Hicks v. Wilson

240 P. 289, 197 Cal. 269, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 239
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1925
DocketDocket No. S.F. 10667.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 240 P. 289 (Hicks v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hicks v. Wilson, 240 P. 289, 197 Cal. 269, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 239 (Cal. 1925).

Opinion

WASTE, J.

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, brought an action to recover $3,000, alleged to be due for money paid to defendant Cokely, a realtor, as agent for defendant Wilson, on account of the purchase of real property, Wilson, the owner of the property, having refused to execute the deed. Wilson offered the sum of $600 to plaintiffs, and on their refusal to accept the tender he placed the money in bank and gave proper notice of the deposit. It was shown at the trial that the plaintiffs paid Cokely $3,000 toward the purchase price of the property without the knowledge of Wilson. Cokely paid Wilson $500 and misappropriated the balance. The trial court found that the plaintiffs employed Cokely to procure for them a residence property, and that in the dealings between plaintiffs and Cokely the latter was acting for and on behalf of plaintiffs as their agent, and not as the agent of defendant Wilson. As a conclusion of law, it, in effect, held that Cokely had no authority to bind the owner, or right to accept money paid by plaintiffs to conclude the sale. It, therefore, entered judgment for plaintiffs for the sum of $500, the amount actually received by Wilson. Because of the tender and deposit, defendant was awarded his costs. Plaintiffs appealed.

The cause was transferred by this court to the district court of appeal, first appellate district, division one, for hearing and determination, where the judgment of the lower court was reversed. In the course of the opinion the court cited the decision of the district court of appeal of the second appellate district, division one, in Gold v. Phelan, 58 Cal. App. 471 [208 Pac. 1001], as laying down the rule defining the authority of a broker' in transactions involving the sale of real estate. In the petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, the respondent most earnestly contended that the decision in the case was contrary to *272 the rule approved in Gold v. Phelan, supra, and, if allowed to stand, would create great confusion and uncertainty in all real estate transactions where the parties dealt through real estate brokers. The petition was granted, and the cause was brought here in order that this court might finally pass upon the questions presented by the appeal.

After a reargument of the case and a careful consideration of all the points involved, we are of the opinion that the facts in the present case differentiate it from those considered in Gold v. Phelan, supra, and that the opinion of the district court of appeal does no violence to the law of the earlier decision. Neither are we apprehensive that the dire results forecast by the respondent will follow if the present opinion is allowed to stand. We therefore adopt as our opinion the following portion of the opinion of the district court of appeal, written by Mr. Presiding Justice Tyler, and concurred in by Associate Justices St. Sure and Knight:

“It is manifest that the gist of the trial court’s findings is based upon the theory that in the dealings between plaintiffs and Cokely relative to the purchase of the Wilson property Cokely was acting for and on behalf of the plaintiffs as their agent and not as the agent of Wilson. It is the plaintiffs’ contention in support of their appeal that the findings of the trial court tending to establish this fact are not supported by the evidence. In this we think the appellants are correct.
“The case presents a situation where one of two innocent persons must suffer through the acts of a third person. An examination of the record shows that there is no evidence of any employment by plaintiffs of Cokely to procure for them a residence in Palo Alto. All that the evidence does show in this regard is that the plaintiffs, desiring to purchase a home in that place, called upon Cokely, a real estate broker residing there and having an office in San Francisco, and stated their wants, and asked him if he had anything in mind that he thought would suit them. He immediately made an appointment with them to take them around and show them various properties. Pursuant to this appointment the plaintiffs on November 2, 1920, were taken by Cokely to the residence of defendant Wilson. Being satisfied after inspection that the property *273 met their requirements they inquired the price. Cokely immediately, in the presence of Wilson, replied ‘$6,750.00 cash, ’ and the plaintiffs at once signified their willingness to purchase at that figure. There is nothing in this evidence which tends to establish an employment of Cokely by plaintiffs as their agent to procure property for them. To hold otherwise would be to say that whenever a person desiring to buy real estate enters the office of a realty broker to make inquiry concerning the same, and the broker submits property to him, an agency is created, giving rise to an obligation on the part of such person to compensate their broker for services performed under such employment.
“ Other evidence upon the subject of agency shows that immediately following* the conclusion of plaintiffs to take the property at the price demanded Mr. Hicks asked Wilson how he should do business with him, to which question Wilson replied: ‘Do business with Mr. Cokely.’ This is testified to by both Mr. Hicks and his wife and is not denied by Wilson. Thereafter Hicks met Cokely for the purpose of completing the transaction. He informed him that he was only able to pay in cash the sum of $4,000, whereupon Cokely stated that if Hicks would pay to him such amount, he would procure the balance of $2,750 necessary to make up the entire purchase price by means of a mortgage upon the property itself, after which the deed from Wilson would be delivered. Accordingly, Hicks within a few days paid over to Cokely several sums of money amounting in the aggregate to $3,000, only $500 of which were paid over by Cokely to Wilson, Cokely apparently embezzling the remainder. It is upon these undisputed facts that the trial court found that the $3,000 was not paid to Cokely as the agent of Wilson.
“At the time of the meeting between the plaintiffs, Wilson and Cokely on November 2, when the oral agreement for the sale of the property was made, there existed no written contract between Wilson and Cokely, but on the following day Wilson executed a written authorization to Cokely by which the latter was appointed his exclusive agent during a period of ninety days for the sale thereof at the above mentioned price, and by its express terms Cokely was authorized to accept a deposit, the purchaser to be allowed *274 thirty days to examine title, and Wilson agreed thereunder to pay the sum of $900 as compensation for Cokely’s services. It will be observed that at the time when Hicks asked Wilson how he should do business with him and the latter replied, ‘Do business with Mr. Cokely,’ Cokely had already completed the usual services required of a real estate broker, i.

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Bluebook (online)
240 P. 289, 197 Cal. 269, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-wilson-cal-1925.