Strumpf v. State

18 So. 2d 104, 31 Ala. App. 409, 1944 Ala. App. LEXIS 337
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1944
Docket6 Div. 52.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 18 So. 2d 104 (Strumpf v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strumpf v. State, 18 So. 2d 104, 31 Ala. App. 409, 1944 Ala. App. LEXIS 337 (Ala. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

SIMPSON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted in the circuit court of selling real estate without a real estate salesman’s or broker’s licence as required by Chapter 14, Title 46, Sections 298 et seq. of the 1940 Code of Alabama. (The report of the case will contain Section 299.)

Trial was upon an' agreed statement of facts which is incorporated in the record as the bill of exceptions. This agreed statement of the evidence shows: Polakow’s Realty Experts, Inc., a corporation doing business in Bessemer, was the owner 'of certain real estate known as Garden Highlands and subdivided the property into lots and put these lots on the market for sale, through its regularly employed agents, some working for a straight salary and others on commission. The exclusive business of said corporation, during the proscriptive period of the indictment, was the purchasing and subdividing of acreage into lots and the selling of said lots to the public through its said employees. Appellant was selling said lots on commission and devoted his entire time to this employment. He was employed by no one else. This was his exclusive vocation and his duties were to find prospects and sell the lots owned by said corporation, making contracts of sale in the name of said corporation as owners thereof. The agreed stipulation of facts further recites that appellant was a regular employee of said corporation.

The overall question presented by the appeal is whether or not, under this state *413 ment of the evidence, appellant would be liable for a State license as a real estate salesman or broker.

By the terms of the act (Section 299) a “real estate broker”, to be liable for a license for selling real estate, must “for a compensation or valuable consideration, sell(s) * * * real estate * * * for others”, and a “real estate salesman”, to be so liable, must be “employed” by such real estate broker.

Manifestly, the corporation was not a broker within the meaning of the act because it did not (to use the language of the act) “for a compensation or valuable consideration, sell(s) or offer (s) for sale, buy(s) or offer(s) to buy, negotiate(s) the purchase or sale or exchange * * *, or * * * lease(s) or offer(s) to lease, rent(s) or offer(s) for rent, any real estate or the improvements thereon for others.” In other words, the corporation was not a broker because it was engaged in doing no business for others. It was selling its own real estate exclusively. Appellant, therefore, was not a real estate salesman (not employed by a broker) and therefore was not liable for a real estate salesman’s license.

But was he a broker under the statute? We think not, under the statement of facts, because it was therein agreed that appellant was a regular employee of the corporation, and the following proviso in Section 299 exempts from liability the corporation’s regular employees with respect to the property it owned, where the sales were made, as here, by said employees in the regular course of, or as an incident to, the business of their principal, to-wit: “The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to any person, co-partnership, association or corporation, who as owner or lessor shall perform any of the acts aforesaid with reference to property owned or leased by them, or to the regular employees thereof, with respect to the property so owned or leased [by them], where such acts are performed in the regular course of, or as an incident to, the management of such property and the investment therein.”

Such is the connotation in the observation of Mr. Justice Bouldin of our Supreme Court in the case of Knight v. Watson, 221 Ala. 69, 127 So. 841, 842, where this same proviso was under consideration. It was there pointed out that “the above-quoted exception is limited to regular employees performing acts in the regular course of or as incident to the management of the property”, but does not exempt a person who for profit takes occasion to make “a sale of property as to which he has no relation as a regular employee of the owner.”

This construction is also consonant with the universal principle that a corporation acts, and can only act, through its agents. It is not easily conceivable that the Legislature would enact that a principal (as owner) could sell its own property without responsibility under the act (though to sell it must do so through its agents), but that it could not do so when acting by and through its duly constituted and regularly employed agents. To adopt this illogical construction would have the effect of proscribing sales of real estate by corporation owners and thereby discriminating against them, meanwhile leaving free of statutory control individual persons selling their own real estate.

This interpretation likewise comports with the generally accepted distinction between an agent, regularly employed by one principal and devoting his entire time to this employment, and a broker, holding himself out to the public to engage, on a commission, to negotiate contracts relative to property indiscriminately and regardless of ownership.

“A broker is distinguished from an agent, in that a broker holds himself out for employment by others, and acts as an intermediate negotiator between the parties to a transaction, and in a sense is the agent of both parties, whereas the element of exclusiveness of representation of the principal by which he is employed enters into the employment of an agent.” 12 C.J.S., Brokers, p. 8, § 3; Stratford v. City Council of Montgomery, 110 Ala. 619, 625, 20 So. 127; City of Lake Charles v. Equitable Life Assurance, 114 La. 836, 38 So. 578; Rattray v. W. P. Brown & Sons Lumber Co., 29 Ala.App. 93, 96, 192 So. 285.

Another observation with respect to the proviso aforesaid is perhaps timely. As regards appellant, he must be ruled as exempt from license because the evidence, according to agreement of the parties, stipulated that he was a “regular employee” of the owner of the property, selling^said property in the regular course of business as *414 such employee. This stipulation in the evidence that he is such regular employee rescues him from liability under the act and makes it unnecessary to here discuss the distinction between an agent regularly employed by and acting for a principal and an independent contractor selling on commissions. For some authorities dealing with the distinction, see Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Pierce, 132 Old. 167, 269 P. 1076, 61 A.L.R. 223 et seq.; In re Murray, 130 Me. 181, 154 A. 352, 75 A.L.R. 725 et seq.; Nichols v. Hubbell, 92 Conn. 611, 103 A. 835, 19 A.L.R. 226 et seq.; Huebner v. Industrial Comm., 234 Wis. 239, 290 N.W. 145, 126 A.L.R. 1113; P. F. Collier & Son v. Hartfeil, 8 Cir., 72 F.2d 625.

It should also be noticed that had the corporation been engaged in selling real property for others, rather than that of exclusively selling its own, then it would have been liable under the statute as a broker and appellant as a real estate salesman. Sec. 299. The evidence in the record, however, presents no such situation.

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Bluebook (online)
18 So. 2d 104, 31 Ala. App. 409, 1944 Ala. App. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strumpf-v-state-alactapp-1944.