McShane v. Quillin

277 P. 554, 47 Idaho 542, 1929 Ida. LEXIS 157
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1929
DocketNo. 5068.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 277 P. 554 (McShane v. Quillin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McShane v. Quillin, 277 P. 554, 47 Idaho 542, 1929 Ida. LEXIS 157 (Idaho 1929).

Opinion

*545 GIYENS, J.

Respondent recovered judgment against appellants, sued as her agents in the management, rental and disposition of her real property on four causes of action. The first was brought to recover $5,000 because, as alleged, appellants, as respondent’s agents, had fraudulently rented over a period of fifty months to their unlawful gain, the property in question for that much less than its true rental value.

The second cause of action was for $2,221.32, the unaccounted for and unpaid balance of the proceeds of a loan secured by appellants for respondent on her property.

*546 In the third cause of action, respondent seeks to recover $1,000 paid appellants as a part payment on commissions which they claimed to be due for negotiating the sale of the premises in question.

The fourth cause of action was based on alleged fraudulently retained rents and profits of $2,052.09.

The first and second causes, as against a general demurrer, sufficiently alleged fraud and that respondent did not learn of the fraud until within three years, the statutory period, of the time suit was brought.

Appellants demurred to the third cause of action on the same grounds, in general, as to the first and second, and appellant, P. J. Quillin, in addition, on the ground that he was improperly joined, the complaint failing to show that he was implicated in the fraudulent representations therein alleged to have been made by Mrs. Quillin, the other appellant. There is no merit in this last contention. If P. J. Quillin had knowledge of these alleged fraudulent representations made by the other appellant and if with this knowledge he ratified her acts and participated in any benefits that may have accrued from them, he would be equally liable with Mrs. Quillin for the alleged fraud. (27 C. J. 11.)

It is the further contention of appellants that this third cause did not state sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action. It alleged, in substance, that Mrs. Quillin, as agent for ITyman, went to the home of respondent in California and so misrepresented the value of the property in question that respondent agreed to sell it for $7,000 less than its true value; and secondly, that after the sale, respondent, believing herself liable for the five per cent commission on the sale price of $28,000, paid $1,000 to appellants on account.

While the cause of action could perhaps be couched in more explicit terms, recovery seems to be sought on two grounds; first, because of the breach of trust and lack of good faith on the part of appellants, and secondly, because, even assuming their good faith, they were not entitled to *547 any commission, not holding a broker’s license as required by 1921 Sess. Laws, chap. 184, p. 378.

That the allegations going to the first point, if sustained, would state a cause of action can hardly be questioned. There is a fiduciary relationship between a real estate broker and his client which requires the utmost good faith (Clopton v. Meeves, 24 Ida. 293, 133 Pac. 907), and in the absence of good faith the broker is not entitled to recover anything for his services. (Clopton v. Meeves, supra; Jeffries v. Robbins, 66 Kan. 427, 71 Pac. 852; 9 C. J. 568-570.)

A consideration of the second point raises the question of the rights of the parties to an illegal contract. No principle in law, perhaps, is better settled than that, which, with certain exceptions, refuses redress to either party to an illegal contract, although this principle has been severely criticised. (Wigmore, 25 Amer. L. Rev. 712, n.) On first blush, it might appear that the facts in this case fall within one of the well-recognized exceptions to this rule, namely, that where the parties are not in pari delicto, the innocent party may recover. This is particularly true where the prohibition of the statute, as in the case before us, is aimed at the act of the defendant and not at that of the plaintiff. (Stansfield v. Kunz, 62 Kan. 797, 64 Pac. 614.) But a closer examination of the principles underlying the cases falling within this exception convinces us that they have no application to the case at bar. It would appear that in such cases recovery is permitted on the principles of the law of quasi contracts. (Woodward on the Law of Quasi Contracts, chap. 8, p. 210.)

The essence of a qisasi-contractual obligation lies in the fact that the defendant has received a benefit which it would be inequitable for him to retain. This was clearly pointed out by Lord Mansfield in the first case recognizing the doctrine of quasi contracts. “If the defendant,” he said, “be under an obligation, from the ties of natural justice, to refund, the law implies a debt, and gives this action, founded in the equity of the plaintiff’s case, as it were, upon a con *548 tract (‘quasi ex contractu’ as the Roman law expresses it). .... This kind of equitable action to recover back money, which ought not in justice to be kept, is very beneficial and therefore much encouraged. It lies only for money which, ex aequo et bono, the defendant ought to refund; it does not lie for money paid by the plaintiff which is claimed of him as payable in point of honor and honesty, although it could not have been recovered from him by any course of law, — as in payment of a debt barred by the statute of limitations, or contracted during his infancy, or to the extent of principal and legal interest upon a usurious contract, or, for money fairly lost at play; because in all these cases the defendant may retain it with a safe conscience, though by positive law he was barred from recovering.” (Moses v. Macferlan (1760), 2 Burr. 1005.)

But where, as here, assuming appellants’ good faith, the benefit received by them, namely the commission of $1,000, had been fairly earned, even though the statute barred its recovery, its retention was not inequitable and they were under no gttasi-contractual obligation to return it. Where the consideration has been paid and the contract executed and the benefit conferred on the defendant was in justice and good faith due, we believe there is no sound principle by which plaintiff can recover. (Stansfield v. Kunz, supra; Deaton v. Lawson, 40 Wash. 486, 111 Am. St. 922, 82 Pac. 879, 2 L. R. A., N. S., 392.)

The facts in McDuffee v. Hayden Coeur d’Alene Irr. Co., 25 Ida. 370, 138 Pac. 503, can be readily distinguished. There the plaintiff, who had entered into a contract with an irrigation company for the purchase of certain lands and water rights, acquired no title because the contract was expressly made void by statute. Obviously, it would have been inequitable to permit the defendant company to retain the money paid on the contract, the plaintiff having received nothing under the contract.

The third count, therefore, stated a cause of action. (Casady v. Scott, 40 Ida. 137, 237 Pac. 415; Gould v. Hill, 43 Ida. 93, 251 Pac. 167; Rowland v. Demming Exploration *549 Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
277 P. 554, 47 Idaho 542, 1929 Ida. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcshane-v-quillin-idaho-1929.