Harris v. Conway

343 P.2d 1069
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 16, 1959
Docket38244
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 343 P.2d 1069 (Harris v. Conway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Conway, 343 P.2d 1069 (Okla. 1959).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal concerns an action by defendant in error, a real estate broker, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, to recover from plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as defendant, a broker’s commission of $2,750, or 5% of the $55,000 sale price of defendant’s home as the site of a future motor vehicle service station.

The principal facts forming the background of the action are virtually undisputed and, for the purpose of dealing with the issues of this appeal, are unnecessary to detail, except as hereinafter related. Defendant, a widow, has apparently, at all times material to this action, lived in the home alone. One of her married sons is Clarence Ganders, a service station operator residing elsewhere in Tulsa. Ever since the death of defendant’s husband, approximately ten years ago, various oil companies, including the D-X Mid-Continent Company and its successor, D-X Sunray, usually referred to herein merely as “D-X”, have evidenced interest, at different times during said period, in obtaining defendant’s home-site for the location of a service station to be constructed thereon. Defendant had rejected any and all offers made to purchase the property until a Tulsa investor, named Ray B. McBride, who had obtained sites for other D-X stations, asked plaintiff to see if she could persuade defendant to sell it. It appears that plaintiff’s endeavors to do this started in the Fall ofT956; and, on December 11, 1956, defendant signed a writing purporting to give plaintiff, for a period of thirty days from said date, “the right to sell” the property for a total price of $55,000, and providing, among other things, for payment to plaintiff of a 5% commission on such sale. Later, the defendant refused to let plaintiff effect such sale of the property, and sold it to her son, Clarence Ganders. Upon defendant’s refusal to pay the commission prescribed in the agreement evidenced by the above mentioned writing, plaintiff instituted the present action to recover it. After trial by jury, verdict and judgment were for plaintiff in the amount sued for; and defendant perfected this appeal.

Under her first assignment of error, defendant argues that the trial court committed errors as follows: (1) In overruling, in part, a motion she filed asking that plaintiff be required to-make her petition more definite and certain; (2) In overruling her demurrer to said petition; and (3) In overruling her demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence. The argument (applicable also to defendant’s challenge of the sufficiency of the evidence as a whole, by motion for a directed verdict) is based on the premise that since the property involved was not sold to plaintiff’s customer, Ray McBride, his failure to enter into an enforceable written contract to purchase it, was fatal to plaintiff’s cause of action. In support of this argument, defendant cites Roberts v. Gardner, Clarke and Sullivan, Okl., 275 P.2d 245, Gilliland v. Jaynes, 36 Okl. 563, 129 P. 8, 46 L.R.A., N.S., 129, Reynolds v. Anderson, 37 Okl. 368, 132 P. 322, 46 L.R.A.,N.S., 144, and other cases. On the other hand, plaintiff says that the rule these cases stand for is not applicable; and asserts, as the applicable one, her Proposition No. 1, as follows:

“Where a broker procures a purchaser ready, willing and able to purchase at the price and under the terms prescribed by seller, and the owner refused to complete the sale the broker has earned his commission and is not required to tender a written contract or to present the buyer to seller.”

This proposition is undoubtedly correct as an abstract proposition of law (see the discussion in Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of United States v. Home, 184 Okl. 542, 88 P.2d 887, 888 and 890, and Bleecker v. Mil *1073 ler, 40 Old. 374, 138 P. 809); but is it adequate scope to furnish a solution of the issues in this case ? In the preliminary portion of her brief, plaintiff concedes argu-endo that her agreement with defendant (evidenced by the hereinbefore described writing of December 11th) gave plaintiff no exclusive right to sell the property even during the 30-day period prescribed therein, so that, if defendant sold the property herself before plaintiff’s performance under said agreement, then defendant was not obligated to pay plaintiff the agreed commission. The argument of neither of the parties reaches the important question of “notice”, which can be a very important one in determining the good faith of the owner of the property in a case like the present one, where he, or she, maintains that she revoked the broker’s authority before the latter’s performance. The rule, as stated in 12 C.J.S. Brokers § 75, is as follows: of

“A broker employed under a contract not giving him the exclusive right to act, nor obligating the owner to pay a commission on a sale or other transaction negotiated by himself alone, is not entitled to a commission where, before performance and notice thereof by him, the transaction which he is authorized to negotiate is negotiated by the principal himself without the aid of the broker.”

See Longmire v. Webber, 109 Old. 49, 234 P. 620, 621; Des Rivieres v. Sullivan, 247 Mass. 443, 142 N.E. Ill, and Rowe v. Koutrouba, 263 Mass. 493, 161 N.E. 412.

Cases in which there is a conflict in the evidence on the question of whether the owner of the property negotiated its sale without the aid of the broker, before he knew, or had information from which he should have known, that the broker had procured a purchaser for it, are made less difficult of determination in some states by decisions based upon statutes, or apparently upon general principles of law, to the effect that the owner must, in order to avoid liability for payment to the broker of his commission (under the principles above referred to) prove that the purchaser he procured was bound by an enforceable contract of purchase, before he was apprised that the broker had also procured someone ready, willing and able to purchase it. See Hartig v. Schrader, 190 Ky. 511, 227 S.W. 815, and Hawks v. Moore, 27 Ga.App. 555, 109 S.E. 807. In the first cited of these cases, the court said [190 Ky. 511, 227 S.W. 817]:

“If an owner might defeat his broker in the collection of commissions by merely entering into an oral agreement with another to sell his property, which agreement was in no sense enforceable against him, an easy method of escaping such payment would be afforded.”

If we applied the rule of the above-cited Kentucky and Georgia cases requiring the owner to have an enforceable contract of sale with the purchaser procured by him, before she could effectively revoke her agreement to let the broker sell it, then, in the present case, if the evidence shows Ray McBride’s willingness, readiness and ability to purchase it, since, according to defendant’s testimony, plaintiff telephoned her saying she had a buyer and defendant thereupon (in the same telephone conversation) told her that she had decided to sell it to her son, Clarence Ganders, then we might readily and justifiably determine that the trial judge not only did not err in overruling defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, but that he could have gone further and sustained plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict, because it was never shown that any memorandum of such an agreement between defendant and her son was reduced to writing and signed, or that any other prerequisite of an enforceable contract between them for the conveyance of such real estate existed before December 19, 1956.

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343 P.2d 1069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-conway-okla-1959.