Lord v. Williams

156 N.E. 421, 259 Mass. 278, 1927 Mass. LEXIS 1198
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 16, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 421 (Lord v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lord v. Williams, 156 N.E. 421, 259 Mass. 278, 1927 Mass. LEXIS 1198 (Mass. 1927).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This is an action of contract brought by a real estate broker to recover a commission. The first count of the declaration was to recover reasonable compensation for procuring a purchaser for land of the defendant, and the second count was for services in negotiating a sale of the same property. The answer was a general denial and a modification of the agreement constituting accord and satisfaction between the parties.

. The case comes before this court, after a general verdict for the plaintiff, on exceptions taken to the judge’s refusals [280]*280to direct a verdict for the defendant and to give the defendant’s requests for rulings numbered 9 to 13. These requests are as follows: “9. No legal and binding contract between Mr. Gutlon and the defendant for the purchase and sale of the property in question was ever made. 10. Upon all the evidence the written agreement dated January 7 was not delivered to Mr. Williams and the delivery assented to by him as a binding contract. 11. The plaintiff’s letter to the defendant dated January 11 in which the signed agreement dated January 7 was returned to Mr. Williams called for further negotiations between the parties which were subsequently entered into, so that the receipt of that letter containing the written agreement by the defendant was not a final delivery of that agreement. 12. It was competent for Mr. Gutlon and Mr. Williams to vary the written agreement dated January 7 by a subsequent oral agreement between themselves, and such subsequent oral agreement would then be substituted for the written agreement which was thereupon abandoned or rescinded. 13. If Mr. Lord knew of and assented to the substitution of a subsequent oral agreement for the written agreement dated January 7, he cannot claim a commission, because of the signing of the agreement dated January 7.” No objections were taken to any part of the judge’s charge. The judge submitted to the jury for its determination the question, "Was it a condition of the plaintiff’s employment that an actual sale should take place before a commission should be earned?” The jury answered "No.” It was agreed that anything that was signed in regard to the transaction in question by Herbert T. Boardman was done as agent for the defendant.

The pertinent facts of the record succinctly stated are in substance as follows: The defendant listed the property in question with the plaintiff for sale and the latter brought the property to the attention of one Moris Gutlon. Thereafter the plaintiff and Gutlon had conferences with the defendant about the purchase and sale of this property.

On January 4, 1924, the plaintiff had a conversation with the defendant "which was substantially as stated” in the following letter addressed to the defendant: "Confirming [281]*281our conversation over the telephone this morning, the following is my interpretation of the deal as accepted by you and Mr. Gutlon: Moris Gutlon, of Boston, is to purchase from you #52 Kneeland Street subject to a first mortgage of $9000 at and # 54 Kneeland Street subject to a first mortgage of $9000 at 6%, paying you $40,000 for both properties, you to carry the properties on a second mortgage above the $18,000 on both properties for the term of one year, he to give you $1000 cash on taking title to show good faith, the $1000 to be returned to Moris Gutlon as soon as you are satisfied that he will faithfully perform his part of the agreement. A commission of $1000 is to be paid to E. T. Lord, 15 State Street, Boston, on passing title. I trust that I have gotten this all straight and that it will be possible for you to have the agreements ready for signature early Monday morning .... Mr. Gutlon informed me that he had a side agreement with you, that he made over the telephone, and that I know nothing about, that in the event of his paying you in full the second mortgage in sixty days that you would return to him $2000, the difference between what you agreed to take ($38,000) originally and $40,000, if you carried the second mortgage through for the year.” Shortly after receiving this letter, the plaintiff in a conversation with the defendant agreed “that in the event of Mr. Gutlon paying the mortgages, and his buying the property at $38,000, the commission was to be paid on the basis of $38,000 instead of $40,000.”

Pursuant to this letter agreements were drafted, subsequently amended, finally signed under date of January 7, 1924, by both parties, and one delivered to Gutlon and the other to the defendant. Some inconclusive correspondence followed.

The agreement provided that the premises were to be conveyed on January 30, 1924. But this was not done; and during the negotiations the defendant and Gutlon agreed to put through the transaction on February 15, 1924, at two o’clock, at the Suffolk registry of deeds. After January 30, 1924, the defendant and Gutlon carried on negotiations looking toward certain changes in the terms of the agreement; [282]*282but the plaintiff testified: “I was not aware of what had gone on”; and on cross-examination testified “that he heard Mr. Gutlon testify that Gutlon was reporting to him every day practically before this transaction on the fifteenth of February with reference to his negotiations with Mr. Williams and would say that it was not every day. He was not reporting to me at all. Mr. Gutlon and Mr. Williams had been in conference a good many times. In other words, I couldn’t control either of them. They would get together irrespective of brokers, and didn’t know what they were talking about. I was not kept informed by Mr. Gutlon of the progress of his talks with Mr. Williams wdth reference to making the final arrangement. I understood there was some arrangement that there was to be no payment of $1,000 in cash when this transaction went through, if it did go through on the fifteenth of February. It was either Mr. Gutlon or Mr. Williams who told me that.”

On February 9, 1924, the defendant wrote and Gutlon received the letter which follows: “As I understand it, you are still willing to put through the trade on 52 and 54 Knee-land Street as of Jan. 30, 1924, wdth my taking a first mortgage to run one year for $40,000.00 which will stand as the purchase price and you to pay adjustments amounting to $305.80 together wdth a deposit of $1000.00 in cash, which is to be returned to you as soon as we are satisfied that you wdll materially improve the property. I also understand and agree to return to you in addition $1500.00 if the mortgage is paid off in full inside 60 days. In view of the fact that there have been several delays through no fault of mine, I must insist that the trade be consummated before Friday the 15th as otherwise I wdll consider the whole matter can-celled.” Gutlon testified that he talked wdth the plaintiff on February 14 about the transaction and told him what the transaction was,' ‘ that I was to take the deed to this property in Mr. Jennison’s name subject to a first mortgage of $40,000, and that Mr. Jennison was to give me back a second mortgage of $15,000, and that I was to pay the adjustments ■ amounting to about $305, less the rent of $45 and that was the whole transaction. I was not to put in any cash at all. [283]*283When I told Mr. Lord this transaction he said, ‘That is all right.’” The defendant testified: “I did agree and say [at the office of the plaintiff on February 13] I would waive my $1,000 cash payment if Mr. Lord would waive his commission until such time as Mr. Gutlon put the building in condition, or showed that he was going to do it.” This conference and statement both Gutlon and the plaintiff denied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 421, 259 Mass. 278, 1927 Mass. LEXIS 1198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-v-williams-mass-1927.