Paul M. Schreibman, Paul M. Schreibman v. L. I. Combs & Sons, Inc., L. I. Combs, Jr., and Village Shopping Center, Inc., an Indiana Corporation

337 F.2d 410
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 16, 1964
Docket14557
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 337 F.2d 410 (Paul M. Schreibman, Paul M. Schreibman v. L. I. Combs & Sons, Inc., L. I. Combs, Jr., and Village Shopping Center, Inc., an Indiana Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul M. Schreibman, Paul M. Schreibman v. L. I. Combs & Sons, Inc., L. I. Combs, Jr., and Village Shopping Center, Inc., an Indiana Corporation, 337 F.2d 410 (7th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

KILEY, Circuit Judge.

The issue in this diversity suit of first impression is whether a real estate brother, licensed in New York, is precluded from recovering a commission in Indiana for services rendered there under a listing contract made there, because he had ■no reciprocal Indiana license when the ■ contract was made or when he performed .acts as a broker under the contract. The district court, without a jury, found for ■defendant at the close of plaintiff’s case .and entered judgment against plaintiff. 1 We think this was error.

Early in April, 1959, plaintiff Schreib■man, a real estate broker licensed in New York and employed in the business of ■selling large commercial properties, received a letter from defendant Combs, -president of defendant Village Shopping ■Center, Inc., about the possibility of a ■sale of defendants’ shopping center near •Gary, Indiana. Thereafter, plaintiff and ■Combs met, the terms of the sale were ■discussed, and the two men inspected the •center. On July 7, plaintiff requested an .application for an Indiana real estate broker’s license. The next day Schreibman and defendants entered into a listing contract. Thereafter, Babin, a prospective purchaser procured by plaintiff, •offered to buy the center for the listed -price. Documents incorporating the terms agreed upon were prepared by Ba-bin, an attorney, and on August 4, 1959, they were presented to the sellers’ attorney. A number of changes and revisions were agreed upon and Babin amended the documents accordingly. They were sent to Combs and the attorney on August 6. On August 10, plaintiff received his Indiana license. On August 19, Babin received a letter from Combs stating that the sellers did not want to sell at that time. Babin testified that he “closed” his file on the matter.

Plaintiff continued his efforts to bring about a sale. In March, 1960, Babin submitted another offer on different prices and terms and again the terms were agreed upon and Babin prepared the documents. A closing date was set for April 12, 1960, but the sellers refused to complete the sale.

The district court concluded that plaintiff had acted as a real estate broker without an Indiana license and was guilty of violating the criminal provision, § 63-2407, 2 of the Indiana Real Estate Licensing Act, which violation precluded recovery of his commission under § 63-2408 3 of the Act; and that the latter statute merely added another element to the broker’s burden of proof, viz., the possession of an Indiana license when the cause of action “arose.”

The district court relied for its conclusion on Hunter v. Cunning, 176 Or. 250, 154 P.2d 562 (1944), rehearing denied, 176 Or. 250, 157 P.2d 510 (1945). But the holding in that case was that the plaintiff broker was not licensed *412 until after the date on which his cause of action arose, if at all. The statement of that court that the broker was precluded from recovery because of his violation of the criminal provision of the Oregon licensing act was dictum.

While, as the district court stated, it may be true as a general proposition of Indiana law that a person should not be permitted to profit from his own illegal acts, we are here concerned with a particular statute and the plaintiff’s right of recovery must be judged under that statute. We disagree with the district court’s conclusion for the reasons given hereafter.

The purpose of the Indiana Real Estate Licensing Act is to protect its citizens from possible loss at the hands of incompetent or unscrupulous persons acting as brokers. A licensing commission is established to administer tests to determine whether applicants are qualified to act as brokers and to issue licenses to those found to be qualified. 4 Provision is also made for issuance of licenses without examination to licensed non-resident brokers at the discretion of the commission. 5 Section 63-2408 here in question provides that one who seeks to recover a commission must allege and prove that he was a licensed broker “at the time the cause of action arose.” In order to effectuate the purpose of the Act it has been provided that only licensed persons may perform any acts as real estate brokers and criminal penalties are imposed, under § 63-2407, upon those who violate this provision.

The district court’s conclusion that acts in violation of § 63-2407 preclude recovery of any commission in connection with the illegal acts renders the phrase “at the time the cause of action arose” in § 63-2408 meaningless, for under this interpretation if a broker has engaged in any of the acts enumerated in the statute prior to obtaining a license, the entire transaction is tainted with illegality and he will not be permitted to recover, no matter when his cause of action arose. This is demonstrated by the fact that the district court decided the case below without making any finding as to when plaintiff’s cause of action arose. The Oregon court, recognizing this dilemma in Hunter, sought to escape the dilemma by interpreting the word “arose” in the similar Oregon statute to refer to all of the acts of the broker which finally culminated in a cause of action, as if the cause of action were arising over a period of time.

We have found no precedent in Indiana or in any other jurisdiction for such an interpretation of the word “arose,” nor has any been cited to us in the briefs, with the exception of the Hunter case, and Irons Investment Co. v. Richardson, 184 Wash. 118, 50 P.2d 42 (1935), in both of which the interpretation followed by the district court, in the case before us, was dictum, since in Hunter and in Richardson the court found that the broker was not licensed until after the date on which the last act necessary to the arising or accrual of his cause of action had taken place.

“Arose,” in its usual and ordinary meaning, denotes past completed action, while the usual and ordinary means of expressing past continuing action would be “was arising.” In framing § 63-2408 the Indiana legislature chose the word “arose,” and in the absence of some established technical meaning of the term in Indiana law, it should be read by the courts in its ordinary sense, unless the clear intent of the statute requires otherwise.

We think that this interpretation of the word “arose” signifies the substantive character of § 63-2408 conferring on brokers, having an Indiana license when their cause of action arose, a right of recovery. This view is supported by the provisions of Indiana’s § 63-2407. Under this section each act is regarded as a separate criminal offense, *413 punishable by a fine “to which shall be added the amount of any real estate commission paid or earned on such violation * -x- *_» The only situation in which the forfeiture provision would be applicable would be where the broker has completed every act required to give him a right to his commission, i. e., where his cause of action has arisen.

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Bluebook (online)
337 F.2d 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-m-schreibman-paul-m-schreibman-v-l-i-combs-sons-inc-l-i-ca7-1964.