Morrow v. Barger

737 P.2d 1153, 103 Nev. 247, 1987 Nev. LEXIS 1629
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1987
Docket17013
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 737 P.2d 1153 (Morrow v. Barger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrow v. Barger, 737 P.2d 1153, 103 Nev. 247, 1987 Nev. LEXIS 1629 (Neb. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

Per Curiam:

I. Claire Morrow claims she is entitled to a real estate broker’s *249 commission pursuant to a written listing agreement, an oral listing agreement or an implied listing agreement for the sale of the ranch of Fay and Anne Barger. The district court granted the Bargers’ motion for summary judgment concluding as a matter of law that no employment agreement existed and that Claire Morrow was not the procuring cause of the sale.

The Facts

For several years prior to 1979, Fay Barger and Anne Barger had been attempting to sell their Nevada ranch through several diiferent brokers. On March 7, 1979, the Bargers signed a written listing agreement with Claire Morrow, a licensed real estate broker. The 1979 agreement, which was of indefinite duration, is signed by the Bargers and states:

We authorize Bob and Claire Morrow of Ruby Mountain Real Estate to sell the ranch at the terms listed above and if a sale is closed to any buyer registered with us in writing, we will pay Ruby Mountain Real Estate a brokerage fee of 5 % of the sale price at close of escrow.

Between the spring of 1979 and the spring of 1981, Robert (“Bob”) Morrow, salesman, agent, and husband of Claire Morrow, contacted John Carpenter, Max Spratling, and Burke Peterson. Bob Morrow gave Spratling some maps of the Barger ranch, explained the grazing rights and showed him most of the ranch including the cattle. Bob Morrow informed Carpenter of Sprat-ling’s interest and provided Carpenter with a copy of the Morrows’ investigations into water rights, deeded acres, BLM grazing rights, AUM permits, farm machinery, irrigation and equipment relating to the Barger ranch. Claire Morrow registered Peterson, Carpenter, and Spratling as buyers with the Bargers under the 1979 written listing agreement. An offer, allegedly from Peterson and Spratling, was prepared by Claire Morrow but never signed by any party nor accepted by the Bargers.

On December 5, 1980, the Morrows and the Bargers executed another listing agreement. This listing expired on April 15, 1981; a sixty-day grace period ended on June 15, 1981. No offers were presented to the Bargers as a result of the 1980 listing agreement.

When the 1980 listing expired, the Bargers declined to execute another written listing agreement with the Morrows. The Morrows claim that Fay Barger orally asked them to continue their efforts to sell the ranch. The Bargers decided to farm the property that summer of 1981. When Bob Morrow contacted the Bargers again in October of 1981, Fay Barger indicated that he was working on a deal to sell the ranch with Carpenter. After this point in time, the Morrows claim that they were excluded from the deal.

*250 On March 5, 1982, the Bargers sold their ranch in a complex series of transactions which involved eight conveyances. The parties to the transaction involved, at diiferent stages, Peterson, Spratling, Carpenter, and Kennecott Copper Corporation of Utah. Kennecott traded the interest it acquired in the Barger ranch to the Spratlings for land owned by them in Utah. Claire Morrow asserts that the sale reflects the transaction which she and Bob Morrow helped promote between the Bargers and Carpenter, Peterson and Spratling.

Discussion

NRCP 56(c) provides that summary judgment shall be rendered if “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” On appeal, all evidence favorable to plaintiff must be accepted as true. Crockett v. Sahara Realty Corp., 95 Nev. 197, 591 P.2d 1135 (1979).

Before a real estate agent is entitled to a commission, the real estate agent must prove (1) that an employment contract existed and (2) that he or she is the procuring cause of the sale. Shell Oil Company v. Ed Hoppe Realty, Inc., 91 Nev. 576, 580, 540 P.2d 107, 109-10 (1975). Claire Morrow makes three alternative claims that an employment agreement did exist at the time of the sale of the Barger ranch. She claims an employment agreement existed in the form of a written listing agreement, oral listing agreement, or implied listing agreement.

The district court found that the 1979 written listing agreement did not create a valid “exclusive” listing agreement pursuant to NRS 645.320 because that contract did not contain a termination date. 1 The district court did not address the validity of the 1979 written listing agreement as a “non-exclusive” listing agreement. 2 Claire Morrow argued in her opposition to summary judgment that the 1979 listing agreement could be an enforceable contract if viewed as a “non-exclusive” listing agreement.

*251 The testimony in the depositions supports a conclusion that the 1979 listing agreement was not intended to be an “exclusive” listing agreement. Fay Barger claims he only entered into open listing agreements with the myriad of brokers who tried to sell the Barger ranch. Claire Morrow’s description of the 1979 written listing agreement reveals that she did not intend the 1979 written listing agreement to be “exclusive.” Claire Morrow believed that if she registered a buyer under the 1979 listing agreement and continued to work with that buyer, she would receive a commission for those buyers. She believed that this arrangement existed until either she or the Bargers canceled the agreement. Claire Morrow did not state that she believed that she was the only agent who could sell the property.

Claire Morrow’s position is that the 1980 written listing agreement did not supersede the 1979 written listing agreement. Claire Morrow asserts that the 1980 written listing agreement was executed in order to pin down the Bargers to a lower price for any newly registered buyers which she submitted during the period from December 5, 1980 until April 15, 1981. She claims that the 1979 written listing agreement was not terminated by either party. Whether the 1979 listing agreement was terminated by the 1980 listing agreement is a question of fact.

Claire asserts that the 1979 written listing agreement was enforceable in March 1982, when the ranch was sold. When the 1980 written listing agreement ended and the Bargers declined to enter into another written listing agreement, Claire claims that the Bargers orally encouraged the Morrows to continue pursuing the sale of the ranch. The meaning and significance of this alleged oral arrangement upon the 1979 listing agreement is a question of fact.

If the evidence in favor of the Morrows is viewed as true, then a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether the 1979 written listing agreement was in effect at the time of the 1982 sale.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
737 P.2d 1153, 103 Nev. 247, 1987 Nev. LEXIS 1629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrow-v-barger-nev-1987.