R. Harris & Co. v. Weller

4 F.2d 427, 55 App. D.C. 234, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3001
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 1925
DocketNo. 4156
StatusPublished

This text of 4 F.2d 427 (R. Harris & Co. v. Weller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. Harris & Co. v. Weller, 4 F.2d 427, 55 App. D.C. 234, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3001 (D.C. Cir. 1925).

Opinion

MARTIN, Chief Justice.

R. Harris & Co., a corporation, brought an action in the lower court against Joseph I. Weller, claiming that it had employed him to act as its agent in the purchase of certain real estate situate within the District of Columbia, and had paid him the sum of $10,000 as commissions for his .services as such agent, whereas at the same time, without its knowledge or consent, he was also receiving compensation from the vendor of the property for services rendered as his agent in the same transaction. Wherefore the plaintiff prayed for a recovery against him in the sum of $10,000.

In defense of the action the defendant denied that he had acted ás agent for the plaintiff in the transaction, in question, and alleged furthermore that the issue in the present case is identical with one which was formerly adjudicated adversely to the plaintiff by the Supreme Court of the District in a ease between the same parties. It may be stated here that the decree thus pleaded as a former adjudication of the issue was affirmed by this court upon appeal in R. Harris & Co. v. Weller et al., 52 App. D. C. 6, 280 P. 980. The opinion in that ease, written by Mr. Justice Robb, so fully presents the facts and circumstances of the transaction in question that it becomes unnecessary to go into great detail here.

The issue in the present ease went to trial before the court and jury, and at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence a verdict was directed in favor of the defendant. Judgment was entered accordingly, whereupon the plaintiff appealed.

Several witnesses testified in behalf of the ^plaintiff at the trial. Their testimony contained substantial contradictions and inconsistencies, but for the present; purpose the evidence must be given the most favorable construction which it may bear in favor of the plaintiff’s claim.. This is to be drawn almost entirely from the testimony of Mr. Peyser, who was the secretary and general counsel of the company, and was its chief representative throughout the transaction.

It appears that R. Harris & Co., and its predecessors under the same name, had been engaged for. many years in the jewelry business in the city of Washington, occupying certain rooms in the Jenifer Building, which it rented from the owner of the building, and that it desired and expected to renew its lease from time to time, in order to continue business in the, same premises. In the month of April, 1919, at a time when its current lease had several years to run, the company received two letters from’ Mr. Weller, a local lawyer and real estate agent, to the effect that he had recently negotiated a sale of the Jenifer Building, that a client of his had purchased the property with the intention óf occupying it as a place of business, and inquiring whether his client could not also purchase the unexpired lease from the company. The name of the new owner of the building was not disclosed in the letters, nor did it become known to the company at any time during the transaction which followed. The record title to the property had been'taken in the name of a clerk in Mr. Weller’s office, but it was well understood that the title was held in trust for another as the true owner, and notice was served upon the company to pay the rental for the premises to the defendant as the agent of the owner. Thereupon negotiations were had relative to a sale of the company’s lease to the purchaser of the property, but without result. The company theh sought to purchase the property from the new owner. It is claimed that the plaintiff at this time employed the defendant as its agent, the testimony of Mr. Peyser upon that subject being as follows:

“* * * I said: ‘Brother Weller’ — I knew him pretty well; I think we went to law school together. I said: ‘Brother Weller, my folks are very much worried about this transaction. We have been in business there for 40 years, and we do not want to 'be put out of the place. Is there not some way in which a lease or a sale could be made?’ He said: ‘No, the price would be so outrageous that it would be almost impossible for anyone to handle it.’ I said: ‘If you can buy the building on any kind of terms at all, we will stretch a point. We will employ you and retain you. I will give, you — ’ He said: ‘It is not necessary.’ I offered him then and there ten thousand ($10,-000) dollars to represent R. Harris & Co. in the purchase of the building. He accepted /it, and the interview testified to by Mr. Strauss, when we met at Mr. Wolf’s house —I went down to Mr. Wolf’s home on Q street, near Nineteenth street, around in that neighborhood somewhere, and I saw him there, and I said: ‘As far as this payment is concerned of ten thousand dollars ($10,-[429]*429000), we will pay you that if wo buy the property. We are hereby employing you.’ And we did then and there employ him, and there is no question in the world that he was employed by us. * * ”

On November 1, 1919, a written contract for the sale of the property to R. Harris & Co. for a consideration of $415,000 was drawn up and afterwards signed by the parties. It recited that the agreement was made by and between Joseph I. Weller, as agent for the vendor, and R. Harris & Co., as vendee. It was signed in the same manner; the name of Mr. Weller’s principal not being disclosed in the contract. The last clause of this contract reads as follows:

“Approved by the agent of the owner of the above described property under authority to him by said owner. Of the purchase price of $415,000, the «sum of $405,000 shall apply on account of purchase price and $10,-000 on account of fee charge.”

Afterwards a modified contract was similarly executed by the parties, and substituted for the first one. In the latter contract the consideration was stated as $405,000, but it was understood and agreed verbally that the actual payment should nevertheless bo $415,-000, as named in the first contract, of which $10,000 should be paid as a fee charge. The transaction was settled accordingly. Upon the subject of this contract Mr. Peyser testified as follows:

“The first question or the first time that the question of employment came up was when the original contract was made, contract Exhibit No. 19, and I had gone to the hospital to see Mr. Wolf, who was there; he had broken his arm, and I came away, and 1 phoned to Mr. Weller’s office, and I told him that I was not so satisfied with the contract as it was presented; that it ought' to state that he was the agent for us. He said: ‘That is only a matter of form, and I will correct that eventually.’ He said: ‘The idea, after all, is to obtain the building.’ He said: ‘I am your agent, and I will deal with you.’ I do not know just when that contract No. 19 was signed, but the contract No. 16 was signed the same day as the final account was stated by the Columbia Title Company, and when we got down to Mr. Weller’s office, after Mr. Weller had made an engagement and failed to keep it at the title office. We got down to Mr. Weller’s office somewhere about 10:25, as the indorsement is on the paper in my handwriting, and we had a call three times from Mr. Weller; but when he got down there he turned to Mr. Wolf and said: ‘Have you shown Peyser the new contract?’ Wolf said: ‘No; not as yet. I have not discussed the proposition with him.’ Mr. Wolf showed me the contract, which is known as ‘Contract No. 16.’ and I saw that the price of the property was going to be $405,000, and I spoke about that; it was to be $405,000 in the original agreement, and I thought that we had better go back to the original agreement.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Union Collection Co. v. Buckman
88 P. 708 (California Supreme Court, 1907)
Johnston v. Wolf
280 P. 980 (California Supreme Court, 1929)
Bollman v. Loomis
41 Conn. 581 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1874)
Lum v. McEwen
57 N.W. 662 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1894)
Howard v. Murphy
56 A. 143 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F.2d 427, 55 App. D.C. 234, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-harris-co-v-weller-cadc-1925.