Rosenthal v. Cangelosi

164 So. 502
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1935
DocketNo. 1525.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 164 So. 502 (Rosenthal v. Cangelosi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosenthal v. Cangelosi, 164 So. 502 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

The defendant appeals from a judgment against him and in favor of the plaintiff, in the lower court, for the sum of $147.60, with interest and costs. The demand is one for a commission as real estate agent in having procured a tenant' for a building on Government street in the city of Baton Rouge, occupied as a drug store and residence.

Plaintiff sets out in his original petition that in August, 1924, he was employed by the defendant, under an oral agreement to find and engage a tenant for the building which he (defendant) proposed to construct on the vacant lot which he owned and which formed the southwest corner of Government and Seventeenth streets. He avers that he interested a party by the name of Pace as a prospective tenant, and, having so informed the defendant, was instructed by the latter to consult an architect for the purpose of drawing suitable plans and specifications for the building to be erected; that the defendant then fixed a rental, based on his probable investment, of $87.50 per month, which Pace found to be too high .and would not agree to. He then avers that he continued his endeavors in behalf of the defendant in an effort to compromise the differences between him and Pace, and that while so engaged, defendant, without his ‘knowledge, contacted Pace direct, and effected an agreement which resulted in the rental of the building for five years at $80 per month for the first three years, and $85 per month for the remaining two years. He alleges that his services, having been the direct and procuring cause of the consummation of the lease, he is entitled to a commission of 3 per cent, on the gross amount of the rent, which commission he figures at the amount of his demand.

In a supplemental petition, plaintiff pleads .in the alternative, that in the event the court should hold that there was no express agreement whereby he was employed by the defendant as above set out, then he1 shows that there was an implied agreement between them to the same effect, and, as a second alternative, he pleads that should it be held that there was neither an express nor implied agreement, acting under authorization and with the defendant’s knowledge and consent, he rendered valuable services for him in procuring a tenant for his property, for which services he is entitled to recover the amount prayed for by him on a quantum meruit.

The defendant answered by denying that there was any agreement between them as alleged by the plaintiff, and that what plaintiff did in regard to trying to obtain a tenant for the premises, he did on his own initiative. He avers that he told plaintiff that he wóuld be interested in building on the property only in the event that he (plaintiff) could dispose of some $3,000 worth of stock for him, and that when plaintiff showed him plans of a building, he told him that, not having sold his stock, he was not further interested, as he did not care to borrow money to invest in the building. He avers, further, that two months after this, Pace, the prospective tenant, came personally to see him about erecting a building, and, as a result of their negotiations, he did have a building constructed, and leased the same to Pace under the terms as set forth by the plaintiff.

While it is a well-recognized principle of law that an owner cannot deprive a real estate.agent or broker of his commission in' a deal or transaction, by taking the matter out of his hands and dealing directly, to his advantage, with the. interested party on the other end, it is equally well settled that in order for the broker to recover under such circumstances, he must show that he had an express contract with the owner, or one that can definitely be implied from the relations existing between them, and that he rendered the service under such contract.

With these principles before us, let us consider the facts as revealed by the testimony in this case, and see how they are to be applied.

Plaintiff starts out by stating that probably two years before he contacted Mr. Pace with reference to leasing the property, he had endeavored to interest the Great Atlantic & Pacific Stores in opening a store on defendant’s corner lot, and had spoken *504 to the defendant about it. Nothing resulted from his efforts in that direction, however, as it turned out that his prospect did not like the location. We presume plaintiff testified regarding this matter to indicate some previous relation with the defendant as it had altogether nothing to do with the Pace proposition. In order to further show what' his relation with defendant as an owner was, he testified abottt a certain commission the latter had paid him for having bought a piece of property for him. The defendant admits having paid such commission in a transaction in which he was the purchaser, and under a specific agreement in which he had bound himself to pay it. These are the only two instances tending to show any business connection between the parties prior to , the Pace transaction, and surely they are not sufficient to establish a relation from which plaintiff might have implied that he was the defendant’s agent, authorized to handle any real estate deal in which he might be interested.

Coming now to the transaction with which we are here concerned, plaintiff says that in August, 1934, he met Mr. Pace, and, knowing that the lease he then had was to expire the following January, he suggested to him that he might interest Mr. Cangelosi in putting up a building on his corner lot on Government street. He says that he after-wards called On Mr. Cangelosi and asked him if he would erect the building, and that he immediately agreed to it. He then states that he told the defendant that they would first have to find out the cost of the proposed building, and he (plaintiff) suggested that they get an architect to draw up the preliminary plans. It is noted that this suggestion, according to his own testimony, came from him, and not from the defendant. Immediately after leaving Mr. Cangelosi, he went to see Mr. Charlton, an architect, and had the latter go with him to see Mr. Pace, from whom the necessary data and information was ’ obtained to draw a plan and work out an estimate of the cost. It next appears, from his testimony, that the architect gave the estimate to Mr. Cangelosi, who, upon learning that the investment would amount to $6,000, fixed a rental price of $87.50 per month. Mr. Pace would not agree to that rental. He reported this to Mr. Cangelosi, telling him that the best he could get was $75 or $80 a month for a five-year lease, which Mr. Cangelosi found too low, considering the value of the property and the cost of the building. Plaintiff then says that he continued to work on the proposition for several weeks, but how, the record does not indicate. It was on November 1st, following, that he learned that a lease had been effected between Cangelosi and Pace, and although he saw the defendant very frequently after that, it does not appear from his testimony that he ever made a specific demand on him for the commission 'he now claims.

Mr. Pace was called as a witness by the plaintiff. His testimony is to the effect that Mr. Rosenthal, on hearing a conversation he was having with another party, relative to the expiration of his lease, came up to him and told him that he could find him a location near by, having in mind the defendant’s vacant lot at the corner of Government and Seventeenth streets. ■ That was the manner in which he was drawn into negotiations concerning the lease. Following this, plaintiff called on him with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenthal-v-cangelosi-lactapp-1935.