was J. Winston Hale.

The issues submitted to the jury were (a) whether the relation of subbroker- and broker existed between Brown and Hale, so that the former stood in the same relation to the latter as did Hale to the Fulenwiders, and (b) whether Hale, Pitts, and Brown were joint adventurers, and in that event plaintiff (Brown) could not recover of defendant (Hale), unless the latter had actually recovered the commissions from the Fulenwiders. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff.

The plaintiff, as a witness, testified that he “was in the real estate business with the defendant,” had handled such “transactions in conjunction with the defendant” “prior to the time that this matter in suit came up”; that their agreement was:

“When I went in the office with the defendant my agreement with him was that I was to work under his license, and he was to pay the expenses of the office, and I was to get half of the commissions on all sales 1 made; that is, on the ones handled by me, or the ones that I brought in, that is, if I produced a purchaser or a seller, and the trade went through, through the influence of the defendant in connection with those trades, I was to get half of the commissions.”

The witness further stated of the matter in hand:

“I was not employed in any way by the Fulenwider boys in connection with this matter in suit. The property was turned over to mé by Mr. Hale, the defendant, some time.about the 1st of November he told me that he had some property belonging to the Fulenwider boys, and that they were very anxious, to trade it; * * * that night I ran upon Mr. Pitts, and made an engagement with him to bring Mr. Maloney down the next morning to our office, and he did bring him down ¿here. Mr. Pitts told me that Mr. Maloney was a prospective trader, and Mr. Pitts was also in the real estate business. So far as I knew Mr. Hale did not at that time know Mr. Pitts, or have any relation with him at all. I made this engagement with Mr. Pitts for the next morning, and he brought Mr. Maloney down to our office, and we showed him the property that day, and he made a proposition on it. * * * The'Ful-enwider boys made Mr. Maloney a proposition, which he accepted. During that time I performed whatever work was necessary, or that happened to come up about making this trade and working it up. I had interviews with the parties, and with Mr. Maloney and Mr. Pitts, and Mr. Hale, the defendant, handled the Ful-enwider boys. Mr. Maloney had no connection with Mr. Hale, the defendant, in connection with this property at all before this matter came up. Mr. Maloney was brought into the transaction by Mr. Pitts and myself, or rather through me. A written contract for this transaction to be carried out was finally signed.”

The witness further testified that—

“Hale and all of us had an agreement as to how our compensation was to be divided for putting this trade through; we were to get a commission from the Fulenwiders, and we had an agreement with Mr. Maloney — Mr. Pitts did —and then we were to divide the commissions. That was the final agreement we had. * * * When we did have our agreement Mr. Hale was supposed to inform the Fulenwider boys of that, and Mr. Hale told me that the Fuienwider boys had been informed about our agreement as to our commission for putting the trade through. * * * In this case the commission was to be 1% per cent., and that commission was fixed by the Fulenwider boys. The Fulenwider boys took the matter of commission up with Mr. Hale, and told him what they would pay, and he asked me if it would be all right to accept that, and I told him it would. I did not have any direct communication with the Fulenwider boys as to what the commission was to be. * * * It was after that when the final typewritten contract was prepared * * * (and) was signed by both Mr. Maloney and the Fulenwider b,oys.”

The witness fixed the amount of his share of the commissions at $3,900, and further stated that he asked Hale for his part of'the commission, or “what action he intended to take about suing the Fulenwiders for this commission, and he said that at the present time he couldn’t sue them, because it would hurt his business connection with them, but that, if he ever had any difficulty with them, he would be glad to go ahead and see what he could do.” The witness admitted on cross-examination that he—

“did not take out any license as a real estate agent when I went with Mr. Hale, because he told me that I would work under his license, and I worked in his office, and he paid the advertising expenses, and furnished me with office space, and the commissions on stuff I sold or got myself were divided between us. If I handled any property that Mr. Hale had listed, and made the sale, I would get half of the commission; it was a simple arrangement. When this trade first came up I saw Mr. Pitts, who is another real estate agent,- and he was the agent for Mr. Maloney, or representing Mr. Maloney. I knew Mr. Pitts, and Mr. Hale told me that he had this Fulenwider property for trading. I then got in touch with Mr. Pitts, and Mr. Pitts came to Mr. Hale’s office. There was no agreement on the part of the Fulen-widers to pay any commission at all except this 114 per cent.”

As to the amount of the commissions the witness stated:

“This agreement to split the commission between the three of us, and me take a third, and Mr. Pitts a third, and Mr. Hale a third, was made some time along about the beginning of the contract. When we found out how much it would be, me and Mr. Pitts and Mr. Hale agreed to add it together and divide it, and the part Fulenwider would have paid would have been about $4,500 and Maloney $12,000, making $16,000, and I was to get a third of that, Pitts a third, and Hale a third. The Fulenwider boys knew that we were to split the commissions; * * * Mr. Maloney knew about it, as it was discussed with them. The commission to be *109 paid by Mr. Maloney was in tbe neighborhood ' of $12,000.”

The witness also testified that the sale did not “go through,” and there “has been no ■consummation of the sale yet.”

The defendant Hale, as a -witness, testified:

“I tried to negotiate a sale or trade between H. N. Maloney and the two Fulenwider boys. Mr. Brown, the plaintiff, came to me in about July, 1921, and asked about making a connection to sell real estate on a commission basis, and I told him it was all right with me, and that I would be glad to have him, and our arrangement was that, if he worked up a sale of any property that I had a listing of, each one ivas to get half of the commission received from the sale, and, if he listed any property, and I worked up a trade on anything that he had listed, the commission was to be split fifty-fifty, and that is the extent of the original trade, and I was to pay all overhead expenses, and he was to work under my license. Now, getting down to this Maloney trade, Mr. Pitts came to my office some time in November looking for Mr. Brown; I had never seen Mr. Pitts before, and did not know who he was; * * * and my recollection is that Mr. Pitts came back the second time, and called for Mr. Brown again, and Mr. Brown was out, and he stated to me that he had been talking with Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 So. 645, 211 Ala. 106, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-brown-ala-1924.