Price v. Rogers Enterprises
This text of 418 So. 2d 1243 (Price v. Rogers Enterprises) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an appeal from a summary final judgment holding that the appellant, a real estate broker, was not entitled to a commission from the appellees with reference to the appellant’s efforts to effect a sale of property owned by the appellees.
The parties entered into a written brokerage agreement pursuant to which the appel-lees would pay the appellant a fixed amount as a commission if the appellant effected a sale of appellees’ property upon terms and conditions agreeable to appellees. The commission was to be paid in installments out of the proceeds of the sale. Subsequently, the appellant produced a prospective purchaser who apparently was willing to purchase the property. In fact, there is evidence that the appellees actually executed an agreement for sale with this purchaser.1 However, the appellees submitted uncontradicted proof that this agreement had been executed only as a gesture of good faith in negotiating, and that the copy of the agreement furnished to the purchaser’s representative was not the final agreement of the parties; other conditions required by the appellees would have to be met before a final agreement could be reached. The ap-pellees also submitted proof that these conditions were never met and that, as a result, the sale was never actually consummated.
The appellant concedes that a binding sales agreement was never executed. However, he points to evidence that the additional conditions imposed by the appellees had been orally accepted by the purchaser, but that the appellees then arbitrarily refused to go forward with the negotiations and execute an agreement for sale. Based on this evidence that the purchaser was willing to meet the appellees’ terms, the appellant contends that the trial court erred in entering a summary judgment denying his entitlement to a commission.
In Malever v. Livingston, 95 Fla. 272, 275-76, 116 So. 15, 17 (1928), the court held that a broker employed to effect a sale must, at the very least, secure a binding contract of sale from a purchaser on terms authorized by the property owner before the broker will be entitled to his commission:
In the leading case of Wiggins v. Wilson, 55 Fla. 346, 45 So. 1011, it was held that a broker employed to sell, as distinguished from a broker employed to find a purchaser, [emphasis in original] is not entitled to compensation until he “effects a sale or procures from his customer a bind[1245]*1245ing contract of purchase within the terms of his authority.” In the opinion, by Mr. Justice TAYLOR, it is also said that, as to a broker employed to sell, he “not only finds a purchaser, but negotiates the sale with him on the terms authorized by his principal, leaving nothing for the seller to do but execute the necessary transfer of the title to the property.” We think this means something more than that the broker who is employed to sell fulfills his contract of employment and becomes entitled to his commission, by merely finding a purchaser, ready, able and willing to buy on the terms fixed by the principal and producing him to the owner, or by introducing to the owner a customer who has verbally agreed to buy at the price named by the principal and who, when brought to the principal, verbally agrees with him on all the terms of sale, and even makes a payment of earnest money — pays something on purchase price. It means, as applied to the facts pleaded in this case, and as a general rule in the absence of contractural stipulations otherwise that the broker must have effected a completed sale of the property, pursuant to the broker’s authority, i.e., the deed must have been executed and delivered by the seller and the proper cash payment made and mortgage and note or notes executed and delivered by the purchaser for the balance; or, the broker must have “procured from his customer a binding contract of purchase within the terms of his authority,” i.e., a written contract which the principal could enforce, leaving nothing for the principal to do on his part but to execute at the proper time the necessary transfer of the title to the property.
Notwithstanding its declaration of this strict standard of performance, the court, in a reappearance of the same case, Livingston v. Malever, 103 Fla. 200, 137 So. 113 (1931), recognized an exception to the rule. In Knowles v. Henderson, 156 Fla. 31, 34, 22 So.2d 384, 385-86 (1945), the court elaborated on this exception:
[T]he general rule stated is not without exception. The weight of authority is to the effect that where a broker in good faith and in reliance upon his contract procures a purchaser ready, able and willing to buy the property in accordance with the terms fixed by the seller, and before the broker can effect the sale or procure a binding contract of purchase the seller defeats the transaction, not for any fault of the broker or purchaser, but solely because the seller will not, or cannot, complete the transaction, then and in such case, the broker is entitled to his commission, if the customer remains ready, able and willing to purchase, although the sale has not been fully completed; the strict terms of the contract between principal and broker as to completing the sale or procuring a binding contract of purchase from the customer being deemed waived by the principal.
In the current case, appellant’s evidence that a binding agreement was not reached only because of the refusal of appellees to go forward with the sale after all conditions had apparently been approved by the purchaser, would appear to be sufficient under Knowles to withstand appellees’ motion for summary judgment. However, because of the particular provisions of the brokerage agreement involved herein we do not believe the Knowles exception applies.
The brokerage agreements involved in Knowles and Livingston contained the basic terms of sale, including the purchase price that the property owners were willing to accept for his property. On the other hand, the brokerage agreement in question here contained no listing price or other terms of sale. Instead the agreement provided for a commission “upon condition that REALTOR effect a sale of THE GULF BUILDING ... upon terms and conditions” agreeable to appellees. This agreement reserved to the property owner discretion in setting the conditions upon which he would sell his property. Implicit in such a reservation of discretion is the right to withdraw from a proposed sale at any time until a binding agreement has been reached. Leon Realty, Inc. v. Bradwell, 271 [1246]*1246So.2d 771 (Fla. 1st DCA 1972).2 Under such circumstances we believe the broker is on notice that he will not be entitled to a commission until the seller has actually agreed to terms by entering into a binding agreement to sell with the prospective purchaser.3
Support for our conclusion may also be inferred from Restatement (Second) of Agency § 445, comment d (1958):
When the principal has furnished the broker with only part of the terms, with the understanding that further details are subject to negotiation between the principal and the customer, the principal, unless acting in bad faith (see § 454), is free to terminate such negotiations without liability to the broker. The principal’s promise to pay the broker a commission does not become binding unless the principal and the customer reach a present definitive oral or written agreement.
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418 So. 2d 1243, 1982 Fla. App. LEXIS 21492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-rogers-enterprises-fladistctapp-1982.