Stromberg v. Seaton Ranch Company

502 P.2d 41, 160 Mont. 293, 1972 Mont. LEXIS 381
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1972
Docket12226
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 502 P.2d 41 (Stromberg v. Seaton Ranch Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stromberg v. Seaton Ranch Company, 502 P.2d 41, 160 Mont. 293, 1972 Mont. LEXIS 381 (Mo. 1972).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DALY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered by the district court of the eighth judicial district, County of Cascade, Hon. Paul G. Hatfield presiding without a jury. Judgment was entered upon findings of fact and conclusions of law which found the plaintiff, Matt Brown, was the efficient procuring cause of the sale of the Seaton ranch to the Glacier Colony of Hutterites, for $810,000 and entitled to a real estate commission in the amount of $40,500, together with attorney fees in the amount of $3,783.56, plus costs.

Plaintiff E. C. Stromberg, a real estate broker, filed an action, against defendants Seaton Ranch Company and Dorothy Seaton, to recover a real estate commission for the sale of the Seaton, ranch. Later plaintiff Matt Brown, a real estate broker, filed an. action against defendant Seaton Ranch Company, a corporation,, for recovery of a real estate commission for the sale of the same' ranch.

Defendants moved to have the two cases consolidated under-Rule 42(a), M.R.Civ.P. Both plaintiffs resisted but the cases, were consolidated by the court.

Seaton Ranch Company owned a large ranch near Fort Shawin Cascade County. Ed Seaton, husband of defendant DorothySeaton, managed the ranch until his death in 1965. Thereafter* *296 Dorothy Seaton took over the management and became owner of all the stock in the corporation.

After her husband’s death, Dorothy Seaton sold the machinery and part of the livestock and entered into approximately twenty nonexclusive listings with various real estate brokers for the sale of the ranch, including a listing with B. C. Stromberg dated May 17, 1966, and a listing to Matt Brown, dated December 9, 1966. Stromberg’s listing contract contained no expiration date and was to remain open until either the contract was terminated or the ranch was sold. The Brown listing contract had an expiration date of June 15, 1967, although a blank space was left in the Brown listing relating to the number of days after the expiration date during which Brown could recover a commission in the event of a sale.

Both Stromberg and Brown solicited the Glacier Colony. Soon after obtaining his listing on May 17, 1966, Stromberg contacted a group of prospective customers and imparted to them all of the pertinent information regarding the Seaton ranch. Among these prospective customers was Mr. John Entz of the Glacier Colony. Mr. Entz, secretary-treasurer of the Glacier Colony, had advised Stromberg prior to May 1966, that the Glacier Colony desired land in the Great Falls area. After receiving the real estate listing from Mrs. Seaton, Stromberg made two personal visits to the Glacier Colony, the first in May or June 1966, and the second sometime in the spring of 1967. Both times he gave information about the Seaton ranch to Mr. Entz and attempted to interest him in the ultimate purchase of the ranch. Stromberg also made several telephone calls to Entz regarding the possible sale of the property and wrote two letters to Entz dated January 5, 1967 and June 27, 1967, both of which discussed the Seaton ranch.

Mr. Entz visited Stromberg’s office on several occasions, the last visit being on July 12, 1967. In July 1967, some members of the Glacier Colony went to Stromberg’s office in Great Falls, expressed a desire to be shown the Seaton ranch, and asked for an appointment for that purpose. Stromberg never made the ap *297 pointment nor showed them the ranch. The last contact by Stromberg with either Mrs. Seaton or the officers of the Glacier Colony was on July 12, 1967, when he wrote a letter to Mr. Entz apologizing for his failure to make an appointment. Stromberg’s testimony at trial was:

“Like I told you before, you reach a saturation point on contacts and work with people. There is some point there where they indicated they were going to come back, I was certainly not going to go there the next day and lead them by the hand and say ‘let’s go ’. ”

Matt Brown specialized in ranch properties and during the period from 1965 to December 1966, he obtained three nonexclusive listings to sell the Seaton ranch, one from Ed Seaton and two from Dorothy Seaton. He had already spent considerable time on this property when he received the listing in question here. Prior to the June 15, 1967, expiration of his listing, Brown on or about May 24, 1967, in response to a call from the Glacier Colony drove to the colony and spent two to two and one-half hours giving the leaders of the colony information on one other ranch and complete details on the Seaton ranch. They did not indicate they had ever seen the Seaton ranch but showed an interest in it. The only deterrent to their interest was an outstanding lease of the farm land to one Charles Jacobsen, but they advised Matt Brown that he could overcome that obstacle. Upon leaving the colony, Brown advised them to contact him when they were ready to look at the ranch.

Within a day or two after enlisting the interest of the Glacier Colony, on May 27, 1967, Brown went to see Dorothy Seaton at the ranch and advised her the Glacier Colony was interested in buying the ranch and ascertained that she would not object to selling to Huntterites. Brown then went to the home of Charles Jacobsen, the lessee of the Seaton ranch farm land in Fairfield, Montana, and attempted to find out what it would take to buy out the lessee’s interest. He was unsuccessful in obtaining a figure.

*298 Subsequently, the leaders of tbe Glacier Colony went to Jacob-sen’s home at Fairfield, their purpose being to deal directly with him in attempting to buy his leasehold interest. They offered him $60,000, but he demanded $80,000. At that time they advised Jacobsen they were buying the Seaton ranch.

A few days after his visits to Mrs. Seaton and to Charles Jacobsen, Brown had another telephone call from the leaders of the Glacier Colony indicating they were in Great Falls and wanted to go out to look at the ranch. This was on June 21, 1967, five days after the expiration date in Brown’s listing.

Brown met the colony leaders and drove them in his car to the Seaton ranch. He spent the entire afternoon showing the ranch, arriving at 2 p.m. and returning to his home between 7:30 to 8:00 p.m. He showed the leaders of the colony a large part of the ranch and they exhibited an interest in seeing the entire ranch property.

The showing of the ranch on June 21 was cut short when Brown’s automobile was damaged when it slipped into a rut, but he was able to drive the leaders back to Great Falls. To complete the showing, arrangements were made for Brown to take the Hutterites to breakfast the next morning and then take them back to the ranch and complete the showing. However, only the next morning, one of the Hutterites called Brown at his home and stated that they had received a call and would have to return to the colony and so would not be able to return to the Seaton ranch.

The next day, June 22, 1967, Brown mailed a letter to John Entz expressing disappointment that he had been unable to show them the entire ranch, offering further information and urging them to make a cash offer.

A day or two later Brown called Mrs. Seaton and asked to meet her either at the ranch or at his office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
502 P.2d 41, 160 Mont. 293, 1972 Mont. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stromberg-v-seaton-ranch-company-mont-1972.