Lerner v. Harvey

155 N.W. 427, 189 Mich. 249, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 778
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1915
DocketDocket No. 6
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 155 N.W. 427 (Lerner v. Harvey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lerner v. Harvey, 155 N.W. 427, 189 Mich. 249, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 778 (Mich. 1915).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiff recovered from defendant in the circuit court of Wayne county a verdict of $340 as commission on the sale of certain real estate. The action was commenced in justice’s court, and pleadings were oral. Plaintiff declared in assumpsit on the common counts, and defendant pleaded the general issue. The property sold was a terrace of six houses and the land on which they were located, upon Theodore street in the city of Detroit. It belonged to defendant and was sold to a man named Lieberman for $17,000. Plaintiff’s bill of particulars was for a commission of 3 per cent, of that amount. Defendant’s most prominent assignments of error relate to refusal of the court to grant his motion for a directed verdict [251]*251in Ms behalf, refusing requests to charge, and the charge as given.

The alleged contract of brokerage, or agency, was oral. The court left it to the jury to determine what contract, if any, was made, and, if there was a mutual understanding between them, what was done under it. The three witnesses in the case are plaintiff, defendant, and the purchaser. The testimony of plaintiff and defendant cannot be reconciled in important particulars, while that of Lieberman, the purchaser, cannot in all respects be reconciled with itself. From the somewhat confusing and conflicting testimony, of the witnesses the undisputed facts stand out that defendant offered this property for sale at $18,000, and plaintiff, having some kind of agency or authority to sell or produce a buyer for it, hunted up Lieberman as a prospective purchaser, took him to defendant and introduced him as such, thus bringing the eventual buyer and seller together, and ultimately Lieberman bought the property for $17,000.

It is the contention of defendant that their agreement, so far as any contract for a commission was made, consisted of his answer to plaintiff’s solicitation for an opportunity to negotiate a sale, that if plaintiff produced a customer ready and willing to pay the sum of $18,000 in cash for this property he would pay him a commission of 2 per cent.; that all efforts of plaintiff and negotiations upon that basis ended in failure over a year prior to the time when he himself sold the property to Lieberman through new and independent negotiations; that, having failed in performance of his express contract, plaintiff can sustain no claim for compensation under an implied one.

Plaintiff’s contention is that defendant proposed and agreed without limit of time that if he produced a purchaser who would buy the property at the price which [252]*252he then asked or, by inference, any other satisfactory sum, he would pay him a commission; that, acting upon such understanding between them, he found a purchaser and introduced him to defendant, which resulted in a sale of the property at a price satisfactory to defendant; that under the circumstances shown,, even though the sale was effected at a lower price than that originally asked, he is entitled to his commission upon the general principle that when a real estate owner has given to a broker authority to sell lands on commission, and himself, without canceling the broker’s authority, effects a sale to the party whom the broker has found and brought to him, the commission is earned.

The court submitted the case to the jury with instruction as to the law upon these conflicting theories. Defendant claims the undisputed evidence supports only his theory.

It appears that plaintiff, who testified that he had been in the real estate business about three years, learned in some manner that the property in question was for sale, and who owned it; that some time in July or August, 1912, he went to defendant’s office and inquired if it was for sale, telling him that he was working on commission. All that each testified to on direct examination touching an agreement as to a commission, agency, and introduction of the ultimate'purchaser (stated in the bill of exceptions in narrative form) is as follows:

Plaintiff testified:
“That he went to Harvey’s office in the Moffat Building and asked him if the property was for sale, and Harvey said it was. Harvey asked him how he was working and he replied that he was working on commission. He asked what Harvey would take for the property and Harvey said $18,000. Harvey asked him what commission he asked and he replied 3 per cent. Harvey said that on a big deal he thought 2 per cent. [253]*253was enough, and witness replied that when a big deal was made the agents liked to get full commission. He showed the property to a Mr. Lieberman, and then took Lieberman to Mr. Harvey’s office. He told Mr. Harvey that Mr. Lieberman was a prospective purchaser. Lieberman said the buildings needed a lot of repairs and $18,000 was too much, and Harvey said the best he Would take would be $17,000; $5,000 down, and Lieberman said he would give about $3,000 down.”
Defendant testified:
“That Mr. Lerner came to his office and asked him if the property was for sale and the price asked. That he told him the price was $18,000 cash. That he asked Lerner if he wanted to buy it and Lerner told him that he did not, that he was a real estate dealer. That he then asked him what commission he asked, and Lerner replied that the usual commission was 3 per cent. That he told Lerner if he would find a purchaser for $18,-000 cash he would pay him 2 per cent, commission; that he would not pay 3 per cent, commission on a deal of that kind. That Lerner left the office and within three or four days brought Mr. Lieberman and introduced him. That he had never seen Mr. Lieberman prior to that time. That Lieberman asked the price of the property and he told him $18,000. That Lieberman said he would not pay that much, and he and Lerner left the office.”

On cross-examination plaintiff testified that the best offer Lieberman then made was $15,000, which defendant would not accept. Lieberman testified that he first learned of the property through plaintiff who took him to defendant’s office and introduced him; that witness said he would think it over and let defendant know, and defendant said he had a man who took care of the property whom he would send down to show witness through there; but the man never showed up and after waiting several weeks he went up to see defendant and so informed him; that defendant then gave him a note to a certain number saying, “You go in and that lady will let you look at the property inside,” which he did, [254]*254and then went down the same week, without plaintiff, “and made Harvey a proposition.”

“Q. What proposition did you make?
“A. I don’t remember; I think it was $16,000 or $17,000, and Harvey turned it down; he wanted $17,-500, and we finally struck up a deal for $17,000. * * * That he saw Lerner several times after he took him up to Harvey’s office; Lerner bothered the life out of him, and he finally told him there was no use bothering him. That Lerner came to him repeatedly and urged him to buy the property. Lerner said he knew several pieces of property and showed him several pieces of other property. Lerner also sold some property for him.”

His “finally” was, like other of his statements, somewhat indefinite, but he subsequently stated on cross-examination that they made the “actual bargain” some time in July or August, 1913. His contract to purchase appears to have been signed November 20, 1913.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 N.W. 427, 189 Mich. 249, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lerner-v-harvey-mich-1915.