MacGregor v. Florida Real Estate Commission
This text of 99 So. 2d 709 (MacGregor v. Florida Real Estate Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Duncan MacGREGOR, Broker, T/A Duncan MacGregor, Inc., Appellant,
v.
FLORIDA REAL ESTATE COMMISSION and J.E. Hollenbeck, Sr., Morrison I. Taylor and Walter R. Hardin, as and constituting the members of the Florida Real Estate Commission, and Lynn M. Shaw, Appellees.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*710 Paty, Downey & Daves, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Gaylord C. Kenyon, Orlando, for appellees.
Sam I. Silver of Pallot, Silver & Mulloy, Miami, as amicus curiae.
HARRIS, Circuit Judge.
It appears that on March 21, 1955, the Florida Real Estate Commission entered its order permitting its representative, Lynn M. Shaw, to file an information against the appellant, and thereafter and pursuant thereto (original information having been quashed on appeal to Circuit Court) on October 28, 1955, an amended information was filed charging appellant with misconduct and containing two counts.
Count 1, briefly, charged appellant with having accepted a listing from one Allard to negotiate the sale of property belonging to Allard, the listing having been restricted to the sale of such property to Christians only, and that appellant knowingly negotiated a sale of such property to a Jewish person not a Christian, and misrepresented to the said Allard that the purchaser was in fact a Christian and not of the Jewish faith, in order to obtain Allard's approval of the sale.
Count 2, briefly, charges the appellant in connection with the same transaction with having negotiated a sale to a purchaser who was then an employee of appellant as a real estate salesman, and the failure of appellant to disclose this fact to Allard.
On November 10, 1955, appellant filed his Motion to Quash the amended information with the Real Estate Commission, which motion was, on April 19, 1956, by the order of the commission, denied.
Appeal was taken to the Circuit Court of the 15th Judicial Circuit of the State of Florida and that court, on August 27, 1956, entered its order affirming the commission's denial of the Motion to Quash, from which order appeal to this court was duly taken; by order of this court on October 8, 1957, Sam I. Silver, was permitted to file a brief as Amicus Curiae.
In the brief and argument of appellant, and also the Amicus Curiae, an effort has been made to treat this case as one involving an alleged and unconstitutional and unenforceable religious discrimination, but we do not feel, from an examination of the facts as disclosed by the record, that such question has any proper place *711 in the decision upon this appeal and therefore such question is neither considered nor decided.
The information charges the appellant and defendant in the proceeding before the Real Estate Commission, with bad faith in the performance of his duty to his principal in negotiating a sale of real estate owned by the principal and listed with the appellant for negotiation of a sale, and seeks to discipline the appellant in connection with the matter.
Appellant contends that the conduct charged fails to constitute a cognizable offense under the regulatory statute and it is upon this point that this case is considered and decided.
Chapter 475, Florida Statutes, F.S.A. provides for the creation of the Florida Real Estate Commission and for licensing and regulation of the Real Estate Brokerage Profession.
Section 475.17 defines the qualifications of applicants for registration, the first two sentences of which read as follows:
"An applicant for registration who is a natural person shall be required to make it appear that he is twenty-one years of age, a citizen of the United States, honest, truthful, trustworthy, of good character, and that he bears a good reputation for fair dealing. An applicant for an active broker's registration or a salesman's registration, shall be required to make it appear that he is competent and qualified to make real estate transactions and conduct negotiations therefor, with safety to investors and to those with whom he may undertake a relationship of trust and confidence."
Section 475.25 defines the several varieties of misconduct for which a real estate broker, upon having been found guilty thereof, may be disciplined and provides:
(1) "(a) Been guilty of fraud, misrepresentation, concealment, false promises, false pretenses, dishonest dealing, trick, scheme or device, culpable negligence, or breach of trust in any business transaction, or has violated a duty imposed upon him by law or by the terms of a listing contract, written, oral, express or implied, in a real estate transaction; or has aided, assisted, or conspired with any other person engaged in any such misconduct and in furtherance thereof; or has formed an intent, design or scheme to engage in any such misconduct, and has committed an overt act in furtherance of such intent, design or scheme; and it shall be immaterial to the guilt of the registrant that the victim, or intended victim, of the misconduct has sustained no damage or loss, or the damage or loss has been settled and paid, after discovery of the misconduct, or whether such victim, or intended victim, thereof, was a customer or a person in confidential relation with the registrant, or was an unidentified member of the general public; or,"
In Ahern v. Florida Real Estate Commission ex rel. O'Kelley, 149 Fla. 706, 6 So.2d 857, 858, this court said; Sub-paragraph 5-858:
"The real estate business has become a highly specialized one and the real estate broker is now the confidant of the public in much the same manner as the lawyer and the banker. His relation to the public exacts the highest degree of trust and confidence and the law imposes on appellees the duty of enforcing its standards."
The employment of a real estate broker to bring about the sale or the purchase of land on behalf of such employer or principal is purely voluntary; and likewise, the acceptance of employment by the real estate broker to undertake the performance of any service for his employer or principal, is purely voluntary.
In the present instance Allard, the employer and principal, tendered a listing upon *712 his property with the restriction that it should be sold to a "Christian only", to the appellant, the real estate broker.
The broker was under no compulsion to accept such listing and if its terms did not meet with his approval, he was at liberty to refuse the same; or if having accepted the listing, he later decided the limitation was an improper one, he could have and should have resigned his agency in the premises. In such event this proceeding would never have been brought. But he took neither of these courses. He accepted the listing and then finding the situation not to his liking or perhaps not to his convenience, proceeded to circumvent the limitation or restriction, which was an original incident thereto, by misrepresenting, or, as the information charges, "falsely representing" to the principal that his proposed purchaser was in fact a Christian when he knew that such purchaser was in fact not an adherent of the Christian faith; thus inducing the principal to enter into a contract to sell his property to a person with whom the principal would not have voluntarily entered into such a contract.
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99 So. 2d 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macgregor-v-florida-real-estate-commission-fla-1958.