McCluskey v. Ware

152 P.2d 1003, 25 Cal. 2d 1, 155 A.L.R. 1319, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 294
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1944
DocketSac. No. 5607
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 152 P.2d 1003 (McCluskey v. Ware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCluskey v. Ware, 152 P.2d 1003, 25 Cal. 2d 1, 155 A.L.R. 1319, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 294 (Cal. 1944).

Opinions

SCHAUER, J.

This is an appeal by the executors of the last will and testament of Charles H. S. Rule, deceased, from an order of the probate court fixing and allowing a broker’s commission, and directing payment thereof by the executors, to respondent real estate broker Alex McCluskey, upon the sales to a purchaser secured by respondent of certain real and personal property of the Rule estate. The substance of appellants’ contention is that the evidence fails to support the interpretation which the trial court (sitting in probate) placed upon a written contract between appellants and respondent relative to the procurement of a purchaser, and that therefore such court erred in allowing respondent a commission [5]*5on the sales. We have concluded that the evidence is not as a matter of law insufficient to support any essential implied finding and that the order appealed from must be affirmed.

The respondent Alex McCluskey, doing business under the firm name and style of McCluskey Realty Company, Santa Rosa, California, at all times concerned was a duly licensed real estate broker and his son C. E. McCluskey was a licensed salesman employed by the father. They carried on their business correspondence on stationery with letterheads showing their profession. As early as January 16, 1942, respondent or his son and agent, on their letterhead stationery, wrote to H. S. Young, an attorney whose firm was employed as the attorneys for the executors in this estate and who was handling the estate matters on behalf of his firm, stating that “Mr. Tom Brownscombe, Attorney here in Santa Rosa, gave us your name stating that you were the attorney for the Charles Rule estate. We have two or three substantial cash buyers for stock ranches and would like to know at an early date if the Rule Ranch at Jenner is for sale and your best price. The writer has been on the ranch several times and we feel that we are fairly familiar with same.” On January 20 Mr. Young replied as follows: “In response to your letter of January 16th, I beg to enclose herewith prospectus on the Rule Ranch. Any cattleman who buys this ranch would take over the registrations for the Hereford breeding stock and the well known good will.” The prospectus, which, in effect, is an obvious sales talk and invitation for bids on the property, accompanied the letter.

In August, 1942, in continuation of the negotiations which had been opened in January, the agent on behalf of the realty company, on its letterhead, wrote to Young for, and the latter in response mailed to him, an inventory of the livestock and equipment on the Rule Ranch. In the meantime the agent had contacted one Louis T. Willig, had succeeded in interesting him in purchasing the property and, during the latter part of August, was, with the father, respondent herein, engaged in assisting Willig to obtain financing for the purchase. On August 24 Willig, who had just learned that one of the executors was one W. P. Wobber, a personal acquaintance of his, inquired of the agent whether the latter would object if he, Willig, saw Wobber personally concerning the property, and received the agent’s permission to do so. There was no sug[6]*6gestión that either Willig or the agent intended that by permitting the personal contact the latter should be understood to waive his obvious' expectancy of earning and receiving a commission on any sale which might ensue to his client. The agent and Willig thereafter made arrangements to meet at the former’s office (that of the McCluskey Realty Company) in Santa Rosa on September 2, 1942, and then to proceed to a nearby bank to discuss financing of the proposed purchase. Willig failed to appear at the real estate office the morning of the date set, and in the afternoon the agent inquired of the bank whether Willig had been there. He was informed that Willig had come to the bank that morning (September 2), that they had “gotten together” on the financing, and that Willig had stated he was not going to file a bid through the realty company—through whose efforts, as related, his interest in the ranch had been aroused and who had carried on the preliminary negotiations which led to the financing arrangements. The agent forthwith telephoned Young, attorney for the executors, and informed him “that Mr. Willig had not kept an appointment with us that .day and that I telephoned Mr. Fuller [the banker] and had asked him if Mr. Willig had been there and he stated that he had. And I further asked him [Fuller] if they had gotten together on any financing and he told me they had. And I then—and also that I had been advised by Mr. Fuller that Mr. Willig had stated he wasn’t going to file a bid through us. . . So I told Mr. Young that we very definitely wanted to register Mr. Willig’s name with him and Mr. Young told me to write him, accordingly, so he should be sure he would have it the following morning, which morning, I believe, was the date the bids were to be opened, so I did so, and sent it special delivery.” (Italics added.) The letter written by the agent to Young was dated September 2, 1942, and reads as follows: “On January 20th you wrote us, enclosing a prospectus of the Rule Ranch, offering it for sale. With this authority, we contacted Mr. L. J. Willig, 38—8th St., San Francisco, and have for some little time discussed the ranch with him. When Mr. Thomas Brownscombe of Santa Rosa [who apparently was acting as an agent or representative for the executors] advised us that bids under the probate sale were being solicited we immediately sought to interest Willig in filing a bid. It seems that following our conversation in this regard he contacted Mr. Wobber and was advised that ... no real estate brokers [7]*7had been invited to solicit bids upon the property. [If this statement was made by Wobber the trial court could have found that it was untrue, as is shown by the correspondence above quoted in which Mr. Young, as agent for the executors, impliedly invited the claimant here to solicit a bidder for the property.]

“Upon Tues., Aug. 25, we again contacted Mr. Willig, by appointment, and discussed the possibilities of financing the purchase and the amount of his proposed bid. In the meantime we had ascertained from one of our local banks what they would loan him on the property. Yesterday, Sept. 1, we ’phoned Mr. Willig, making an appointment to meet him at our office following an interview he proposed to have with Mr. Puller, Pres, of the Bank of Sonoma County at Sebastopol. Mr. Willig failed to appear at our office and upon our ’phoning Mr. Puller we were advised that Mr. Willig had told him of our contact with him but that ... he was going to file directly with Mr. Wobber.

“We feel very definitely that under the circumstances if Mr. Willig does file a bid it should be regarded as being subject to our commission.” (Italics added.)

Under date of September 5,1942, Young replied as follows: “I have your letter of September 2nd. The executors have not yet made any return on the Rule Ranch sale, so as I write this letter it is questionable as to who will be the successful bidder. While it is most agreeable to us to deal with brokers nevertheless this bid came directly from the purchaser and not through any broker, as a net bid. I think you will fully understand as the attorney for the estate there is nothing I can do concerning your commission.” (Italics added.) The statement in the above quoted letter that “this bid came directly from the purchaser and not through any broker” is apparently true only in a limited and technical sense.

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Bluebook (online)
152 P.2d 1003, 25 Cal. 2d 1, 155 A.L.R. 1319, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccluskey-v-ware-cal-1944.