Keviczky v. Lorber

49 N.E.2d 146, 290 N.Y. 297, 146 A.L.R. 1410, 1943 N.Y. LEXIS 1116
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 49 N.E.2d 146 (Keviczky v. Lorber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keviczky v. Lorber, 49 N.E.2d 146, 290 N.Y. 297, 146 A.L.R. 1410, 1943 N.Y. LEXIS 1116 (N.Y. 1943).

Opinions

*300 Finch, J.

Whether plaintiff has made out a cause of action sufficient to sustain the finding of the jury, that the buyer and seller and so-called dummy broker have conspired wrongfully to refrain from dealing with plaintiff and thus prevented him from earning his commission, is the question presented by this appeal.

In view of the findings of the jury, plaintiff is entitled to the most favorable view of the evidence, including the reasonable inferences therefrom.

The dramatis persones are plaintiff, a real estate broker, and defendants-appellants, a savings bank and one Lorber, a purchaser of real property from the bank. Defendant G-eller Realty Associates is likewise a real estate broker.

On September 6,1937, one Burrucker, an authorized employee of the bank, the . owner of the property, employed plaintiff to sell the property and agreed to pay plaintiff the usual Real Estate Board brokerage commission. From September, 1937, to May, 1938, plaintiff negotiated between the bank and prospective purchasers. Between May, 1938, and July or August, 1938, plaintiff negotiated between Lorber and the bank, and induced the bank and Lorber to be satisfied with a price of $480,000, $50,000 cash and a five-year mortgage of three and one-half per cent and one per cent amortization. After Lorber had told plaintiff that he was satisfied with the terms, he asked plaintiff to wait until he had finished with his work late in the afternoon and that he would then come and talk to plaintiff. While walking together uptown, * * * Mr. Lorber turned to me and said, Keviczky, here is about $8,500 in commission involved. ’ ” Lorber then demanded of plaintiff that he kick back to Lorber all but $1,000 of the commission involved. Plaintiff called attention to the length of time that he had been *301 working on the matter and refused to part with any of his commission. It is a fair inference that Lorber thereupon conceived the plan to obtain approximately this amount of the commission and yet not lose the benefits of the terms negotiated by plaintiff. Pursuant thereto, the next day he informed plaintiff that he had decided not to purchase the property at all, as “ * * * I don’t like that section * . * Plaintiff thereupon notified Burrucker of Lorber’s satisfaction with the terms and that Lorber was attempting to obtain the greater part of the commission, and notified Mr. Burrucker that if Mr. Lorber attempted to obtain the property without plaintiff, the latter expected Mr. Burrucker to protect him in the matter, to which Mr. Burrucker replied, “ I will bear in mind.”

Lorber in.August, 1938, without the knowledge of plaintiff, takes up negotiations with the bank through Burrucker. It is a fair inference that either Lorber or the bank was afraid to complete the deal without the intervention of a dummy broker. Whether Burrucker or Lorber engaged the dummy broker Geller Realty Associates it is difficult to determine since the testimony of Lorber and Geller is contradictory. Lorber testified first that Geller made the appointment with the bank and, on cross-examination, that he, Lorber, made the appointment. The strongest inference is that Burrucker, being anxious to dispose of the property for the bank, engaged Geller; but whoever it was is immaterial, the important inference being that Geller was only a dummy broker and that Lorber was to receive the benefit of the commission to the knowledge of the bank.

Certain it is that on August 24th Geller receives the particulars of this identical property from Burrucker. " Lorber thereupon went to meet Geller at a stockbroker’s office and Geller at once offers the identical property at $500,000 with $50,000 cash, and Lorber states his willingness to pay that' amount. A few minutes-later Geller makes an appointment with Burrucker for the same afternoon, and in a meeting between Burrucker, Geller and Lorber, which lasted a very few minutes, the sales price of the property is agreed upon at $480,000 with $50,000 cash and other details practically the same as arranged by plaintiff except for some slight and immaterial variations of which there is no indication that Lorber could not have done the same through plaintiff. The next day Geller signs an assign *302 ment to one Sobel, the lawyer of Lorber who up to this time has been a complete stranger to the transaction but who through the assignment is to receive from the bank $7,000 as his share of the brokerage commission out of a total commission of $8,200. August 29th the contracts are executed with the title closing about ten days later. At that time a check for the full commission was ostensibly delivered to Geller but he immediately indorses it over to Lorber upon receiving from Lorber a certified check for $1,200.

Plaintiff, learning of the sale, complains to Burrucker that the bank should not have recognized another broker in place of plaintiff, and that it aided and abetted the conspiracy by concealing its negotiations with Lorber from plaintiff, and that the bank also aided and abetted Lorber in the conspiracy to defraud plaintiff of his commission by the payment of the commission ostensibly to the dummy broker Geller but in reality to Lorber to the knowledge of the bank. Burrucker attempts to halt any contemplated legal action by plaintiff with threats that if he sues then no bank would ever be willing in the future to do business with him and, admitting the fault, says, “ Mow, there is other ways we will try to make up for it * * *. You have been running in with offers here on a piece of property we have on East 78th * * * Street * * * and if you bring in a reasonable offer for that property I will help you to make the deal, and you will make a good commission.” Direct and positive proof of a conspiracy to cheat and defraud such as is here presented is seldom, if ever, attained. Conspiracies of this nature ordinarily are not conceived and executed openly but in secret. Usually the only evidence available is that of disconnected acts on the part of the individual conspirators, which acts, however, when taken together in connection with each other, show the conspiracy to secure a particular result quite as satisfactorily and conclusively as more direct proof. (People v. Flack, 125 N. Y. 324; People v. Van Tassel, 156 N. Y. 561.)

A fair inference from the above evidence is that Burrucker, knowing through the efforts of plaintiff that Lorber wanted the property and that the terms were acceptable to him, provided that he might receive back all but approximately $1,000 of the commission allowed to the broker, sent Geller to Lorber. The bank clearly was anxious to get rid of the property and was *303 willing to sell for $50,000 cash on a price of $480,000, provided the buyer was responsible. The bank knew that Lorber would buy if a broker could be obtained who would accept approximately $1,000 as his share of the commission. It appears that Geller was at the bank on another deal. Geller had done business with Burrucker but never with Lorber. A fair inference from the testimony is that Burrucker said to Geller, “ If you wish to make $1,000 quickly, take this property and go up and see Lorber.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.E.2d 146, 290 N.Y. 297, 146 A.L.R. 1410, 1943 N.Y. LEXIS 1116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keviczky-v-lorber-ny-1943.