Stagg v. Lawton

49 A.2d 599, 133 Conn. 203, 1946 Conn. LEXIS 155
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 24, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 49 A.2d 599 (Stagg v. Lawton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stagg v. Lawton, 49 A.2d 599, 133 Conn. 203, 1946 Conn. LEXIS 155 (Colo. 1946).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

In this action by a real-estate broker to recover a commission for procuring a purchaser of the defendant’s property, the trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiff and the defendant has appealed. This action is somewhat unusual in that the commission sought to be recovered was not to be paid by the defendant but by the purchaser.

Pacts sufficient for our disposition of the appeal as stated in the finding are not subject to correction. While the plaintiff was working for a real-estate firm, he was authorized by the defendant to secure a purchaser of the property at a certain price, with an agreement that he was to receive a 5 per cent commission. Subsequently, he severed his connection with the firm and the defendant authorized him, as an individual, to secure a purchas *205 er at the same price. The defendant intrusted the matter of the sale of the property to her daughter, Mrs. Ross. The plaintiff brought possible purchasers to see the property, but Mrs. Ross three times raised the price and stipulated further that the price bo “net” to the defendant. The plaintiff finally procured a person who was ready, willing and able to buy the property at the price fixed by Mrs. Ross and who agreed to pay the plaintiff a commission of 5 per cent. The offer was communicated to Mrs. Ross and we interpret the finding, somewhat ambiguous in this respect, as meaning that she was at the same time informed of the promise of the prospective purchaser to pay the commission. The defendant refused to convey.

The fact that the defendant’s refusal to sell the property, whatever the reason or lack of reason for it, prevented the plaintiff from obtaining the commission which the purchaser had promised to pay him would not in itself entitle the plaintiff to recover in this action; one cannot be held liable for the failure of another to perform an agreement the latter has made unless the former was under a legal obligation owed by him to the promisee. The plaintiff, in support of his right to recover, cites a number of authorities. Some of these are cases where an owner agreed with a broker, not that he would pay him a commission, but that the broker should receive all or a part of the price above a certain amount which the owner stipulated he was to receive for his own use; see T. C. Henry & Sons & Co. v. Colorado Farm & Live Stock Co., 91 C.C.A. 16, 164 F. 986; Culbertson v. Sheridan, 93 Kan. 268, 144 P. 268; Reams v. Wilson, 147 N. C. 304, 60 S.E. 1124; Cook v. Rockwell, 233 Mich. 64, 206 N.W. *206 313; and the situation presented was essentially different from the one before us, because in those cases the owner had in effect, if not in terms, agreed to pay the broker a certain amount out of the price to be paid to him for the property and was liable on that agreement. In other cases cited by the plaintiff, the trial court found that it was one of the terms of the agreement between the owner and broker that the owner would convey the property to a purchaser procured by the broker who was ready, willing and able to buy on the terms fixed in the authority given the broker; see Pease & Elliman, Inc. v. Gladwin Realty Co., Inc., 216 App. Div. 421, 215 N.Y.S. 346; Newman v. Pierson, 195 App. Div. 407, 186 N.Y.S. 388; Eells Bros. v. Parsons, 132 Iowa 543, 109 N.W. 1098; in none of these eases was the Statute of Frauds involved; the failure of the owner to convey was a breach of a provision in the contract between the owner and the broker, and on that breach the latter was properly held entitled to damages, which, in a proper case, would be the commission the purchaser had agreed to pay the broker. Atkinson v. Pack, 114 N.C. 597, 605, 19 S.E. 628. In the note, 144 A.L.R. 921, there is broad language which would suggest that the owner might be liable for a commission the purchaser has agreed to pay without proof of such a contract, but an examination of the cases cited, with the exception of Kaercher v. Schee, 189 Minn. 272, 249 N.W. 180, discloses that all of them fall within one or the other of the two situations we have stated above.

In addition to the Kaercher case, we have found four other decisions which hold that, where a broker is authorized to procure a purchaser at a price “net” to the owner and he does procure one who is *207 ready, able and willing to purchase on the terms set by the owner and who also promises to pay a commission to the broker, the latter, on the refusal of the owner to convey, can recover from the owner the amount of that commission; Cavender v. Waddingham, 2 Mo. App. 551; Bird v. Blackwell, 135 Mo. App. 23, 115 S.W. 487; Chutkow v. Wagman Realty & Ins. Co., 80 Colo. 11, 13, 248 P. 1014; Aronson v. Carobine, 129 Misc. 800, 222 N.Y.S. 721; but none of these cases attempts any critical examination of the problem. There are other cases which, on a casual reading, seem to reach the same conclusion, but a careful examination will show that in all of them there was an agreement between the owner and the broker that if the latter procured a suitable purchaser the transaction would be consummated; Livermore v. Crane, 26 Wash. 529, 67 P. 221; Atkinson v. Pack, supra; Eells Bros. v. Parsons, supra; Morgan v. Whatley & Whatley, 205 Ala. 170, 87 So. 846; and these decisions fall within the second class of cases referred to in the preceding paragraph. See Calkins v. F. W. Woolworth Co., 27 F.2d 314. On the other hand, in Fox Co. v. Wohl, 255 N.Y. 268, 174 N.E. 650, the court, taking note of varying decisions in the lower courts of the state, held that a broker who had brought parties to an agreement for the exchange of lands, a provision of which was that each would pay a portion of the commission, could recover from the one who refused to carry out the transaction the commission he had agreed to pay but could not recover from him the commission the other party had promised. This decision was followed in Bradley, Beall & Howard, Inc. v. Miller, 128 F.2d 320, 321.

We have never been called upon to determine the *208 question. In Zimmerman v. Garvey, 81 Conn. 570, 71 A.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A.2d 599, 133 Conn. 203, 1946 Conn. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stagg-v-lawton-conn-1946.