Talley v. Security Service Corp.

663 P.2d 361, 99 N.M. 702
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1983
Docket14113
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 663 P.2d 361 (Talley v. Security Service Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talley v. Security Service Corp., 663 P.2d 361, 99 N.M. 702 (N.M. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

GALVAN, District Judge.

Plain tiffs/Appellants sued Security Service Corporation (Security) for breach of contract to recover a real estate brokerage commission. After trial to the bench, the court entered judgment denying all relief. Upon appeal, we affirm.

We discuss four issues:

1. Whether for purposes of a broker’s commission, sale of the property in question related back to the time the option was granted.

2. Whether Security prevented the brokers from performing under the listing agreement.

3. Whether the commission was waived.

4. Whether equity will intervene.

The facts of this case are as follows. On June 1, 1979, Appellants Talley and Daugherty agreed to sell Security seventeen acres of unimproved land. . As part of the agreement, Security gave Talley and Daugherty the right to sell twenty-six lots in the subsequently platted tract for a ten percent commission. The pertinent language in the contract granting that right reads as follows:

The Seller [Talley and Daugherty] shall have the right to sell to an approved builder, at terms acceptable to the Buyer’s bank, twenty-six (26) single family lots and receive a ten percent (10%) sales commission. This listing privilege expires one hundred eighty (180) calendar days after the recordation of the plat for said tract. The minimum sales price of the lots will be determined by the Buyer [Security] including commission.

Talley was a real estate salesman for Appellant Maurice P. Sheehan, d/b/a Sheehan Realty, and Daugherty was a real estate broker for Appellant Rudy P. Hopp, d/b/a R.P. Hopp Realty. On December 11, 1979, Security entered into a listing agreement with R.P. Hopp Realty and Sheehan Realty. In compliance with the contract as set out above, the brokers received an exclusive listing on twenty-six lots. The listing was to begin on December 11,1979, and continue until June 12, 1980. The listing carried an attachment identifying the twenty-six lots selected by Talley and Daugherty and the price for each lot as set by Security.

On December 28, 1979, Security contracted with Wood Brothers Homes, a corporation, to sell fifty-seven finished lots (not involved in this appeal). As additional consideration, Security agreed to grant Wood Brothers an option to buy any of the twenty-six lots Hopp Realty and Sheehan Realty did not sell during the 180 day listing agreement. Wood Brothers’ option was limited by the following language:

SUBJECT, HOWEVER, TO THE EXISTING PRIOR RIGHT OF R.P. HOPP REALTY AND SHEEHAN REALTY TO SELL SUCH LOTS TO THIRD PARTIES PURSUANT TO THEIR BROKERAGE AGREEMENT WITH SELLER [SECURITY], which may result in fewer than 26 additional finished lots being available for this option;

The option to Wood Brothers was to be for thirty days, with the following agreement regarding notice:

Seller [Security] shall notify Buyer [Wood Brothers] on or before June 15, 1980, of the number and designation of the 26, or such lesser number as herein provided, lots described above which have not been sold by R.P. HOPP REALTY and SHEE-HAN REALTY and which are then subject to this option, the giving of such notice, as herein provided, shall commence the 30-day term of this option. [Emphasis supplied.]

After the exclusive listing expired, Wood Brothers exercised its option with Security. Talley, Daugherty, Hopp Realty, and Sheehan Realty (Brokers) sued Security for the commission they would have earned pursuant to their contract had they sold the twenty-six lots.

Brokers rely on the language of the listing agreement, which provides in part as follows:

I [Security] agree to pay Broker a commission of_per cent of the selling price plus applicable New Mexico Gross Receipts Tax on said commission upon the occurrence of any of the following events:
(1)If prior to the termination of this agreement Broker or his agent secures a purchaser on the above terms or at any other price or terms acceptable to me; or (2) If prior to the termination of this agreement the said property is sold or exchanged by Broker or his agent or any other person, including myself; or
(3) If at any time up to three months following the termination of this agreement the said property is sold or exchanged to any person who has inspected or been shown the property, and whose name Broker or his agent had, prior to termination, submitted to me in writing or personally introduced to me as a prospective purchaser and if the said property had not been relisted prior to the sale or exchange; or
(4) If by any action I prevent performance of this agreement by Broker or his agent.

The parties concede that paragraphs (1) and (3) do not apply. Brokers contend, however, that since Wood Brothers exercised their option to purchase the twenty-six lots, Brokers are entitled to a ten percent commission pursuant to paragraph (2) of the listing agreement. They claim this even though the option period did not commence until June 16, 1980 (after the listing agreement had terminated), and the option was not exercised by Wood Brothers until June 20, 1980. Their reasoning is that the sale to Wood Brothers related back to December 28, 1979, when Security agreed to grant Wood Brothers an option to buy the twenty-six lots after the 180 day listing agreement terminated. Additionally, Brokers contend that the agreement to grant the option prevented them from performing under the listing agreement and that they therefore are entitled to their commission pursuant to paragraph (4).

1. Did the Sale Relate Back?

It is a settled principle that when an owner sells the property covered by an exclusive listing agreement during the term of the agreement, the broker is entitled to the commission. White v. Ragle, 82 N.M. 644, 485 P.2d 978 (Ct.App.1971). The owner-broker relationship exists during the term of the listing agreement. During that term “the contractual duties of the owner are to compensate the broker for services rendered in accordance with the contract of employment and to exercise good faith toward the broker * * Wilson v. Hayner, 98 N.M. 514, 516, 650 P.2d 36, 38 (Ct.App.1982).

To support their claim for a commission, Brokers rely primarily on the case of Anthony v. Enzler, 61 Cal.App.3d 872, 132 Cal.Rptr. 553 (1976), for the proposition that when an owner grants an option during the term of the listing agreement and the option is exercised after the listing agreement terminates, the sale relates back to the date the option was granted. In Anthony, third party purchasers obtained by the broker attempted to defeat the broker’s right to a commission by inducing the owner to enter into an option agreement that would not be exercised until the listing agreement had terminated.

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Bluebook (online)
663 P.2d 361, 99 N.M. 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talley-v-security-service-corp-nm-1983.