Potts v. Thompson
This text of 161 A.2d 284 (Potts v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
PAULA VON TILL POTTS, D/B/A SKILLMAN AND SKILLMAN, REALTORS, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
v.
WILLIAM BRYCE THOMPSON, IV, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*425 Before Judges PRICE, GAULKIN and FOLEY.
*426 Mr. Theodore D. Vreeland argued the cause for the plaintiff-respondent.
Mr. John Francis Cannon argued the cause for the defendant-appellant.
The opinion of the court was delivered by GAULKIN, J.A.D.
Defendant appeals from a judgment of the Law Division in favor of the plaintiff in an action for real estate broker's commission.
Defendant (himself a real estate salesman) and his mother owned a house in Princeton. Defendant circularized plaintiff and other brokers offering the property for sale for $34,000 with a commission of 5%. In addition, defendant himself advertised the property for sale in newspapers.
Mildred C. Light, an employee of plaintiff, showed the property to Dr. and Mrs. Rosenhaupt. They offered $31,000, "contingent on contractor's estimate for necessary improvements," which defendant rejected.
On May 26 one Lear answered an advertisement, which defendant had placed in the New York Times, and inspected the premises. On May 27 defendant telephoned Mrs. Light and told her that Lear had offered $31,000 and asked her to see what the Rosenhaupts planned to do and to see whether she could "get the Rosenhaupts up." Early on May 28 defendant called Mrs. Light and told her that Lear was willing to pay $32,000 and inquired whether the Rosenhaupts would pay $34,000. She asked for time to communicate with them, saying she thought she would be able to get $34,000. At 10:12 A.M. Mrs. Light telephoned Mrs. Rosenhaupt and told her that if she wanted the house she "would have to come up with $34,000 and come up with it fast." However, in a conversation between defendant and Lear that commenced at 10:38 A.M. Lear offered $33,000 and defendant agreed to take it. At 10:50 A.M. Mrs. Rosenhaupt secured her husband's permission to bid $34,000 and notified Mrs. *427 Light in a telephone conversation which began at 11:05 A.M. Immediately thereafter Mrs. Light called defendant, who then told her that he and Lear had already agreed upon a sale for $33,000.
Defendant mailed a contract at 11:25 A.M. to Lear in New York. At 12:33 P.M. the $3,300 deposit agreed upon by Lear in the telephone conversation arrived in Princeton by telegraph. About 2 P.M. plaintiff prepared a contract to purchase defendant's property, obtained the signature of the Rosenhaupts, and thereafter tendered it with a deposit check of $3,400 to defendant, but the tender was refused. It is interesting, though not material, to note that thereafter Lear assigned his contract to the Rosenhaupts and the Rosenhaupts took title.
Plaintiff then instituted this action, which defendant defended upon the ground that prior to receipt of the Rosenhaupt offer he had sold the property to Lear. Plaintiff countered with the proposition that since the agreement with Lear had not been reduced to writing until after defendant knew of the Rosenhaupt offer, plaintiff was entitled to the commission. The court so held.
Plaintiff concedes that if a sale of the real estate is made by the owner to his own purchaser and there is not sufficient time between the sale by the owner and the broker's production of a buyer to notify the broker of the prior sale, then a broker situated as plaintiff is here is not entitled to any commission. 1 Corbin on Contracts §§ 50, 67 (1950); Romine v. Greene, 13 N.J. Super. 261, 265 (App. Div. 1951); see also Restatement, Agency 2d § 106; § 435, comment (c); § 449; § 453, comment (d); cf. Rose v. Minis, 41 N.J. Super. 538, 543 (App. Div. 1956). Here it is apparent that the Thompson-Lear sale was "made so short a time before the broker's performance that reasonable opportunity to notify the broker was not afforded under the circumstances." Romine, supra, 13 N.J. Super., at page 265.
Plaintiff's position appears to be that there was no "sale" here by defendant, within the meaning of this rule, because *428 defendant had not yet entered into a written agreement for sale when plaintiff told him the Rosenhaupts would pay $34,000. The trial court agreed with the proposition that a written contract is essential, and it was upon this basis that judgment was entered in plaintiff's favor.
Romine v. Greene, supra, does contain language which justifies the position taken by the plaintiff and by the trial court. In that case the court said (13 N.J. Super., at page 265; emphasis ours):
"However, a broker who performs his undertaking cannot be deprived of his commission merely because the owner is engaged at the time in negotiations for sale to a purchaser of his own procuring, even though such negotiations ripen into an actual sale at a later time. A mere preliminary discussion between the owner and a prospective purchaser, or a tentative agreement looking to a sale, or an oral agreement for a sale, is not sufficient; there must be a binding agreement for the sale. Hartig v. Schrader, 190 Ky. 511, 227 S.W. 815 (Ct. of App. Ky. 1921); Hawks v. Moore, 27 Ga. App. 555, 109 S.E. 807 (Ct. of App. Ga. 1921).
The formal written contract was executed * * * two days after performance by the broker, and it constitutes no bar to the plaintiff's right to recover his commission. * * * Since this plaintiff had no notification of a sale prior to his performance, the defendant * * * is liable for the commission unless he can prove a binding agreement for sale made so short a time before the broker's performance that reasonable opportunity to notify the broker was not afforded under the circumstances."
An examination of the record in the Romine case indicates that the italicized words "or an oral agreement for a sale" may have been dictum. It appears that when Romine produced his buyer Mrs. Greene's negotiations may have proceeded only to the point where they amounted to no more than "[a] mere preliminary discussion between the owner and a prospective purchaser, or a tentative agreement looking to a sale * * *." (Romine, at page 265.) If so, this was enough to support the result reached in Romine, and the further statement in the opinion that "an oral agreement for a sale, is not sufficient; there must be a binding agreement for the sale," was unnecessary.
*429 We see no basis in law or in reason for making a distinction as to what constitutes a "sale" by an owner and a "sale" by one of several competing brokers, especially when, as here, the broker knows the owner himself to be a real estate salesman actively trying to sell the property. As long ago as 1869 our Supreme Court said, in the much cited case of Vreeland v. Vetterlein, 33 N.J.L. 247, 249 (Sup. Ct.
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161 A.2d 284, 61 N.J. Super. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-thompson-njsuperctappdiv-1960.