Taft v. Bayne

118 A. 173, 140 Md. 683
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 118 A. 173 (Taft v. Bayne) 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
Taft v. Bayne, 118 A. 173, 140 Md. 683 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Boyd. O. I.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of the appellee against the appellants for commissions alleged to be due the former by the latter for procuring a purchaser *684 -of a farm owned by Mrs. Taft, located in South Towson, Baltimore County. There are sixteen bills of exception in the record, presenting rulings on evidence, and one embracing those on the prayers.

The plaintiff is not a real estate broker, but is a barber in Towson, in a shop owned by William M. Koerner. In order to show the basis of plaintiff’s claim, we will state the evidence fully reflecting on that. The plaintiff testified that about the fifteenth of April, 1921, he cut Mr. Taft’s hair in the barber shop, where he had a conversation with him. He was asked to tell what that conversation was, and replied: “Well we were talking about property for sale, and he said to me, ‘Mr. Bayne,’ he said, ‘I have a property for sale down on the York Road at Rodgers’ Forge.’ Of course I knew the property very well, I said, ‘All right, Mr. Taft,’ and he said, ‘if you can sell that property I will give you commissions,’ and I asked him, ‘how much you want for it.’ And he said he would like to get thirty thousand dollars for it, and I said, ‘how many acres,’ and he said, ‘fifteen, and buildings are in good condition and has nice fruit on it,’ and I said, ‘all right, Mr. Taft, if I can- sell it for you I would be willing to do it. Of course that money looks pretty good to me,’ and in about one day or so Mr. Held came in there and he said, ‘I had a man over around Ruxton and places-’ ”

Objection was made by the defendants to the answer but the court permitted it to be given with the understanding that Mr. Held would follow it up. The witness then proceeded: “He said that he had just had a man over through Ruxton looking at a place where he could put seven or eight telephones, and he said that he didn’t find any place over there to suit this gentleman, and he said if he could get any place he was going to let him know and T said, ‘Robert, I have a place on the York Road which would suit Mr. Clifford’ and I said, ‘If you can sell it, or get in connection with Mr. Clifford, I will give you part of my commission that Mr. Taft promised me,’ and he said, ‘all right, T will go out and call *685 tip’ and lie goes out and calls up Mr. Charles Earp, and ho came in and said he called up Mr. Earp, and Mr. Earp was to let Mr. Clifford know.”

A motion to strike out the answer as hearsay and not responsive to the question was made, hut overruled, and for some reason which is unexplained, that was repeated. The witness was then asked: “Did Mr. Held report to you any more the result of this talk with Mr. Earp ?” which was objected to, but the witness was permitted to answer and said:

“He said be had been talking with Mr. Earp and that Mr. Earp said that he would let Mr. Clifford know in the morning, and in a couple of days afterwards Mr. Held came over there and said that Mi". Earp had called him and said Mr. Clifford would he out to see us on Wednesday to look at the property, and we waited for him Wednesday and he didn’t come, and the next day or so afterwards Mr. Held came and told me Mr. Clifford had been to Mr. Taft’s.”

A motion to strike that out was overruled and the witness further testified: “That after Mr. Held reported to him that Mr. Clifford had been to the Taft property, he immediately got in the machine and went down to see Mr. Taft, and he asked him if Mr. Clifford had been out to see him and Mr. Taft said yes. Mrs. Taft was not present at that time; that Mr. Taft said, ‘yes, Mr. Clifford has been here,’ and witness said, ‘I am the gentleman that notified Mr. Clifford about your place being for sale’ and about that time Mrs-. Taft came out ou the porch and he turned around and said to Mrs. Taft, ‘This is the gentleman that sent Mr. Clifford out to see us about the property,’ and she didn’t say anything at that time and turned around and went on the other end of the porch and we talked there for a co-uple of minutes and Taft said to witness-, ‘how did Mr. Clifford come to come out here with Mr. Steffey,’ and witness said, ‘I don’t know anything about that.’ ”

He was asked “Who is that ?” and replied, “The real estate-man, Mr. Steffey, and he asked me, how did he get in touch *686 with him, and I said, ‘Mr. Taft, I don’t know about that,’ and he said, ‘Very well, I have signed all my rights over to the real estate broker,’ he said, ‘I have not anything to do with it,’ he said, ‘If you want your commission you will have to get it through Mr. Steffey.’ ”

The witness then went on to testify that he had not collected any commission on the sale, that the property had been sold to Mr. Clifford, that he didn’t know the purchase price. He was then asked, “That day that you were at Mr. Taft’s was .anything said about the property being sold at that time?” and replied, “Well, he said he didn’t know if Mr. Clifford was going to take it or not, but that morning I went down there Mr. Held told me Mr. Clifford would be out there on the following Saturday.”

A motion to strike out that part of the answer of the witness as to what Mr. Held said was overruled.

The witness further testified on cross-examination that the time was in April, he thought on Friday, the 22nd, about a week following the time Mr. Taft was in the barber shop. That he did not see Mr. Taft any more after that, that he went there a couple of times after that but no one was at home; that the Friday he went there was the day before the Saturday that Mr. Held had reported that Mr. Clifford was going to return, that he told Mr. Taft he would be out on the following Saturday; that the sale had not been actually consummated when he was talking to Mr. Taft. He said he was not a licensed real estate broker; that he was a barber, that he had not seen Mr. Taft or communicated with him since April 22nd; that he did not send a bill to him for his commission because Mr. Taft said he did not see where he had any right to pay him, that he should get his compensation from the real estate agent, Steffey and Company; that he did not know Mr. Clifford, the purchaser, never savr him until the day he testified ; that he did not claim to have taken any part in negotiating for the sale for it with Mr. Clifford, didn’t carry on any of the negotiations between Taft and Clifford himself; that ho used his friend, Mr. Held, that he was acting as his agent; *687 that Mr. Held knew Mr. Clifford, and he, Bayne, used him as his agent, that he didn’t know what the property actually sold for eventually.

Harry T. Campbell testified that he was in the barber shop when the conversation between Mr. Bayne and Mr. Taft took place. II e said: “I was sitting there waiting to be shaved, and I heard them talking about real estate and Mr. Taft said, ‘Soli my place or find somebody to buy it, and there is $1,500 in it for you, and Mr. Bayne asked him how many acres and 1 didn’t pay any attention,’ but I heard him say he would give him $1,500 if he could find anybody to buy it.”

William M. Koemer, the proprietor of the barber shop; said that Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 A. 173, 140 Md. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taft-v-bayne-md-1922.