Shepherd-Teague Co. v. Hermann

107 P. 622, 12 Cal. App. 394, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 348
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 6, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 609.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 107 P. 622 (Shepherd-Teague Co. v. Hermann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepherd-Teague Co. v. Hermann, 107 P. 622, 12 Cal. App. 394, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 348 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

HALL, J.

Plaintiff recovered a judgment against defendant for the sum of $1,500, commission claimed to have been earned under a written contract of employment to find a purchaser for and negotiate a sale and transfer of certain real property for defendant. This is an appeal from the order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

Defendant in his answer admitted that he executed a written agreement in favor of the plaintiff, by which the defendant agreed to pay to the plaintiff a commission of $1,500, “provided that the said plaintiff should consummate a sale of certain property therein named and set forth,” upon the terms in said writing set forth, but denied performance of the contract upon the part of plaintiff, and any indebtedness from defendant to plaintiff under said contract.

Defendant attacks the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings in favor of plaintiff.

The first contention of appellant involves the construction of the contract under which plaintiff claims that it has earned the commission sued for.

The contract relied on is in two instruments executed by defendant to plaintiff. By the first—which by its terms was to expire in ten days from June 13, 1905, defendant promised to exchange certain property of his, subject to a mortgage for $40,000, for a piece of property known as the home place of A. B. Butler, and contained the provision that: “In the event this exchange is made, I agree to pa,y to Shepherd-Teague Company a commission of two and one-half per cent upon the value of my property.”

*397 The second instrument, dated June 24, 1905, was an extension and modification of the first as to the terms upon which defendant would exchange properties, and also contained this provision: “That said agreement is also modified by this extension to the effect that in the event the trade is consummated, the commission that I was to pay therefor to the said Shepherd-Teague Company shall be $1,500 instead of the commission therein set forth.”

- No exchange of properties between defendant and Butler has ever taken place. The trade was never consummated by any exchange of deeds, and defendant for this reason contends that under the contract plaintiff is not entitled to his commission.

Of course parties to a broker’s contract for the sale of real estate may make the payment of commissions dependent upon any lawful condition, and such contract might be so worded as to make it clear that the parties intended that no commissions were to be paid except upon a completed sale resulting in the execution and acceptance of deeds of transfer. Such a contract, however, is not the usual one between the seller and his agent or broker. We do not think it is the meaning of the one now under consideration. In the first writing the commission was to be paid “in the event this exchange is made.” Within the meaning of a broker’s contract to sell real estate, a sale or an exchange is made when the broker has procured from a responsible purchaser, or one acceptable to the seller, a binding and valid contract for a sale or exchange on the terms proposed by the seller, or has brought the seller and buyer together, and they have in consequence entered into such a contract, or such buyer, being able, ready and willing to buy on the seller’s terms, offers so to do. {Phelps v. Prusch, 83 Cal. 627, [23 Pac. 1111].)

The language of the second writing that “in the event the trade is consummated, the commission that I was to pay therefor to the said Shepherd-Teague Company shall be $1,500 instead of the commission -therein set forth,” lends somewhat stronger support to appellant’s contention. But this language must be interpreted in the light of the purposes and objects of the contract. The record shows that before the date of the second writing defendant had learned that plaintiff was acting for Butler also, and was to receive a *398 commission from him. This circumstance as well as the verbiage of the commission clause in the second writing shows that the primary purpose and object sought thereby was to change the amount of the commission to be paid, rather than the event upon which it was to be paid. Defendant at this time was anxious, or at least willing, to exchange certain property of his for certain property belonging to Mr. Butler. The Butler property was for sale, and certain negotiations had been carried on through plaintiff between defendant and Butler prior to the execution of the second writing, but which had not resulted in any meeting of the minds of the principals. A trade was under consideration, but had not been agreed upon. The purpose of employing plaintiff was to effect a trade, to secure from Butler a valid and binding acceptance of the offer of defendant. When' this should be accomplished by plaintiff it would have consummated the trade, we think, within the meaning of the contract sued upon. It was the only consummation of the trade within the power of the broker. The consummation by exchange of deeds required the further act of defendant, over which plaintiff had no control.

The second and most important contention of appellant is that, conceding the interpretation of the contract to be as contended for by respondent, the evidence fails to show that plaintiff has performed the same.

In this case the exchange was never actually consummated between defendant and Butler. Under these circumstances it is incumbent on the broker “to prove that he found a purchaser ready, willing and able to buy the property on the terms fixed, and either that he procured from that person a valid contract binding him to purchase the property upon those terms, or that he brought the vendor "and the proposed purchaser together so that the vendor might have secured such contract if he desired. On no other terms can he recover.” (Mattingly v. Pennie, 105 Cal. 514, [45 Am. St. Rep. 87, 39 Pac. 200]; Gunn v. Bank of California, 99 Cal. 349, [33 Pac. 1105].)

Plaintiff never brought Butler to defendant. Butler was not within the state of California. Plaintiff relied upon a contract that it procured. This contract was not signed by Butler personally, but was signed thus, “A. B. Butler by J. *399 J. Miley.” It was also signed by defendant, and efforts were made to carry out the contract, but defendant’s title to a portion of his property was defective, and the trade fell through.

It is urged that the contract for the exchange of the properties is not shown to have been a valid contract binding upon Butler, and therefore its procurement was not a sufficient performance by plaintiff to entitle it to recover.

Miley was the manager of the Butler property, a vineyard, but had no power of attorney to sell real estate. The agreement signed by defendant and Miley is dated June 30, 1905. It was admitted in evidence, over the objection of defendant, that it was not shown to have been executed by Butler. The only evidence of any authority for Miley to execute any contract for the sale or exchange of the Butler property is that contained in certain telegrams from Butler.

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Bluebook (online)
107 P. 622, 12 Cal. App. 394, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepherd-teague-co-v-hermann-calctapp-1910.