Preston v. McClelland

196 Iowa 13
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 Iowa 13 (Preston v. McClelland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preston v. McClelland, 196 Iowa 13 (iowa 1923).

Opinion

Preston, C. J.

1. The defendant listed his property with different agents, and claimed that the listing with plaintiff was not exclusive, and that he had a right to sell the property which he did to or through other realtors. The deed was made directly to E. R. Moore, who is the party whom plaintiff claims to have produced as a purchaser of the property. This fact, however, was not known or communicated to the defendant by plaintiff or anyone else until after the conveyance to Moore. The terms of the sale by defendant to Moore were not the same as the terms which plaintiff claims to have given Moore. Thus far, we take it from the record, there is no dispute between counsel. There are some other matters referred to later, about which there is no dispute in the testimony.

The issues, substantially as stated by the parties in their briefs, are, on behalf of plaintiff, that he was a broker, engaged in selling real estate for commissions, and that, in the summer of 1920, defendant .verbally employed him to find a purchaser at a price and on terms satisfactory to the defendant. He agreed to pay the customary commission, which would amount to $805. About June, 1921, plaintiff found and procured a purchaser in the person of E. R. Moore, who was ready, able, and willing to pay $22,000 for the property, — $12,000 cash, on delivery of the deed and abstract, and $10,000 in 5 years, at 6 per cent, secured by mortgage. It is alleged that plaintiff reported said offer to defendant, who verbally accepted the same, and promised to make conveyance and pay the commission; and that plaintiff reported the acceptance to Moore, who was at all times ready, able, and willing to buy on said terms; that defendant afterwards sold, or caused the premises to be conveyed, to said E. R. Moore. Wherefore, plaintiff claims that his commission is due. Defendant admits the employment, and that plaintiff reported a prospective buyer on the terms alleged in the petition, but' alleges that defendant and his mother and sister were co-owners of the real estate, and that, when plaintiff submitted the offer, he did not disclose the identity of the prospective purchaser, and was told that the offer would be submitted to the co-owners, [15]*15which offer was rejected by them; that thereafter, defendant received an offer of $22,000 cash from M. V. Bolton, which offer was accepted; and that a deed was thereafter, at the instance of Bolton, executed to Moore.

As stated by the defendant, the issues were that plaintiff alleged the commission to be due; that plaintiff had submitted an offer less than the list price, from an unnamied and undisclosed purchaser, which offer was refused, and that defendant himself had sold the property at list price; that, at the request of the buyer, defendant conveyed directly to Moore, without notice or knowledge that Moore was plaintiff’s prospective buyer; that plaintiff at no time so notified defendant; that plaintiff had not procured and produced to defendant a buyer ready, able, and willing to buy the premises at the designated price.

It is said by appellant that, in addition to the issues thus made by the pleadings, the court permitted plaintiff, over objection, to introduce in evidence further issues: First, that defendant had waived production by plaintiff of his alleged purchaser; and second, that defendant acquiesced in plaintiff’s withholding -the name, and identity of his alleged purchaser, and that defendant had consented to the nonproduetion by plaintiff of his alleged purchaser; and that, in response to such new issues, defendant, by motion to direct verdict, by offered instructions, by objections to evidence, and so on, raised the further propositions, (1) that plaintiff had reported an offer other than the list price; (2) that the listing was not exclusive, and that defendant had a right to sell to one not known to have been produced by plaintiff; (3) that plaintiff had refused to disclose the identity of his purchaser, and that defendant had no knowledge that Moore was plaintiff’s prospective buyer; (4) that plaintiff did not procure a purchaser ready, able, and willing to buy at the price and terms fixed, and did not produce such purchaser to defendant, and did not afford defendant an opportunity to enter into a binding contract with said prospective purchaser, whereby defendant might have an enforcible contract for the sale; and (5) that the plaintiff was guilty of breach of faith and fidelity, barring and precluding all right to commission, in that, while plaintiff was seeking agency from [16]*16the defendant, he was secretly acting for Moore, and serving Moore’s interests, and willfully and intentionally did not communicate to the defendant the best offer that Moore had authorized the plaintiff to make, and did not disclose Moore’s identity, — and this at Moore’s request and by Moore’s direction. Amplifying somewhat the fifth proposition just stated, defendant says, and properly presented the proposition thus: Plaintiff is not entitled to recover, for the reason that, while plaintiff assumed to act as agent for defendant for a commission, and to give defendant the best effort and skill to advance defendant’s interests, the plaintiff was, secretly and in breach of faith and fidelity to defendant, acting as agent for Moore, whose interests were antagonistic to the interests of defendant; and that plaintiff did not, at the direction and request of Moore, disclose to defendant, as he was in duty bound to do, that it was Moore, the owner of the adjoining property, who was his prospective buyer, and did not disclose to the defendant, as he was in duty bound to do, that Moore would pay all cash for the property, if necessary, to procure it, and did not exercise all Ms. knowledge and skill to the advantage of defendant, as his employer and principal, and was thereby false to his trust, and in law entitled to no reward. There is no dispute in the evidence in regard to this proposition. Indeed, plaintiff himself testifies thereto, and defendant claims that plaintiff’s testimony was the first knowledge he had in regard to the matter.

Some of the matters before referred to are not specifically pleaded by either party. It is defendant’s contention that, because o'f the matters so brought into the case by the plaintiff, he had a right to meet them, and that plaintiff did not sustain by the evidence the case he had made on paper in his petition.

We think that the appellant’s proposition as to the want of good faith on the part of the plaintiff as defendant’s agent is well taken. Numerous propositions are argued, and many eases cited; but, as we view it, this question is decisive of the case. We find that this question is established without dispute in the record. This being so, it is unnecessary to refer to the evidence at any length.

It appears that the property in question was owned by the defendant and his mother and sister. This was known to the [17]*17plaintiff. The sister was, at the time, somewhere on the west coast. There is considerable evidence as to correspondence and the attempt to find her, and it seems that, after she was reached, in a month or two, her understanding of the agreement which plaintiff claims to have had, was that the purchase price was to be all cash. .The plaintiff contends that this defendant accepted the offer unconditionally, when it was first submitted to him by the plaintiff. This is denied by the defendant, who claims that he had no authority to sell until he should hear from his sister and secure her consent.

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Bluebook (online)
196 Iowa 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-v-mcclelland-iowa-1923.