Lester v. Marshall

352 P.2d 786, 143 Colo. 189, 1960 Colo. LEXIS 555
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 31, 1960
Docket18657
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 352 P.2d 786 (Lester v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lester v. Marshall, 352 P.2d 786, 143 Colo. 189, 1960 Colo. LEXIS 555 (Colo. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Doyle.

William and Louise Marshall, plaintiffs below and herein referred to as plaintiffs, purchased a home at 3200 South Delaware Street, Englewood, Colorado, on August 3, 1955. Plaintiffs paid the full purchase price of $18,500 in cash on the occasion of the closing. At this time there was an outstanding first deed of trust to.the Industrial Federal Savings and Loan Association amounting to $11,152.43. Plaintiffs delivered to Mr. Richard Hurd, the broker who had the listing, a cashier’s check payable to them and endorsed it in blank. Hurd made the disbursements called for on the closing statement, including the payment to the seller, the payoff of the second mortgage and other expenses, but failed to pay off the indebtedness to the Industrial Federal Savings and Loan Association. This amount he converted to his own use. Plaintiffs did not learn of this conversion until some three months had passed. They then brought an action and named Hurd, R. J. Lester and Ellen K. Wilson as defendants. Lester and Wilson, real estate broker and saleslady respectively, had represented plaintiffs in the transaction. Trial was to the court and during the course of it, Hurd confessed judgment and is not a party in this Court. At the trial’s conclusion judgment *191 was entered against the defendants, Lester and Wilson, in the sum of $12,625.21. They seek review by writ of error.

There is little dispute in the evidence. Dr. Marshall is a minister who had resided at Rawlins, Wyoming, prior to the transaction hereafter described. He had visited Denver during 1954, during which time he became acquainted with the defendant, Mrs. Wilson, a licensed real estate saleslady employed by R. J. Lester, a real estate broker. Upon deciding to move to the Denver area in July 1955, the Marshalls employed Mrs. Wilson to locate a house for them. Mrs. Wilson showed plaintiffs several houses, none of which were satisfactory to them. Then, on July 27, 1955, plaintiffs called Mrs. Wilson and told her that they had located a house and asked her to show it to them. This is the house described above which was then listed with the defendant Hurd.

After being shown the house, the Marshalls and Mrs. Wilson went to the Lester real estate office and proceeded to fill in a form receipt and option contract for the purpose of making an offer to the defendant Hurd. The Marshalls gave Lester a check for $900 to be transmitted with the contract to Hurd. Mrs. Wilson had told the Marshalls that she and Lester were in a listing exchange arrangement with Hurd. The offer providing for a sale price of $18,000 was transmitted to Hurd. Telephone negotiations followed between Mrs. Wilson, acting for plaintiffs, and Hurd, acting for the sellers. As a result of these negotiations, the sellers, who had demanded $19,500, agreed to sell for $18,500, subject to modifications all of which were inked into the contract. Plaintiffs agreed to buy for this amount.

It is noteworthy that the Marshalls were insistent that they obtain possession on August 3, 1955, and that the property should be free and clear of encumbrances. They inquired of Mrs. Wilson as to how the existing encumbrances were to be paid off. She, in turn, according to her testimony, told them that this was all handled by *192 the broker at the time of the closing. Her statements to the plaintiffs were of such a nature as to reassure plaintiffs that this was a matter of routine.

After the contract was completed and signed, plaintiffs returned to Rawlins, telling Mrs. Wilson that they would not be back to Denver until the date of the closing. She in turn assured plaintiffs that she would take care of everything.

On August 3, 1955, the closing took place at the office of defendant Hurd. A settlement sheet presented by the broker, Hurd, disclosed in detail various items of receipts and disbursements, including the outstanding obligation to the Industrial Federal Savings and Loan Association in excess of $11,100. Plaintiffs accepted delivery of a warranty deed which purported to convey the premises free and clear of all liens and encumbrances. The plaintiff, Dr. Marshall, then endorsed his cashier’s check in blank and delivered it to Hurd.

Again, after the closing, the plaintiffs expressed some apprehension to Mrs. Wilson and she again assured them that they had nothing to worry about and that she would take care of everything. The testimony establishes further that neither Mrs. Wilson nor Lester advised the plaintiffs to retain an attorney or to have the title examined. Mrs. Wilson did testify, however, that on her own initiative she had requested a title opinion from Hurd’s lawyer. No such opinion was ever provided.

Some weeks after the closing, plaintiffs called the Lester office and complained that the deed (which Hurd was supposed to have recorded) had not been received. Lester then called Hurd, who stated that through an oversight the deed had not been recorded. Lester did not inquire as to whether the deeds of trust had been released. The information that the Industrial Federal deed of trust had not been paid off did not come to light until some time later in the fall of 1955. The existence of the unpaid note came to plaintiff’s attention after Hurd failed to make the November payment. There *193 after they kept the loan in good standing and subsequently commenced the present action.

The trial court found that the defendants Wilson and Lester were buyers’ agents; that they were aware of the plaintiffs’ desire to pay cash and had undertaken the employment with this in mind; that Mrs. Wilson had given the plaintiffs assurance that she would see to it that their wishes were carried out fully. The court concluded that the two agents had by their representation and conduct lulled the plaintiffs into a false sense of security as a result of which the plaintiffs failed to take steps which they would otherwise have taken in order to protect themselves, and as a consequence the loss was suffered. The court also reasoned that apart from the express terms of the agency, the real estate broker was obligated, under the circumstances such as those disclosed, to protect his client against the kind of hazard here present, and concluded that this duty could have been discharged and the loss avoided if the defendants had instructed the plaintiffs to draw checks jointly to the owner and the holders of the first and second deeds of trust or had they themselves held the funds in escrow, or if they had instructed plaintiffs to specially endorse the cashier’s check to Lester and Hurd as joint endorsees.

Defendants argue that there was neither contractual nor tort obligation towards the plaintiffs following the closing; that their duties were discharged once the deed was delivered and that the risk of the conversion was one to which the plaintiffs subjected themselves when they delivered the bearer check to Hurd.

Defendants further argue that the evidence fails to support a judgment against Lester either directly or vicariously and, thirdly, that Mrs. Wilson and Lester were agents of the plaintiffs; that their relationship to the plaintiffs at the time in question was a gratuitous one which imposed no legal obligations.

The determinative question is whether the defendants *194

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
352 P.2d 786, 143 Colo. 189, 1960 Colo. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lester-v-marshall-colo-1960.