Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc. v. Clay

343 S.E.2d 297, 231 Va. 170, 1986 Va. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 25, 1986
DocketRecord 830206
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 343 S.E.2d 297 (Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc. v. Clay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc. v. Clay, 343 S.E.2d 297, 231 Va. 170, 1986 Va. LEXIS 142 (Va. 1986).

Opinion

CARRICO, C.J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc. (Long & Foster), filed a motion for judgment against Mary W. Clay (Clay) seeking recovery of a real estate commission in the amount of $13,000 allegedly due on the sale of a tract of land owned by Clay in Fairfax County. Clay filed grounds of defense and a counterclaim against Long & Foster and its agent, Rita Marsh (Marsh), for damages allegedly caused by Marsh’s breach of fiduciary duty in the handling of the sales transaction. Clay also filed a third party motion for judgment against Marsh for indemnification in the event Clay was held liable to Long & Foster.

The case was tried before a jury, and three verdicts were returned on forms provided by the court. On Long & Foster’s claim for a commission, the jury found in favor of Clay. On Clay’s counterclaim against Long & Foster and Marsh, the jury returned this verdict:

We, the Jury, on the issue joined in the case of Mary W. Clay . . . versus Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc., . . . find our verdict in favor of [Mary W. Clay] and assess her damages in the amount of $4,000.

On Clay’s third party motion for judgment, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Clay against Marsh for $1.00.

Long & Foster and Marsh moved to set aside the verdicts returned on Long & Foster’s original claim and Clay’s counterclaim. The trial court denied the motion. On Long & Foster’s original claim, the court entered judgment in favor of Clay. On *172 Clay’s counterclaim, the court entered judgment in her favor for $4,000 against both Long & Foster and Marsh. With respect to the $1.00 verdict in favor of Clay against Marsh, the court on its own motion set the verdict aside and dismissed Clay’s third party motion for judgment. 1

Long & Foster and Marsh contend the trial court erred in entering judgment against them on the $4,000 verdict. They argue that because they were proceeded against as master and servant and the liability of Long & Foster was predicated solely upon the doctrine of respondeat superior, a finding of liability against Marsh as the servant was “a necessary premise” to a finding of culpability against Long & Foster as the master. Citing several Virginia cases, 2 Long & Foster and Marsh say that where a master and a servant are proceeded against jointly and the liability of the master is derivative, a verdict against the master and in favor of the servant, or silent with respect to the servant, exonerates not only the servant but the master as well.

We do not agree that the trial court erred in entering judgment against Long & Foster and Marsh on the $4,000 verdict. In Cape Chas. Flying Ser. v. Nottingham, 187 Va. 444, 47 S.E.2d 540 (1948), we said:

“Verdicts are to be [fairly] construed, and, if the point in issue is substantially decided by the verdict, it is good, and when the meaning of the jury can be satisfactorily collected from the verdict, upon the matters involved in the issue, it ought not to be set aside for irregularity or want of form in its wording.”

Id. at 454, 47 S.E.2d at 545 (quoting Peters v. Johnson, Jackson and Co., 50 W. Va. 644, 645-46, 41 S.E. 190, 190 (1902)).

We think the way Long & Foster and Marsh would have us read the verdict would produce an unfair result. They would have *173 us say that the clause, “in the case of Mary W. Clay . . . versus Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc.,” means the verdict was against Long & Foster alone. In our opinion, the language of the clause, fairly read, is parenthetical and descriptive, intended to identify the case in which the verdict was returned, rather than the party or parties against whom returned.

When the verdict is fairly read, its operative and decisive language is: “We, the Jury, . . . find our verdict in favor of [Mary W. Clay].” This language represents a general finding in favor of Clay and constitutes a verdict against both Long & Foster and Marsh. 3 Cape Chas. Flying Ser., 187 Va. at 455, 47 S.E.2d at 545; Lough v. Price and Dix, 161 Va. 811, 818, 172 S.E. 269, 271 (1934); Fishburne v. Engledove, 91 Va. 548, 560, 22 S.E. 354, 356 (1895).

Long & Foster and Marsh next contend there is no evidence in the record to support a finding that Marsh breached her duty as a real estate salesperson in her dealings with Clay. This duty was expressed in two instructions granted by the trial court, without objection, as requiring Marsh to explain the terms of the sales contract to Clay and also to explain that “the contract contained terms different from the terms described in the listing agreement.”

On this point, the record shows that on November 15, 1981, Clay gave Marsh, as Long & Foster’s agent, an exclusive listing to sell the property in question for $130,000. Clay told Marsh she would consider accepting a first deed of trust for part of the sales price provided she “could get enough [cash] to pay off the debt” then existing on the property. Clay also told Marsh she would not accept a second trust, and a printed provision in the listing agreement which would have permitted a second trust was lined out.

On December 20, 1981, Marsh presented Clay with a “Land Sales Contract” signed by Jim L. Blevins, who rented the property in question from Clay. In the contract, Blevins agreed to purchase the property and to pay Clay $25,000 in cash and $105,000 in monthly installments. The contract called for settlement within 10 days and provided for the payment of a 10% sales commission. The contract also contained a clause requiring Clay “to subordinate [to] a bona-fide construction loan.”

*174 Clay asked Marsh what the subordination clause meant. Marsh gave an explanation, but Clay “didn’t understand it” and asked again what the clause meant. This time, Marsh “made no explanation that [Clay] could make head [or] tails of.”

Although the transaction as proposed in the contract would not “get [Clay] enough [cash] to pay off the debt,” she went ahead and signed the contract. She signed, Clay said, because she thought the contract was consistent with the terms of the listing agreement and “[b]ecause Mrs. Marsh kept urging [her] to sign it”; Marsh kept saying: “Sign it, Mrs. Clay. Sign it now so we can hurry and go to settlement.”

In a day or two after she signed the contract, Clay learned from “some of the lawyers” where she worked “what [the subordination clause] meant.” She then wrote Long & Foster on December 23, 1981, stating she was revoking the contract because its terms were unsatisfactory and had not been explained to her “total satisfaction.”

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343 S.E.2d 297, 231 Va. 170, 1986 Va. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-foster-real-estate-inc-v-clay-va-1986.