Sphatt v. Roth

34 N.W.2d 222, 253 Wis. 339
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 N.W.2d 222 (Sphatt v. Roth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sphatt v. Roth, 34 N.W.2d 222, 253 Wis. 339 (Wis. 1948).

Opinion

Martin, J.

Plaintiffs herein do not dispute the facts found by the trial court. The sole question involved is as stated by plaintiffs: “Was there a dona fide sale of the property herein to the defendants or their agent?” This question was answered, “Yes” by the trial court and judgment entered in favor of the defendants. The defendants asked for a review of that part of the judgment denying defendants a brokerage commission and awarding the plaintiffs the sum of $500. We shall discuss these questions in the above order.

On October 31, 1945, Wenzel R. Sphatt and Mary C. Sphatt, his wife, and William Roth and Clinton R. Taplin, copartners, doing business as Roth & Taplin, entered into a real-estate listing agreement for the sale of the following described real estate situated in Milwaukee county, Wisconsin, and for the sale of certain personal property located thereon:

Lot numbered five (5), in block numbered eight (8) in Mitchell Manor, a subdivision of a part of the northwest one quarter (NW j4) of section numbered eleven (11) in township numbered six (6) north, range numbered twenty-one (21) east, in the city of West Allis.

Said listing agreement provided among other things for the payment by the plaintiffs to the defendants of a broker’s commission of five per cent of the sale price for obtaining a purchaser for said property.

On December 12, 1945, the defendants as agents for the plaintiffs presented a form of agreement for purchase and sale of real estate which was executed by the plaintiffs as sellers and by Earl L. Kester and Helen R. Kester as buyers. The purchase price of said real estate was the sum of $10,300, of which the sum of $500 was paid at the execution and de *342 livery thereof. The said agreement provided, among other things, that in the event the buyers fail to carry out the agreement, the $500 paid thereunder shall, at the option of the seller, be forfeited and be paid to the seller as liquidated damages, subject to deductions of broker’s commission and disbursements. The said purchase price included the stock in trade and certain fixtures and personal property then owned by the plaintiffs and which were then located upon the premises in question. The said agreement was also made subject to the obtaining of a G. I. loan of $2,000 within thirty days from the date of said agreement. Thereafter the said G. I. loan referred to was approved in favor of the said buyers by the Veterans Administration and on March 5, 1946, the parties to the said transaction were waiting for the processing of said loan through a building and loan association so as to complete the transaction.

On March 5, 1946, the defendants produced a warranty deed of said premises to be executed by the plaintiffs pursuant to' said agreement of sale above mentioned in which deed the space where the name of the grantee or grantees should have appeared was left blank. The defendant Taplin at that time informed.tlie plaintiffs that the loan had not been completed but that the defendants would, on behalf of the purchasers, advance the balance of the purchase money owing the plaintiffs pursuant to said agreement for purchase and sale since the plaintiffs were anxious to complete the transaction, and that as soon as the loan being arranged for by Kester and his wife, the purchasers, was completed the defendants would insert in the blank space in the deed, where the name of the grantees had been omitted, the name of such person or persons as the Kesters desired to nominate as such grantees. Defendant Taplin also then stated that in the event that the Kesters should refuse to consummate the real-estate transaction that the defendants would insert the-name of some other purchaser whom they, the defendants, would procure.

*343 The plaintiffs were satisfied with such arrangement and executed the said warranty deed as grantors on March 5, 1946, and delivered the deed to defendant Taplin for the purpose of having the latter deliver the same to the Kesters or such other grantee as soon as the name of such grantee could be ascertained and inserted in the deed. At the same time defendant Taplin delivered to the plaintiffs a statement which showed the sale price of $10,300, and certain deductions, including two mortgages amounting to $5,000 which were to be paid by the purchasers, and a $500 brokerage commission. The balance of $4,473.62 was thereupon paid to the plaintiffs by check of the defendant Clinton R. Taplin dated March 6, 1946.

Thereafter, Earl L. Kester, one of the purchasers, informed defendant Taplin that he and his wife had changed their minds about the purchase. The defendants urged Kester to take the property but the latter procured an independent appraisal which showed a value of only $8,000 for the premises and he insisted upon cancellation of his obligation as purchaser and a refund of the $500 deposit made by Kester upon the purchase price pursuant to the agreement for purchase and sale of the real estate. Without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs who were unaware of the fact that Kester had refused to go through with the transaction, the return of the said $500 was made by check signed by Myrtice C. Taplin.

Defendants then attempted to find another purchaser for the property but without success, though the property was extensively advertised. In June, 1946, the defendants inserted the name of their nominee, Myrtice C. Taplin, the wife of one of the defendants, as grantee in the warranty deed executed by plaintiffs, and the same was recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Milwaukee county on June 27, 1946. Plaintiffs were not informed that said name would be inserted in the deed as grantee. The plaintiffs had no *344 knowledge of the failure of the Kesters to consummate the purchase until on or about May 1, 1946, when Mary C. Sphatt had been informed that, the mortgages had not been paid, and that the defendants claimed to be the owners of the premises. This information was confirmed in a letter dated May 3, 1946, from defendants to plaintiffs. On May 4 and June IS, 1946, defendants paid the interest due on the two outstanding mortgages, respectively, and obtained satisfactions of the same on July 2, 1946. Improvements were made by the defendants on the building and on January 1, 1947, the approximate value of the property was $13,000.

In a letter to the defendants, dated June 21, 1946, plaintiffs offered to return the money advanced to them by the defendants, plus the taxes and interest paid by the defendants, less the value of any personal property removed by the défendants from the premises upon the defendants submitting evidence of the amounts paid out by them in behalf of plaintiffs. The plaintiffs also' requested the return of all keys to the premises as well as all papers and documents received by the defendants from the plaintiffs in connection with this matter. On or about June 28, 1946, plaintiffs tendered to defendants the $4,473.62 advanced by the defendants on March S, 1946, but the defendants refused said tender.

The question is, under these circumstances, did defendants make a full and fair disclosure to the plaintiffs. It might also be said here that defendants did considerable 'improving of the property after they paid the purchase price to plaintiffs and that the property had increased some in value.

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Related

(1972)
61 Op. Att'y Gen. 3 (Wisconsin Attorney General Reports, 1972)
Hilboldt v. Wisconsin Real Estate Brokers' Board
137 N.W.2d 482 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.W.2d 222, 253 Wis. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sphatt-v-roth-wis-1948.