Hutchinson v. Dobson-Bainbridge Realty Co.

217 S.W.2d 6, 31 Tenn. App. 490, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 115
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 31, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 217 S.W.2d 6 (Hutchinson v. Dobson-Bainbridge Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchinson v. Dobson-Bainbridge Realty Co., 217 S.W.2d 6, 31 Tenn. App. 490, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 115 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

*492 FELTS, J.

This is a suit by a real estate broker to recover a commission claimed to be due by the terms of a written contract with defendant. In the General Sessions Court plaintiff obtained a judgment. Likewise, in the Circuit Court there was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the amount of its claim, $247.50. Defendant appealed in error to this Court.

In April 1944, plaintiff’s employee, E. S. Morgan, sold defendant and wife a bouse located on Be.lle Forrest Avenue, in Nashville. During that negotiation defendant said he wished to sell their house located on Seventeenth Avenue, then occupied by their tenant. He described this property and stated his terms of sale, $4,950, $1,000 cash and the rest in monthly notes. Morgan wrote these terms and the description of the property on the back of a card and defendant signed the front side, which was a printed form filled out as follows:

“Dobson-Bainbrige Realty Co., Inc., Agents
“Yon are hereby appointed exclusive agents to make sale or rent the real property described on the opposite side of this card for 90 days.
“You are authorized to accept deposit on purchase price and execute binding contract of sale or rent on owner’s account.
“In case of sale or rental by owner, agent, or any other party before expiration of this agreement you are to receive full cash commission on whole purchase or rental price for said property.
“It is further agreed that if the property is sold, owner will furnish acceptable title in Abstract or guaranty title to be optional with purchaser and make warranty deed to same.
*493 “Usual rate of commission to be applied.
“This 18th day of April, 1944
“/s/ E. W. Hutchinson”

There were some conflicts in the evidence as to whether these blanks had been filled in, and as to some other matters in connection with the signing of this card. But since the jury resolved these conflicts in favor of plaintiff, we must accept its version and take this writing as expressing the agreement of the parties.

Plaintiff immediately entered upon performance of the agreement and spent time and money in its efforts to procure a purchaser. It listed the property for sale, advertised it in the newspapers over a period of four or five weeks — ‘ ‘ at least four runs of three days each, ’ ’ and carried prospective purchasers to see the property. But it found its efforts to sell were handicapped. The tenant and his wife worked and were not at home till 6:00 P.M., the property could be shown only after that hour in the evening, and they were “ knocking it ’ ’ and ‘ ‘ had killed ’ ’ one or two “pretty good prospects” by telling them “the basement was wet and such things as that. ’ ’

Morgan told defendant of these difficulties, and defendant said the tenant would move within two or three weeks. They discussed the advantages of having the property vacant and of being able to give immediate possession to a prospective purchaser. Morgan suggested some things to make the property more attractive and salable, such as redecorating the rooms and other minor repairs. So they concluded it would be better to wait till the tenant got out and defendant could “fix up the place.” The tenant vacated and defendant finished this work about July 2.

On the next day Morgan again looked at the property, and told the defendant he thought he could now sell it for *494 the price demanded. Defendant, however, said they had become dissatisfied with their Belle Forrest property and were thinking of selling it, and he asked Morgan “to hold np for a few days because they were thinking possibly of having to go back into the property, ’ ’ and said he would let Morgan know “when he made up his mind what to do with the property. ’ ’

Plaintiff waited as requested, but heard no further from defendant, and later learned from another broker that defendant and wife had sold the property through that broker. They sold for $4,950, $600 cash and balance in monthly notes, paying that broker the usual commission of 5 per cent of the total price. This sale was made July 13, 1944, and therefore within the 90 days while plaintiff was exclusive agent and entitled to the commission in case of a sale “by owner, agent, or other party,” according to the terms of the writing above quoted.

Defendant, however, contends that this writing was not a binding contract because it lacked mutuality and was without any consideration. Plaintiff, on the contrary, submits that it was supported by sufficient consideration and was a binding contract; that by its terms defendant was bound to pay plaintiff the commission in case of a sale within the 90 days, regardless of who made such sale; and that this case is controlled by Hagan v. Nashville Trust Co., 124 Tenn. 93, 136 S. W. 993.

In that case persons, developing and selling land for a subdivision of Nashville, employed Hagan for a term of five years to superintend construction of the improvements, to advertise the property at their expense, and to solicit purchasers and make sales of the property. For these services, which did not take all his time, they agreed to pay him a certain commission “on all sales of said property.” After some two years they became dissatis- *495 fled with, the slowness of his sales and discharged him. He stood ready and willing to perform his part of the contract. They employed other brokers who made more sales than he could have made himself. It was held he was entitled to the commission on all the sales, including those made by the other brokers.

The writing in this case is like the contract in that case in one particular. In both the promise was to pay the broker the commission on the sale, no matter who made it, the promise here being: “In case of sale ... by owner, agent, or any other party before expiration of this agreement yon are to receive full cash commission on whole purchase . . . price for said property.” That is, if there was a sale within the 90 days, regardless of who made it, defendant was to pay plaintiff the commission.

But this writing differs from the contract in that case in another particular. That was not the usual brokerage agreement. Hagan promised to perform the services and for his promise his employers promised to pay him the commission. That is, it was a bilateral contract, the promise on one side being the consideration for the promise on the other, and both parties being bound from the moment of the exchange of their promises.

In this case, however, there was no exchange of promises, no mutuality, no consideration when defendant signed the writing. By it he appointed plaintiff exclusive agent for 90 days and promised to pay plaintiff the commission in case of a sale within that time. But plaintiff made no promise, did not agree to try to sell, but was free to do as it chose. The writing itself was not binding as a contract. It was only an offer to make a unilateral contract — an offer of a promise not for a counter promise but for an act to be performed, a sale.

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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W.2d 6, 31 Tenn. App. 490, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-v-dobson-bainbridge-realty-co-tennctapp-1946.