Harkey v. Gahagan
This text of 338 So. 2d 133 (Harkey v. Gahagan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Thomas Gilbert HARKEY d/b/a T. G. Harkey Realtor, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Addie Kiper GAHAGAN, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*134 Freyer & Freyer by Sam A. Freyer, Shreveport, for plaintiff-appellant.
Nelson & Achee, Ltd., by Harry R. Nelson, Shreveport, for defendant-appellee.
Before BOLIN, PRICE, HALL, MARVIN and JONES, JJ.
En Banc. Rehearing Denied, November 1, 1976.
JONES, Judge.
The Constitution provides in part that when a judgment of a district court is to be modified or reversed and one judge of the court of appeal dissents, the case "shall be reargued before a panel of at least five judges prior to rendition of judgment." La. Const. Art. V, § 8(B) (1974).
The original consideration of this appeal by a three-judge panel produced this result and the case was reargued before a fivejudge panel.
T. B. Harkey, a realtor, and Mrs. Addie Kiper Gahagan entered into a real estate listing contract on Dec. 28, 1973. The agreement provided that Harkey was to have the exclusive right to sell Mrs. Gahagan's 11.14 acres for a period of 12 months, with a 12 month extension clause. The sale price was to be $15,000 per acre, which would result in a total price of $167,100. On June 6, 1975, some 5 months after the expiration of the primary term of the agreement, Mrs. Gahagan sold the 11.14 acres covered by the listing agreement, along with 2.14 acres of adjacent land and her home located thereon, to Don Coleman. The price for this 13.28 acres, plus the residence was only $150,000, some $17,000 less than the price originally asked for the 11.14 acres covered by the listing agreement. Harkey sued, seeking to enforce the collection of a 6% commission allegedly due under the listing contract.
The trial court rejected plaintiff's demand. We affirm.
At the time the contract was executed, defendant advised Harkey that Coleman had expressed an interest in the property at a prior time. Coleman had offered $150,000 for the 13.28 acres before defendant executed the listing contract. After Harkey obtained the contract, he telephoned Coleman and told him that he had 11.14 acres of *135 the property listed, and the terms thereof. Coleman advised Harkey he was not interested in the property. The record reflects no further contact between Harkey and Coleman during the existence of the primary contract.
The trial court, in its reasons for rejecting plaintiff's demands, held that the sale consummated after the expiration of the listing agreement was outside the scope of the listing agreement because the price was substantially reduced and there was substantial difference in the property sold from that in the listing agreement. Circumstances such as these do not necessarily deprive the realtor of the right to his commission, if he is otherwise entitled thereto. Corbitt v. Robinson, 53 So.2d 259 (La. App.2d Cir. 1951); Slimer v. White, 275 So.2d 468 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1973).
As an additional reason for denying plaintiff's claim for his commission, the trial court held that plaintiff was not the procuring cause in consummating the eventual sale between purchaser and defendant.
`Procuring cause' refers to the efforts of a broker in introducing, producing, finding or interesting a purchaser, and means that negotiations which eventually lead to a sale, must be the result of some active effort of the broker. Lehmann v. Howard, 49 So.2d 453 (La.App.2d Cir. 1950); Womack Agencies v. Fisher, 86 So.2d 732 (La.App., 1st Cir. 1956).
The plaintiff did not find the purchaser nor did he interest the purchaser in acquiring the property, nor can it be remotely said that he began any negotiations with the purchaser for acquisition of the property. The trial court was therefore correct in holding that plaintiff was not a procuring cause to the transaction.
The listing contract between plaintiff and defendant contained the following extension clause:
"This employment and authority shall continue for the period of twelve (12) months from date hereof. I agree to pay said agent 6% percent of the selling price as and for the compensation of said agent hereunder in the event of a sale or an exchange of said real property by said agent or by any other agent or person, including myself, while this contract is in force, or if sold or exchanged within twelve (12) months after termination to anyone with whom said agent or owner had negotiated or to whom this property had been shown or submitted prior to the termination. . . ."
Plaintiff contends he is entitled to recover the real estate commission because the extension clause had been activated by his telephone call to Coleman and therefore he was entitled to his commission on any transaction which occurred between Coleman and defendant for a period of 12 months following the expiration of the primary term.
The purpose of the extension clause in a real estate listing contract is to insure the realtor's right to a fee when the property owner sells the property subject to the listing after the expiration of the primary term to a purchaser who had been located or otherwise interested in the property by the realtor's effort. The realtor does not have to be the procuring cause in order to activate the extension clause. He need not have been involved in active negotiation with the purchaser at the time of the expiration of the primary term. However, his activities must have been the cause of creating some minimal interest in the purchaser which contributed to bringing about the eventual sale.
Illustrative of the interpretation and construction given to extension clauses by courts of other states is Hammerstad v. Saunders, 6 Wash.App. 633, 495 P.2d 349, 51 A.L.R.3d 1145 (1972). In that case a realtor had an exclusive listing contract providing that the realtor would be entitled to his commission in the event the property was sold by the owner to any person to whom it had been offered by the realtor or with whom the realtor had negotiated during the primary term. During the primary term one of the realtor's employees, while showing some 40 pieces of property to a prospective *136 purchaser, drove by defendant's home and pointed it out and quoted him a price. The prospective purchaser immediately rejected any consideration of the property because the price was too high. Later an appointment was arranged during the primary term when the realtor's employee was to have shown the property to the prospect, but this appointment was cancelled. After the elapse of the primary term the prospective purchaser's wife learned of the availability of the house during a social visit in the home of the property owner. This visit had no relationship whatsoever to any of the realtor's activities. Thereafter the prospective purchaser and his wife purchased the property and the realtor sued for his commission. The court denied recovery on the theory that no causal connection existed between the activities of the realtor during the primary term and the subsequent acquisition of the property by the person to whom it had been pointed out by the realtor's employee.
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