McNeny v. Touchstone

60 P.2d 986, 7 Cal. 2d 429, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 652
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1936
DocketL. A. 14824
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 60 P.2d 986 (McNeny v. Touchstone) 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
McNeny v. Touchstone, 60 P.2d 986, 7 Cal. 2d 429, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 652 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

This action for an accounting was brought by the plaintiff, who was a member of the copartnership composed of plaintiff and defendant Weatherford W. Touchstone under the firm name of McNeny & McNeny. The members of said firm entered into a written agreement dissolving said partnership and providing for a division of certain commissions upon a number of unfinished real estate transactions which the parties to the agreement anticipated would be consummated in the near future after the dissolution of said partnership. In this agreement the defendant Weatherford W. Touchstone purchased from the plaintiff the goodwill of the real estate" brokerage business, which had *431 been carried on by the partnership, and the furniture and fixtures used in connection with said business. The defendant Weatherford W. Touchstone, immediately after the dissolution of the old firm, formed a new partnership with his brother, the defendant Blake Touchstone, and the new firm began business as real estate brokers in the same offices as those theretofore occupied by the old firm.

The controversy between the parties .hereto grows out of the construction to be given to paragraph 8 of the dissolution agreement which reads, in so far as it affects our present purpose, as follows:

“8. It is expressly agreed that the parties hereto, have prior to the date hereof, expended a great deal of time and effort in preliminary negotiations on the proposed transactions hereinafter referred to, and that said parties agree, that if and in the event, within two years from the date hereof, any of the following transactions are consummated, all commissions accruing therefrom, shall be distributed as hereinafter specified, when and as said commissions are paid. In so far as this agreement is concerned, a transaction shall be deemed to have been consummated when a prospective purchaser, seller, lessor or lessee has been produced who is ready, able and willing to and thereafter does consummate a transaction upon terms acceptable to the clients involved in said proposed transactions. The obligations to divide said commissions shall extend to transactions consummated by either of the parties hereto, directly or indirectly or by any person employed by or associated with either of said parties.
“ (a) If a lease is obtained for the W. T. Grant Company on any location on Broadway, between Third Street on the North and Tenth Street on the South, in Los Angeles, California, forty-five (45%) per cent of the gross commission received by such of the parties hereto as may receive or be entitled to receive such commission for obtaining said lease, shall be paid to the other when and as such commission is received.
“(f) If a transaction is consummated for a hotel in Hollywood, San Diego, Fresno, Oakland, Bakersfield, Los Angeles or San Francisco, in California, or Portland, in Oregon, forty-five (45%) per cent of the gross commission received by such of the parties hereto as may receive or be entitled to *432 receive such commission for negotiating said transactions, shall be paid to the other, when and as such commission is received. ’ ’

This agreement was dated October 1, 1931, and within two years thereafter the lease referred to in subdivision (a) was obtained for the W. T. Grant Company at the location mentioned in said subdivision, on which a commission in the sum of $25,000 was paid. There was associated with defendants in obtaining said lease the firm of Coldwell, Cornwall & Banker, and the commission was divided one-half to said firm and one-half to defendants. The commission was not paid in cash but by the execution of three promissory notes executed by the lessors named in said lease, one in favor of Coldwell, Cornwall & Banker in the sum of $12,500, one in favor of defendant Weatherford W. Touchstone for the sum of $8,333.33, and one in favor of defendant Blake Touchstone in the sum of $4,166.67.

Within the two-year period specified in said agreement of dissolution there was also consummated through the efforts of defendants a transaction for the Mayflower Hotel in the city of Los Angeles, which transaction the parties hereto admit is covered and controlled by subdivision (f) of paragraph 8 of said agreement of dissolution. In this transaction the commission was $5,000, and the necessary expense incurred in connection with said transaction was the sum of $1287.50, leaving the sum of $3,712.50 as the net commission received by defendants in consummating said transaction. This sum was paid to defendants in the following proportions, one-third thereof, or the sum of $1237.50, to the defendant Weatherford W. Touchstone, and two-thirds thereof, or the sum of $2,475, to the defendant Blake Touchstone.

Plaintiff contends that he is entitled to 45 per cent of the $12,500 notes received by defendants for services rendered in obtaining the W. T. Grant Company lease, and 45 per cent of $3,712.50, the net commission received by defendants in the transaction for the Mayflower Hotel. On the other hand, the defendants contend that plaintiff is entitled only to 45 per cent of what the defendant Weather-ford W. Touchstone himself received as commissions in consummating the two transactions involving the lease to W. T. Grant Company and the Mayflower Hotel, and that plain *433 tiff has no interest in or right to any part of the commission which was paid to defendant Blake Touchstone. The case in the superior court was tried by the court without a jury, and resulted in findings and judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against both the defendants. The defendants have appealed, and, in support of their contentions above noted and of their appeal, rely upon the provisions of section 8 of the agreement of dissolution quoted above. The defendants concede that the trial court construed this section of the agreement against them, but contend that the court erred in its construction of the agreement for the reason that this section of the agreement is clear and unambiguous and definitely limits the obligation of the defendant Weatherford W. Touchstone to account to plaintiff for 45 per cent of the amount actually received by said defendant as commissions for consummating said transactions. It is the position of said defendant, as well as his codefendant Blake Touchstone that defendant Weatherford W. Touchstone, in consummating said transaction, could associate with himself his partner, Blake Touchstone, or any other real estate agency, and pay to the person or firm so associated any part of said commission agreed upon between them, and that defendant Weatherford W. Touchstone would only be accountable to the plaintiff for 45 per cent of the commission, after deducting that part of said commission paid to the real estate broker associated in said transaction. Defendants rely in support of their aforesaid contentions upon the provision of said agreement of dissolution which is substantially the same in both subdivision (a) and subdivision (f) of said section 8, and which provision specifies as the basis of the division of commissions in consummating said transaction that “forty-five (45%) per cent of the gross commission received by such of the parties hereto as may receive or be entitled to receive such commission for obtaining said lease (or negotiating said transaction) shall be paid to the other when and as such commissions shall be received”.

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Bluebook (online)
60 P.2d 986, 7 Cal. 2d 429, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneny-v-touchstone-cal-1936.