Murphy v. Linskey

109 A. 412, 94 Conn. 475, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 5, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 109 A. 412 (Murphy v. Linskey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Linskey, 109 A. 412, 94 Conn. 475, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 21 (Colo. 1920).

Opinion

Prentice, C. J.

The jury were amply justified by undisputed evidence in finding, as their verdict imports that they did, that the plaintiff, a real-estate broker, entered into a contract of employment, not exclusive, with the defendant, whereby he was authorized to sell the property in question for $75,000 and promised a commission of two per cent were he successful in effecting a sale. They were likewise justified in finding that the plaintiff, immediately following this employment, instituted efforts looking to the purchase of the property by one whom he regarded as a promising prospective purchaser. The plaintiff’s testimony and that of those whom he approached in the prosecution of these efforts are in irreconcilable conflict with respect to what transpired in the interviews between them, but whatever was then said or done, the situation down to the early days of August, 1917, remained, as all who testified agreed, that the defendant continued firm in his asking price of $75,000; that no offer of purchase of any kind had been made; and that no word holding out hope of a possible future offer was ever uttered, beyond a statement by one of the prospective buyer’s agents, testified to by the plaintiff and denied by the agent, that if the defendant would consider an offer of *477 $60,000, he, the agent, would see if he could get his people to make it. At this point the plaintiff’s efforts and all participation by him in negotiations looking to the consummation of a sale ceased. He so testified, and, further, that he was wholly ignorant of subsequent proceedings in the matter until he read in a newspaper that the property had been conveyed to the agent of the prospective purchaser last referred to. This information proved to be accurate, and subsequent inquiries disclosed that the conveyance was made on August 22d, 1917, that the price received by the defendant was $70,000,, and that the conveyance was taken in the name of the agent for his principal.

From this outline of the salient facts of the case, in full accord in all its essential features with the plaintiff’s testimony, it is apparent that he could not establish his claim to a commission upon the ground that the sale had been brought to a successful conclusion by his own unaided efforts. Particularly is this true when the testimony reveals the coming upon the scene of another broker and his active participation in the negotiations for and in the consummation of the bargain made and executed. If the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment for his commission, it must have been for the reason that he had shown that he was, notwithstanding the presence and activity of the last-named intermediary, the procuring cause of the sale. Hoadley v. Savings Bank of Danbury, 71 Conn. 599, 608, 42 Atl. 667.

To entitle a real-estate broker to claim from his principal a commission for the sale of the latter’s real estate, he must, in the absence of an express contract to a different effect, show that he procured a purchaser ready, willing and able to buy upon terms prescribed or accepted by its owner. Commander v. Lawler, 94 Conn. 125, 126, 108 Atl. 537; Ritch v. Robertson, 93 *478 Conn. 459, 463, 106 Atl. 509; Butler v. Ouwelant, 90 Conn. 434, 438, 97 Atl. 310.

Where two or more brokers without exclusive authority to sell, play some part in a transaction of sale, each contributing something to bring about the resulting sale, each is not entitled to a commission or to share in the commission paid. Some one of them is entitled to it, and he the one who deserves to be regarded as the procuring cause of the sale by reason of his efforts having been an efficient proximate cause in its accomplishment, or, as otherwise expressed, the “predominating efficient cause” of such accomplishment. Whitcomb v. Bacon, 170 Mass. 479, 481, 49 N. E. 742; Votaw v. McKeever, 76 Kan. 870, 875, 92 Pac. 1120.

The plaintiff appears to have succeeded in establishing that he was employed by the defendant to effect a sale of the property, that he first approached the ultimate buyer through the latter’s agents, and thus brought him into the field as a possible purchaser, and that a sale to him upon terms satisfactory to the owner was in fact consummated. These are facts deserving of consideration in passing upon his claim to a commission, but they are by no means decisive of his right to it as being the procuring cause of the sale. That cause may be found elsewhere. Rosenfield v. Wall, 94 Conn. 418, 109 Atl. 409. “A broker who does not have the exclusive sale of real estate does not become entitled to a commission merely by bringing the property to the attention of the person who finally buys it, but he must also show that his services were the efficient or effective means of bringing about the actual sale.” Whitcomb v. Bacon, 170 Mass. 479, 481, 49 N. E. 742. “The finding of a prospective purchaser is not the only service of the broker. A large part of his .effort, perhaps the greater part, is in inducing either the purchaser to meet the seller’s terms and price, or *479 the seller to make concessions in the terms to meet the purchaser’s wishes.” Rosenfteld v. Wall, 94 Conn. 418, 109 Atl. 409.

Between the situation as it was on the first days of August, when the plaintiff’s participation in the negotiations ceased, and as it became on August 22d, when terms of sale were agreed upon and the sale consummated, there is a wide chasm which has to be bridged if the plaintiff is to maintain his claim to having been the efficient cause of the sale; and it has to be bridged in such a way that it may satisfactorily appear that the influence of the plaintiff and his efforts were carried over, into and through the negotiations and action of others and into the final outcome so potently and predominately as to entitle him, notwithstanding that he had no personal connection with what was then said and done, to be regarded as the procuring cause of the sale for 170,000 which somehow was brought about.

Was it so bridged, and were the plaintiff’s efforts and accomplishments antedating his cessation of effort so closely connected with the consummation of the sale that was later made, or so influential in bringing about that result, as to deserve to be regarded as the procuring cause of it? That question, fundamental to the plaintiff’s case, presented an issue of fact for the jury, and went to them as such. As the verdict necessarily indicates, it was determined in the affirmative, and that determination must stand, if it is one which could reasonably have been arrived at upon the evidence. Seward v. Seward & Son Co., 91 Conn. 190, 193, 99 Atl. 887; Duncan v. Kearney, 72 Conn. 585, 586, 45 Atl. 358; Hoadley v. Savings Bank of Danbury, 71 Conn. 599, 608, 42 Atl. 667.

An examination of the evidence discloses no testimony touching the events of the intervening time *480

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Bluebook (online)
109 A. 412, 94 Conn. 475, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-linskey-conn-1920.