Starkweather v. Shaffer

497 P.2d 358, 262 Or. 198, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 468
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 497 P.2d 358 (Starkweather v. Shaffer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starkweather v. Shaffer, 497 P.2d 358, 262 Or. 198, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 468 (Or. 1972).

Opinion

HOWELL, J.

This is an action for damages against the defendant, a realtor in Josephine county. Judgment was entered on a verdict for plaintiff for $5,000 general damages and $5,000 punitive damages, and defendant appeals.

The defendant presents 18 assignments of error, many of which are repetitious. Included in the assignments of error are contentions that the trial court erred in refusing to grant defendant’s motions for a judgment of involuntary nonsuit and a directed verdict.

Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the evidence discloses the following.

In 1968 plaintiff was the owner of approximately 12 acres of rural residential property in Josephine county. He was recently divorced and had custody of his small son. Plaintiff had been seriously ill and was not employed at the time. He decided to sell his property, and in February, 1968, plaintiff contacted a saleswoman representing defendant. She prepared an agreement wherein the defendant listed the property for sale for $15,000. The representative neglected to have plaintiff sign the listing agreement, but apparently this did not concern her because she testified that she “figured we had a listing even though it really *201 was just information when it is not signed by the man who called up.” Some advertising was done and the property shown about three times. Plaintiff became concerned about the lack of interest in his place and called defendant Shaffer, who came out to plaintiff’s home. After looking over the property, defendant told plaintiff that “he couldn’t move it for the fifteen” and inquired whether plaintiff would reduce the price. Plaintiff mentioned $12,500, but defendant said that “he had other properties that were as good or better that he couldn’t move for ten, so he said maybe seven or eight, something like this would move it faster.”

Later, on May 17, 1863, defendant prepared, and plaintiff signed, a document labeled “Earnest Money Receipt” wherein plaintiff agreed to sell the property for $8,000. The document stated the following:

“This offer is subject to buyer’s inspection and acceptance. * * * Thereby grant Shaffer Rlty. 10 days time from date to get buyer’s acceptance.”

The agreement was signed by plaintiff on the line for the seller’s signature, but the purchaser’s signature line was left blank. The agreement obligated plaintiff to pay defendant a commission of $480.

Three days later defendant called plaintiff and told him “he thought he had a buyer.” When plaintiff arrived at defendant’s office, defendant told him he was the buyer. The plaintiff testified the defendant also told him that he had to sell his property because he had signed the earnest money receipt. The defendant then prepared, and plaintiff signed, another *202 earnest money receipt whereby plaintiff sold the property to defendant for $7,520, which sum represented the original price of $8,000 as stated in the first earnest money receipt, less a commission of $480.

The defendant spent $1,277 cleaning the property and painting the buildings. He also ran advertisements in the local newspaper offering the property for sale in two separate parcels — one of four acres and the buildings for $13,500, and the other parcel of eight acres for $6,400. Both properties were sold at these prices by the end of August, 1968.

In his complaint, plaintiff alleged that a fiduciary relationship existed between plaintiff and defendant; that defendant breached his duty to plaintiff in various particulars, including misrepresenting to plaintiff that the property could not be sold for $15,000 and that its value was only $8,000; and that defendant misrepresented to plaintiff that he, the defendant, was acting for a third party purchaser and induced plaintiff to execute the earnest money receipt to sell the property for $8,000.

*203 The complaint also contained a second cause of action which consisted only of a demand for punitive damages. No demurrer was filed to the complaint.

At the trial the defendant moved for a nonsuit and directed verdict on the grounds of a failure of proof. The defendant treated the first cause of action as being one for fraud and deceit. The exact basis for both motions is difficult to determine. The defendant stated in his argument that the proof failed to show a value of the property in excess of $8,000; failed to show that defendant misrepresented that he was acting for a third party purchaser; and that no fiduciary relationship existed between plaintiff and defendant prior to May 17,1968, when plaintiff signed the earnest money receipt. In regard to the latter, the defendant argues that the relationship of principal and agent is required under OES 41.580 to be in writing subscribed by the party to be charged.

The law is well established in this state, as elsewhere, that a real estate broker stands in a fiduciary relationship with his client and is bound to protect his client’s interest. He must make a full and understandable explanation to the client before having him sign any contracts, particularly when the contracts are with the broker himself. Prall v. Gooden et ux, 226 Or 554, 561, 360 P2d 759 (1961). The relationship casts upon the broker the burden of showing that there was a full and complete disclosure and that the broker did not reap a secret profit. Widing et al v. Jensen, Real Estate Com., 231 Or 541, 544, 373 P2d 661 (1962); Parker v. Faust, 222 Or 526, 353 P2d 550 (1960). Specifically, if the brokers know that “by subdividing the property, a greater price therefor could be obtained, and failed to advise plaintiff of that fact, they [are] *204 guilty of a breach of their duty as real estate brokers.” Ridgeway v. McGuire, 176 Or 428, 433, 158 P2d 893 (1945).

Prom the evidence mentioned the jury could have concluded that the defendant knew that plaintiff was anxious to sell because of his physical and domestic situation, that the defendant did not expend his best efforts to advertise and show plaintiff’s property, and that the defendant told plaintiff he was unable to sell the property at plaintiff’s price, all with the anticipation that he would be able to purchase plaintiff’s property and re-sell it, keeping the gain for himself. While the property was not sold by the defendant for $19,900 until three months after he purchased it from plaintiff, the jury could have inferred that defendant knew of its actual value when he purchased it from plaintiff on May 20, 1968.

There was ample evidence to support the allegations of the complaint.

The defendant also argues in support of the motion for nonsuit that plaintiff’s allegations and proof of defendant’s failure to advise plaintiff of the best method to sell the property and misrepresenting the value as being less than $15,000 could not be supported because no broker-client relationship existed between plaintiff and defendant prior to May 17, 1968, when the parties signed the earnest money receipt.

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Bluebook (online)
497 P.2d 358, 262 Or. 198, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starkweather-v-shaffer-or-1972.