Stokes v. Wolf

112 A. 566, 137 Md. 393, 1921 Md. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 112 A. 566 (Stokes v. Wolf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stokes v. Wolf, 112 A. 566, 137 Md. 393, 1921 Md. LEXIS 2 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appeal in this ease was taken from a judgment of the Court of Cbmmon Pleas of Baltimore in favor of the plaintiff in an action brought by the appellee against the appellant for the recovery of commissions for services claimed to have been rendered in procuring a purchaser for the Hotel Caswell in Baltimore City.

*396 The declaration contains the common counts, and a special count, in which it is stated that

“the defendants employed the plaintiff at and for a compensation of $15,000 to sell or find a purchaser of the property known as the Caswell Hotel; and that the plaintiff procured purchasers who were ready, willing, and able to purchase the said property upon terms authorized by the plaintiff’s employers; that the said employers were advised of that fact, and the names of the purchasers were disclosed to the said employers, and the said employers were given an opportunity to complete the sale to the said proposed purchasers; and that the said sale was not consummated because of the said employers’ default, in that after having agreed to make the said sale, they subsequently refused to make the same, and the defendants refused and still do refuse to pay the plaintiff.”

The declaration was supplemented by a bill of particulars setting forth in detail the claim presented under the common counts. There were originally two defendants, Sylvanus Stokes and the C'aswell Hotel Company, both of whom pleaded the general issue, but at the close of the testimony the case against the Caswell Hotel Company was dismissed.

The record submits eight exceptions, seven of which relate to the court’s rulings on evidence, and one to its rulings on the prayers and on motion to strike out evidence. The main questions presented by the appeal are whether there is to be-found in the record any evidence legally sufficient to show: first, whether there ever was any such contract of employment as that set up¡ by the appellee in his narr.; and second, whether he did in fact procure a purchaser ready, able and willing to buy the property upon terms satisfactory to the appellant, and third, whether the appellant accepted such purchaser.

Since the legal sufficiency of the evidence to establish these facts is challenged, it becomes necessary to review the testi *397 mony in connection with, them. In such an examination not only is the truth of all the evidence in favor of the plaintiff’s contentions assumed, but also all inferences and implications which may be legitimately and naturally drawn from it. The contentions of the respective parties, as to what the transaction between them concerning the Oaswell Hotel really was, were directly opposed, and the testimony in the ease is entirely consistent with that conflict-

The appellee contends that he was employed at a stated compensation to procure a purchaser for the hotel, and that acting under such employment he did procure persons ready, able and willing to buy it upon terms satisfactory to the appellant, and that the appellant accepted such purchasers and agreed to sell the property to them, but that afterwards^, without any default on the part of such proposed purchasers or the appellee, he refused to consummate that sale, but sold the property to another.

On the other hand the appellant contends that he never employed the appellee to sell the property at all, that he never agreed to pay him any commission for its sale, but expressly declined to do so, and that the appellee never procured any person except himself as a possible purchaser, and that all the negotiations between them in reference to the hotel were in connection with the appellee’s efforts to buy it for himself.

■Sylvanus 'Stokes, the appellant, who has been for a number of years engaged in the business of building, developing1 and selling hotels in various cities, came to Baltimore in 1889, where he remained until 1897. Shortly after the Baltimore fire in 1904-, he built and for a time operated the Caswell Hotel. Although that property was nominally owned by the Oaswell Hotel Company, Stokes, as the owner of virtually all the stock of the company, was its real owner. After carrying on the hotel himself for about a year, Stokes leased it for short periods hr several tenants and finally to Mr. Harry Bnsick, who became its owner through purchasing the *398 stock of the Oaswell Hotel Company in 1918. For some time before its sale to Mr. Busiek in 1918,. Mr. Stokes had been trying to find, a purchaser for the property, and had repeatedly, “possibly a dozen times,” offered it to Mr. Busiek, but up to that time without success.

It was under these circumstances that the negotiations, which form the subject matter of this case, began between the parties to it. In discussing the testimony relating to them reference will be made principally to that portion of it which tends tp support the contention of the appellee, since we are concerned not with its weight, but with its legal sufficiency to entitle the plaintiff to recover under the pleadings.

Testifying in his own behalf, the plaintiff said that, in the early spring of 1917, Mr. Stokes came to his office to see him “about getting a customer for the Oaswell Hotel,” that in that, interview Mr. Stokes told him he owned the hotel and wanted to sell it, and gave the witness the detailed information which he felt he should have to discuss its sale intelligently with, prospective purchasers, and told him that he wanted $650,000' for it. Continuing the witness said: “I told Mr. Stokes that I would look about for a purchaser. I did not know how soon I would get a purchaser- * * * I told him I was a busy man myself, but I would make a strong-effort to get somebody to buy the hotel if I possibly could. * * * I do not remember his exact language, but it was agreed between Mr. ’Stokes and myself that I was to get the usual, commissions allowed by real estate men, two and one-half per cent, on tire sale if consummated.” He was then asked: “For what were you to receive this two and one-half per cent, commission ?” And replied: “When I got a purchaser to buy the Oaswell Hotel from Mr. .S’tokes I was to receive two and one-half per cent, commission. That was to be the fee or the commission, just as you chose to use tire word, for the effort I was putting forth to locate a customer.” He further testified that he finally interested a Mr. Joel Gephard,' who was a “part owner in the Victoria Theatre and other large *399 properties around Baltimore,” in the property, and brought about an interview between him and Mr. Stokes. Thisi interview took place either at the store of Mr. D. Clifford Mansfield, on Fayette Street, or at the witness’ office. That at that interview Mr. Stokes and Mr. Gephard, in the presence of Mr. Mansfield and Mr. Wolf discussed “the purchase by Mr. Gephard of the Hotel Caswell.” That the appellant had asked $650,000' for the property, but Gephard did not want to give that much money for it. That there was “considerable talk and bickering back and forth,” and that Mr. Stokes and the witness were trying to convince Mr. Gephard that it was really a valuable property and what possibilities it had.

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Bluebook (online)
112 A. 566, 137 Md. 393, 1921 Md. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-wolf-md-1921.