Laska v. Winter

79 Pa. D. & C. 170, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 328
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County
DecidedMarch 12, 1951
StatusPublished

This text of 79 Pa. D. & C. 170 (Laska v. Winter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laska v. Winter, 79 Pa. D. & C. 170, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 328 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Keller, P. J.,

— This matter comes before the court on preliminary objections to a real estate broker’s bill in equity for commission alleged to be due him, and certain other relief, designed to insure its collection, on an alleged exclusive agency contract with two partners.

The allegations of the bill, which must be taken to be true for the purpose of the preliminary objections, may be summarized as follows: Defendants, Winter and Bruntrager, as copartners, were operating a tavern, known as Hillside Inn, at Edgely, Bucks County, Pa., when on May 29,1950, defendant Winter, in his name only, signed an exclusive agency contract with plaintiff for the sale of the premises. On the back of the contract is certain information descriptive of the premises, including: “Price suggested — $30,-000.00.” Plaintiff alleges that prior to the execution of the exclusive agency agreement, defendants, Tony W. Winter and Joseph G. Bruntrager, had orally engaged him to obtain a buyer for the premises and that he had taken many prospective purchasers to inspect the same. He further avers that on May 29, 1950, when the exclusive agency agreement was executed, defendant, Tony W. Winter, represented to him that he had the authority to enter into the agreement on account of the partnership of Tony W. Winter and Joseph G. Bruntrager, trading and doing business as Hillside [172]*172Inn. On June 1, 1950, plaintiff produced a buyer, one John Srogota, who was then and there willing to purchase the premises for $30,000, and offered to defendants, Winter and Bruntrager, a check for $1,000 as earnest money. Bruntrager, making an excuse, alleged to be untrue and fraudulent, that he desired to buy the premises and, therefore, would like to have the matter postponed, refused to execute an agreement of sale. Both partners subsequently entered into an agreement of sale with defendants, Harry L. Ellis and Helen Greenberg, with whom plaintiff had no connection.

Plaintiff’s bill is brought: (1) To restrain, preliminarily, defendants, Winter and Bruntrager, from conveying the premises to defendants, Ellis and Green-berg; (2) to recover a commission to pay plaintiff the sum of $1,500, being the commissions alleged to be due plaintiff for the sale of the premises; (3) that the agreement of sale between defendants, Winter and Bruntrager, and Ellis and Greenberg, or any other buyers, be set aside to the extent necessary to satisfy plaintiff’s claim; (4) to impress a lien upon the premises to insure collection of plaintiff’s claim, and (5) to grant such other relief as the court may find just and proper under the circumstances.

Defendants, in their preliminary objections, allege the following:

1. That the bill in equity does not disclose a cause of action and does not sustain the prayer thereof in that:

(a) As to defendants, Harry L. Ellis and Helen Greenberg, plaintiff does not assert any contractual relationship or other basis of legal or equitable liability.

(b) As to defendant, Joseph G. Bruntrager, the facts averred show that defendant was not a party to the alleged contract on which plaintiff’s claim is based; that plaintiff does not assert any enforcible contract [173]*173with said defendant, and that defendant never employed plaintiff as his agent.

(c) As to the partnership of Tony W. Winter and Joseph G. Bruntrager, trading as Hillside Inn, the alleged contract shows that it was not executed on behalf of, in the name of, or by the partnership.

(d) As to defendant, Tony W. Winter, the bill in equity discloses that plaintiff knew defendant could not enter into a binding contract of agency for the sale of the premises without the joinder of defendant, Joseph G. Bruntrager; that plaintiff knew the contract was not complete or intended to be complete without the joinder of Joseph G. Bruntrager; and that the alleged contract of agency is not a contract for the sale of the fractional interest of defendant, Tony W. Winter, in the premises.

2. Liability for the alleged cause of action set forth in the bill of equity cannot be asserted against all the material defendants, for the reasons specifically set forth in paragraph 1 hereof.

3. On the facts averred in his bill of equity, plaintiff has a full and adequate remedy at law in that: (a) Plaintiff’s sole claim is for money damages and the only right of action alleged is a right of damage for breach of contract; (b) plaintiff does not ask, nor does he assert any right to any equitable relief; (c) the bill in equity does not contain any valid allegation of fraud. The alleged representation of defendant, Joseph G. Bruntrager, that he was interested in buying the premises, if untrue as averred, did not affect the rights of plaintiff and did not constitute fraud, since there is nothing in the contract alleged by plaintiff which would make it inoperative in the event of a sale to Joseph G. Bruntrager; (d) the facts alleged in the bill of equity do not constitute any conspiracy or agreement to defraud plaintiff, but, on the contrary, establish that [174]*174plaintiff’s sole complaint is that defendants, and more particularly defendant, Joseph G. Bruntrager, refused to be bound by contract to which Joseph G. Bruntrager was not a party and which contract could not be valid without his joinder therein.

The single averment of plaintiff’s bill relating defendants, Harry L. Ellis and Helen Greenberg, to the matter in dispute is in paragraph 9(b), which alleges that defendants knew or should have known of the agreement of agency signed by Tony W. Winter and “maliciously and fraudulently” entered into an agreement of purchase of the premises with defendants, Tony W. Winter and Joseph G. Bruntrager, to the detriment of plaintiff. It is clear that, by the terms of the agency contract upon which plaintiff relies, plaintiff could suffer no detriment by reason of the agreement between defendants, Winter and Bruntrager, and defendants, Ellis and Greenberg, as the terms of the agency contract provide a commission on a sale “by whomsoever the same may be made or effected.” If the agreement of sale could not be operated to the detriment of plaintiff, it follows that there could be neither malice nor fraud in its execution. We think the use of the word fraud as applied to defendants, Ellis and Greenberg, in paragraph 9(c) of plaintiff’s complaint is inaccurate and inapplicable, as there is nothing contained in the complaint to substantiate any fraud or give rise to any inference of deception or concealment on the part of defendants to plaintiff’s damage. Fraud is a deception practiced to induce another to part with property or surrender some legal right. As commonly used the word implies deceit, deception, artifice, trickery: Thorne’s Estate, 344 Pa. 503; Ballentine’s Law Dict. Nor can paragraph 9(6) of plaintiff’s bill of complaint be interpreted to allege conspiracy, since defendants, Ellis and Greenberg, had [175]*175a lawful right to buy, and even under the alleged contract, Winter and Bruntrager had a lawful right to sell the premises. The mere fact that several parties happen to exercise independent rights at or about the same time does not constitute an actionable conspiracy: Morris et ux. v. Halford et al., 352 Pa. 138, 140. Conspiracy is a combination of two or more persons, by some concerted action, to accomplish some unlawful purpose, or to accomplish some purpose not unlawful in itself by unlawful means: Ballentine’s Law Dict.; Ballantine v. Cummings, 220 Pa. 621, 630.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 Pa. D. & C. 170, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laska-v-winter-pactcomplbucks-1951.