Spiro v. Corpora

174 So. 145, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 201
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1937
DocketNo. 16420.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 174 So. 145 (Spiro v. Corpora) 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
Spiro v. Corpora, 174 So. 145, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 201 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

McCALEB, Judge.

The plaintiff appeals from a judgment dismissing his action against the defendants. He bases his demand upon a written contract under which he claims certain real estate broker’s commissions, together with attorney’s fees.

The material facts of the case are not contested, and we find them to be as follows :

The plaintiff is a licensed real estate broker, conducting his business in the city of New Orleans and its vicinity.

Mrs. Julia A. Maloney, one of the defendants, owns certain real property situated in New Orleans, which she values at the sum of $4,000. Being desirous of disposing of this real estate by sale or exchange, she employed the plaintiff as her agent to locate a purchaser.

Luigi Corpora, the other defendant, likewise employed the plaintiff as his agent to sell certain property owned by him in the parish of Jefferson, which he values at $8,-000.

As a result of his dual representation of both defendants, plaintiff brought them together and proposed that the parties exchange their properties- at the values established by them and that Mrs. Maloney assume an existing mortgage on Corpora’s property in the sum of $4,000 to equalize the difference between the purchase prices. This suggestion met with the favor of the defendants and, on May 30, 1933, they entered into a written contract whereby Mrs. Maloney promised to sell her property to Corpora for $4,000 and Corpora agreed to convey his property to Mrs. Maloney for $8,000. This, contract is executed upon an “Exchange or Trade Agreement” form adopted by the New Orleans Real Estate Board and provides, among other things, that the respective vendors agree to pay the plaintiff, as agent, a commission of 4 per cent, on the purchase price of the prop-

*146 erty, which is declared to be earned upon the signing of the agreement.

In prospect of the acquisitions to be made by the parties, titles to the real estate involved in the transaction were examined. After Corpora had perused the title to Mrs. Maloney’s property, he refused to consummate the deal, giving as his reason that the measurements of the land as described in her title were incorrect. He had a survey made of this property which disclosed that it contained a smaller quantity of land than that shown' by the title (which was based upon a prior survey of the property).

Mrs. Maloney claims that the measurements as exhibited by her title are correct and testifies that she is ready, able, and willing to carry out her agreement. But Corpora refuses to take the title on the ground that the survey, which he caused to be made of the Maloney property, reveals that he will not receive all of the land represented by the measurements contained in the offer of sale. Under these circumstances, it is obvious that the correctness of the respective contentions of the parties cannot be established except by a suit for specific performance, and thus far neither party to the contract has seen fit to institute such an action.

With affairs in this state, the plaintiff has been unable to collect, from either defendant, the commissions covenanted for in the agreement, and he has filed this suit against both of them, to enforce their respective obligations to him, on the theory that he has done everything required of him and that, by the terms of the contract itself, the commissions have been earned and are due and payable whether or not the promise of sale and purchase are ever completed.

It is manifest, from the foregoing statement of the case, that the problem to be determined involves an interpretation of the effect of the contract between the parties. The courts of this state, on numerous occasions, have had before them this type of agreement, and we turn to these adjudicated matters to guide us to the correct solution.

It is well settled that a real estate broker, employed by a vendor to negotiate a sale or exchange of property,' is entitled to his commission when he has found a purchaser, even though the sale is never consummated owing to the fault of the vendor. See Cristina v. Nunez, 8 La.App. 531; Loyacano v. Succession of Thompson, 4 Orleans App. 345; Gurley & Parkinson v. Loeffler, 14 Orleans App. 424; Palmisano v. Stewart, 3 La.App. 66; Dauterive v. West India Transportation Co., 3 La.App. 319; Barry v. Guiffria, 10 La.App. 123, 120 So. 878, and Clesi v. Thacher, 12 La.App. 55, 125 So. 194.

On the other hand, it has been held that a real estate agent is not entitled to a commission from his principal where .the contract cannot be consummated because the prospective purchaser refuses to take title to the property and the principal is without fault in the premises. See Devereaux & Ashby v. Rochester, 10 La.App. 430, 120 So. 658.

It will be readily discerned that the foregoing adjudications afford little or no assistance in the solution of the question confronting us, for, here, Mrs. Maloney earnestly contends that the measurements of her land as exhibited by her title are correct, and she signifies her willingness to complete the deal but is unable to do so because Corpora refuses to accept her title. We are unable to determine in this suit whether or .not her title to the property is free from defect. By the same token, we cannot declare that the objections made by Corpora to the measurements of her land are not well founded. Both parties are ostensibly in good faith. If the exchange agreement can be interpreted as meaning that the real estate agent is entitled to a commission at the time same was signed, irrespective of whether or not the vendors are able to convey a merchantable title, then plaintiff is entitled to recover. On the other hand, if the agreement is interpreted to mean that the plaintiff’s commissions are earned only in the event the respective sales can be consummated by delivery of titles which are free from defects and that the claimed defects do not exist through the fault of either of the defendants, then the plaintiff’s suit against them is bound to fail.

The plaintiff maintains that, under this exchange agreement, his commission is earned at the time the contract is signed, and the fact that it cannot be consummated for any reason is not his concern; that he, admittedly, has brought the parties together and performed all services required of him and that, as a consequence, he is entitled to recover the commissions claimed from each! He points with confidence to the agreement itself which provides that the agent’s commission is earned upon the ac *147 ceptance of the.offers and also stipulates: “In the event either title is not valid, and cannot in reasonable time and at reasonable expense, be made valid, this contract shall be null and void, without prejudice, however, to the agent’s commission, which is earned upon the signing of this agreement.” (Italics ours.) And further that “The commission is earned on the signing of this agreement and shall not be affected by any subsequent agreement of the parties hereto, or by the annullment of this contract by any court.”

The same contention, as is made by the plaintiff in this case, was invoked by the defendant realtors in the case of Boisseau v. Vallon & Jordano, Inc., 174 La. 492, 141 So. 38, 40, wherein the Supreme Court had occasion to interpret a contract practically identical with the one now under consideration.

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174 So. 145, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spiro-v-corpora-lactapp-1937.