Levit v. Bowers

119 N.E.2d 536, 2 Ill. App. 2d 343
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 3, 1954
DocketGen. 46,161
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 119 N.E.2d 536 (Levit v. Bowers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levit v. Bowers, 119 N.E.2d 536, 2 Ill. App. 2d 343 (Ill. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Schwartz

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant is a realtor who held an exclusive agency for the sqle of a large plot of ground at 55th street and Cicero avenue in the City of Chicago. In June 1949 he mailed a letter to about a thousand real estate brokers in the Chicago Loop, offering to pay a full commission to realtors who “successfully negotiate a sale” of all or a portion of the property. Plaintiff is also a realtor who claims that pursuant to defendant’s offer, he successfully negotiated a sale of a portion of the property and is entitled to a commission for so doing. A verdict for $4,200 was returned in plaintiff’s favor and judgment was rendered thereon by the trial court.

The principal issue turns on the meaning of the words “successfully negotiate a sale.” There is some difference, although not much, on the facts of the case. Since the jury found for plaintiff and since that verdict is not against the manifest weight of the evidence, we accept the account of the transaction as given by plaintiff. From this it appears that plaintiff called defendant’s place of business about the middle of September 1949 and inquired about the property. He was referred to Maurice F. Brown, a salesman for defendant. Shortly thereafter, in the middle of September, he received the letter of June 27, 1949, and a plat showing the property. The letter was addressed to plaintiff, bore the title: “Be: Industrial Vacant,” and started as follows:

“We will pay full commission to realtors who successfully negotiate a sale of any or all of the parcels of industrial land described more fully on the enclosed plat.”

Then followed a list of seven parcels with prices set opposite each. The highest price was thirty cents a square foot. On September 30, 1949, Brown called at plaintiff’s office. Plaintiff told him he had a client, H. & E. Balaban Corporation, who desired the property for lciddy-park purposes and would pay $56,000 for 280,000 square feet, or 20 cents a foot. H. & E. Balaban Corporation possessed assets of over a million dollars, including, a bank balance of $375,000. Brown took the matter up with defendant and the offer was rejected on the ground that the price was too low. However, negotiations were continued. In November 1949, plaintiff submitted an offer of $63,000, or 22-% cents per square foot; and in February 1950 he submitted by letter an offer of $70,000, or 25 cents a square foot, payable $20,000 in cash and the balance by a purchase money mortgage. These offers were rejected because the price offered was too low. On March 15, 1950 plaintiff received another letter from defendant, similar to that of June 1949, reiterating the offer to pay a full' commission for successful negotiations. Conversations followed this letter, and plaintiff submitted an offer of $84,000, $42,000 down and the balance in a purchase money mortgage. This offer met the highest price which had been asked by defendant but it was rejected, defendant insisting on payment in cash. On May 17, 1950 plaintiff submitted an all cash offer of $84,000, or 30 cents a square foot. This offer was agreed to and defendant stated he would give plaintiff the name of the lawyer for the seller so that the attorneys could draft the necessary agreement. On the same day, plaintiff confirmed this conversation by letter. On June 5 he called defendant by telephone, telling bim the offer was still open and asking the name of his attorney immediately. Defendant did not give plaintiff the name of his lawyer nor did he take any steps to close the deal, and the negotiations terminated.

It is contended by defendant that the words “successfully negotiate a sale” mean that no commission was to be paid unless the sale was consummated. Plaintiff contends that he successfully negotiated the sale when, after long and protracted negotiations, he procured a purchaser who was willing to buy on the terms demanded by defendant, that is, 30 cents a square foot, in cash. Like many words which describe human conduct as related to affairs of commerce, the word “negotiate” can be used in many different senses. In Webster’s International Dictionary, it is defined as follows:

“To hold intercourse or treat with a view to coming to terms upon some matter, as a purchase or sale, a treaty, etc.; to conduct communications or conferences as a basis of agreement; as to negotiate for the purchase of a house.”

It may mean an actual “transfer for a valuable consideration.” It is also used as a synonym for “surmount or traverse,” and in that respect applies to any test of skill or strength. In common parlance among business men today it may mean the performance of the business in hand. The word “sale” means generally the actual transfer from a seller to a purchaser. It is often used, however, to signify the conclusion of negotiations even though final transfer has not been made. It is not uncommon for one business man to say to another after bargaining has led to an agreed price, “You have made a sale,” although no actual transfer has as yet resulted. “ ‘Sale,’ as applied to relation between landowner and real estate broker working to secure purchaser of land, means procuring purchaser able, ready and willing to buy on terms fixed by seller.” Black’s Law Dictionary, 4th Ed., p. 1504. The question then is — what did the parties to this transaction reasonably understand by the words used?

The letter in question was prepared and signed by a realtor and sent to a thousand real estate brokers — men who make their living as agents for buyers and sellers of real estate. The final transfer was beyond their control. Hence it has been held by courts that barring the express statement of a condition to the contrary, a realtor has earned his commission when he has produced a buyer ready, willing and able to buy. In Glatt v. Adams, 226 Ill. App. 321, the broker produced a buyer who was ready, willing and able to buy, but no contract of sale was executed because the defendant later stated that he was not satisfied with the financial responsibility of the proposed buyer. Notwithstanding that, the court held that the broker had performed his part of the transaction when he submitted a buyer whom the seller accepted without challenging his financial responsibility. But it is contended by defendant that this general principle as related to the duty of a broker was enlarged in the instant case by the terms of the letter in question to require that a sale be consummated before the broker was entitled to his commission. If this is so, then the solicitation by the defendant of the services of a thousand realtors in the Chicago Loop was hardly more than a snare and a delusion. In our opinion, the words in question merely emphasize the requirement that the agent would by negotiation produce an offer that met the terms and conditions laid down by the seller. The facts of the case illuminate their meaning. Nothing is said in the letter of March 15, 1950 with respect to payment for the land, and the seller had the right to and did insist on full payment in cash. Balaban finally agreed to this condition. The property being vacant and the transaction being for cash, there was left no matter of substance to be decided. At that point the negotiations had ended successfully. All that was left was the submission of a title opinion and the adjustment of one or two details such as the apportionment of taxes.

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119 N.E.2d 536, 2 Ill. App. 2d 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levit-v-bowers-illappct-1954.