Hensley v. Moretz

90 S.E.2d 183, 197 Va. 440, 1955 Va. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 28, 1955
DocketRecord 4433
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 90 S.E.2d 183 (Hensley v. Moretz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hensley v. Moretz, 90 S.E.2d 183, 197 Va. 440, 1955 Va. LEXIS 239 (Va. 1955).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

D. L. Moretz brought this action to recover from Grady S. Hensley the sum of $500, alleged to be due as commission for his services in connection with the sale of a parcel of real estate owned by the defendant. After hearing the evidence and instructions of the trial court, the jury returned a verdict fpr Moretz in the amount *441 asked for, and from the judgment affirming that award we granted this writ of error.

Grady S. Hensley, sometimes herein referred to as defendant, assigns error to the refusal of the trial court: (1) to strike plaintiff’s evidence; (2) to set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence and award him final judgment; and (3) to the granting and refusal of certain instructions.

Whatever agreement or understanding was had between the parties relative to the sale of defendant’s land was oral. The material facts may be stated as follows:

According to Moretz, a real estate broker, the following negotiations took place between the parties. Having heard that the home of the defendant was for sale, he went to see Hensley and asked if that was true. Hensley replied, “Yes, it is for sale. I am asking $16,500 net.” Moretz then said “Well, if some one contacts you, I will set as a price $17,300, which will give me an $800 commission,” and the defendant agreed. A few days later, Herbert C. Hensley and his wife, residents of West Virginia, and strangers to Grady S. Hensley, called at Moretz’s office to look at some real property. Moretz showed them the defendant’s home and the Herbert Hensleys agreed to purchase the property for $17,300, including some blinds and drapes. Later some question arose as to the furnishings in the house, and Moretz, after talking with the defendant and the Herbert Hensleys, agreed to withdraw the drapes from sale and to cut his commission from $800 to $500. Two days later Herbert Hensley telephoned Moretz, and told him that he would take the property at a price of $17,000. Herbert Hensley said that he would like to have R. L. Shipley, a real estate and insurance agent, obtain for him an F. H. A. loan, in order to raise a portion of the purchase price. Thereafter, Moretz, Grady Hensley, Herbert Hensley and wife, and Shipley met in the latter’s office. There a written contract of sale, prepared by Shipley, dated May 19, 1953, was executed by Grady S. Hensley, as vendor, and Herbert Hensley, as purchaser. Mrs. Herbert Hensley also signed the contract and the signatures were witnessed by Moretz. The contract contained the following pertinent recital:

“Witnesseth: that the vendor agrees to sell and convey and the purchaser agrees to purchase through the realtor, D. L. Moretz, that certain property * * *. The selling price of said property is to be $17,000, payable as follows: $2,000, receipt of which is hereby *442 acknowledged, as forfeit binder, the remainder to be paid from the proceeds from a loan, which has been applied for in the amount of $11,500. Upon closing of the loan, Grady Hensley will pay rent in the amount of the payments of the loan through the August payment. In the event the loan cannot be obtained in the amount of loan shown above, the full binder shall be returned without further obligation of the purchaser.” * * *

The contract did not specify the time within which the sale was to be consummated, nor state how the difference between the purchase price of $17,000 and the down payment of $2,000 plus an F. H. A. loan of $11,500 was to be made.

Moretz said that at the meeting in Shipley’s office, the purchaser asked him if he would take a note for his commission, and he refused. He recalled that the defendant said that he would have to have a “bigger binder than usual” and asked for a $2,000 down payment because he wanted to build another house, and the sum of $2,000 was paid to Grady S. Hensley at that time as a “forfeit binder.” He further said that it was customary in transactions of the kind involved for the broker to hold the deposit; but that he made no objection to the payment to the defendant, in order to get his house started.

R. L. Shipley testified that he obtained from the F. H. A. a firm commitment to lend Herbert Hensley $11,900, good until November 7, 1953. He had no definite recollection about any discussion over the commission to be paid by the defendant.

On August 13, Herbert Hensley notified Moretz by telephone that he was not going to consummate the contract of May 19th. On August 24th, Moretz called the Herbert Hensleys over the telephone and asked them about complying with their contract, and they replied: “We are through, we have had financial reverses; there is nothing we can do. We just can’t go through with the deal.” In the conversation they suggested that they might file a petition in bankruptcy as a relief to their financial situation.

Moretz communicated the above information to Grady Hensley, and said to the latter that since he knew the deal was over, “Suppose we settle up. You have got the $2,000. Give me my commission and quit, and we will start all over from there.” The defendant refused to pay him any commission, saying that Moretz’s contract with him was to sell the property to yield $16,500 net to him, and he had not done so.

*443 According to Grady Hensley, the circumstances were as follows:

Moretz came to a place where defendant was working, and asked him if he would sell his residence. Defendant replied: “Sure.” Moretz then asked how much he would “have to have” and defendant said “Get me $16,500 and all over that you can have.” The two then looked at the house. Shortly thereafter a relative of Mrs. Herbert Hensley came to look over the house, and asked defendant if it was for sale. He told her “Yes.” She asked the price. Whereupon, he asked her if she had talked to Moretz about the property. She said she did not know Moretz. Grady Hensley gave her a price of $16,500; but refused to allow her to look over the house that night because it was too late. The next day Herbert Hensley and his wife inspected the house, and offered to buy it for $16,500. Defendant found out that they had “talked” to Moretz, so he called Moretz, told him of the occurrence, and asked him to see “what kind of a commission he could work out with the Hensleys, that otherwise the deal was off so far as he was concerned.” Moretz later called defendant and told him he “had worked out a satisfactory settlement with the Hensleys and that they were going to take the house. The next thing we drew up this contract here * * At the meeting in Shipley’s office, he said “it was understood that he (Moretz) would get his commission when the balance of the loan was received.” Asked “Was there any conversation about a note relative to his commission,” defendant replied: “The Hensleys, of course, when they found out I would take $16,500 and found out they couldn’t get it at that, they claimed that they only had a certain amount of money to put in the house and they couldn’t go over $16,500. I think Mr. Moretz told them he would take a note for his commission and that was agreed on. When they came down here to meet in Mr. Shipley’s office to sign the sales contract, they agreed they would go ahead and pay him his commission when the loan was closed out.”

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E.2d 183, 197 Va. 440, 1955 Va. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hensley-v-moretz-va-1955.