Leboire v. Royce

224 P.2d 106, 100 Cal. App. 2d 610, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1264
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 1950
DocketCiv. 14105
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 224 P.2d 106 (Leboire v. Royce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leboire v. Royce, 224 P.2d 106, 100 Cal. App. 2d 610, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1264 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

PETEBS, P. J.

The basic problem involved on this appeal can be stated as follows: A prospective purchaser, the defendant, unable to find sources of supply of desired materials, requests a broker, the plaintiff, to assist him in finding such materials. The broker finds a supplier and brings the purchaser and supplier together. The purchaser and broker enter into a contract whereby the purchaser agrees to pay the broker a 2% per cent commission on the consummated deal, and on all other purchases made from the same supplier by the purchaser within one year of the date of the contract, the purchaser informing the broker that such future transactions may be entered into with others as purchasers. During the one-year period the purchaser desires to enter into further purchases from the same supplier, but, being unable to finance the transactions alone, enters into a joint venture with X to purchase such materials. The joint venture makes several large purchases from or through the same supplier within the one-year period. Is the broker entitled to a commission on these subsequent transactions under his contract with the purchaser ?

The trial court, after a trial without a jury, answered this *612 question in the affirmative and held that the broker was entitled to a commission on these subsequent transactions. It entered its judgment in favor of the broker for $66,545.40, plus interest and costs. The purchaser appeals.

The facts, and the law applied to these facts, demonstrate that the trial court was correct. Ken F. Royce, the defendant, was engaged in the business of handling, storing, repairing, purchasing, selling and renting heavy construction equipment. Early in 1947 there was a shortage of such equipment. At that time Royce asked Leon N. Leboire, the plaintiff, an export-import broker, to assist him in locating such equipment. Leboire agreed to try and locate such equipment. He discovered some such equipment, and told Royce that he had received a call from Honolulu from one Davis, vice-president of the General Commodities Corporation, and that this company had been authorized by the Chinese government, which owned such equipment, to sell it. Royce told Leboire that he had tried to purchase such equipment from the Chinese government but had been unsuccessful. Pursuant to arrangements set in motion by Leboire, Davis came to San Francisco and met Royce. As a result of this meeting Royce purchased, through Davis, equipment valued at over $7Q0,000. This will be referred to as the first purchase.

At or about this time it was contemplated between Royce and Leboire that the latter should go to Guam and arrange for the shipment of the purchased material to the United States. It was also contemplated that further purchases by Royce from or through Davis might be arranged, and it was agreed that Leboire should receive a commission on such future purchases if made within a year. The parties reduced their contract to writing on August 12,1947, the very day the RoyeeDavis contract was signed, the contract taking the form of a letter addressed to Leboire and signed by Royce. The latter requested Leboire to prepare the agreement and suggested its terms. The letter contains several interlineations in the handwriting of Royce. As corrected, it reads as follows:

“Dear Mr. Leboire:
‘ ‘ As per our agreement, it is understood I will pay you two and one half (2%) percent on the consummated deal of tractors purchased from the Chinese Government through or from Mr. Tom Davis, or through or from General Commodities Corporation, Ltd., covering the purchase of the following items: . [The items are listed.]
*613 For the' total sum of approx. $660,000.00 [The total purchase was over $700,000.]
Sincerely yours,
[Signed] Ken F. Royce Ken Royce
“Any further purchases from above parties within one year from to date [sic] will be subject to a commission to you.
[Initialed] K.F.R.”

The main body of this contract was typewritten, but the postscript was added in the handwriting of Royce.

Leboire personally delivered the contract to Royce at the latter’s office. At that time Royce stated that he had changed his mind about sending Leboire to Guam. Royce had directed Leboire to provide for a 2 per cent commission on the purchase already consummated, and a 3 per cent commission on future purchases, and the contract, as originally prepared, so provided. Royce struck out the travel portions of the contract, struck out the 2 per cent and 3 per cent provisions and inserted 2% per cent and wrote and initialed the postscript. In explaining to Leboire why he was changing the commission provisions of the contract Royce stated: “I have changed my mind about sending you to Guam, and I am going to send somebody from the Morris Plan with my engineer, but I am going to, instead of 2 per cent, to give you 2%, and all the purchases that are made either by myself or with someone else, I am going to give you either 2% or 3; leave it up to me. You know me . . . well enough, because I am going to get some other people interested in it. I have got a lot of people that are interested in buying equipment.”

Royce was interested in purchasing more of the heavy equipment, but apparently was unable to finance further purchases. On August 22, 1947, 10 days after the date of the RoyceLeboire agreement, Royce entered into a joint venture contract with Hyman-Miehaels Company, an Illinois corporation, for the purchase of such equipment. This agreement recites that both parties were familiar with the fact that there were large quantities of surplus of government equipment and other property available in the South Pacific and other parts of the Orient, but that because of the large financial requirements involved in the purchase of such equipment the parties have agreed to form a joint venture “for the purpose of engaging in the business of purchasing, renting, selling, importing, ex *614 porting, reconditioning, financing and otherwise dealing in and disposing of surplus government and other property.” The agreement recognizes that on the very day this contract was executed—August 22, 1947—Hyman-Miehaels Company had entered into an agreement with General Commodities Corporation to purchase over a half million dollars worth of such equipment, and the agreement recognizes that such purchase was made on behalf of the joint venture. Under the agreement, profits and losses of the venture were to be divided 60 per cent to Hyman-Miehaels Company and 40 per cent to Boyce. The joint venture was to be managed by an executive committee consisting of two persons, one to be named by each party, disagreements to be settled by Michaels, the president of Hyman-Miehaels Company.

Leboire, of course, was interested in collecting his commissions on the first and second purchases. Leboire was paid $10,000 by Boyce as a part payment on the commission earned on the first purchase. Later Leboire was informed by Boyce that Boyce and Davis had agreed to share the burden of the commissions, and that each would pay him one-half of the commissions earned. Leboire called upon Davis. Davis gave Leboire a check for $7,097.27 as a portion of the commission earned on the second purchase.

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Related

Rosenberg v. Wittenborn
178 Cal. App. 2d 846 (California Court of Appeal, 1960)
Leboire v. Royce
349 P.2d 513 (California Supreme Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 P.2d 106, 100 Cal. App. 2d 610, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leboire-v-royce-calctapp-1950.