Tosh v. Kirshner

248 S.W. 994, 213 Mo. App. 257, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 24
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 994 (Tosh v. Kirshner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tosh v. Kirshner, 248 S.W. 994, 213 Mo. App. 257, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 24 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*259 ABNOLD, J.

This is an action to recover a real estate broker’s commission. The suit was originally instituted and tried in a justice court in Jackson Coun ty, where on September 14, 1920, judgment was rendered in defendant’s favor. - An appeal .was taken in due tim° to the circuit court of said county where trial to a jury on April 14, 1921, resulted in verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $500. Timely motions for new-trial and in arrest were overruled and the cause is her-'' by writ of error.

The record discloses that some time during the latter part of February, or the first of March, 1920, plaintiff who is a real estate broker, was employed by defendant to procure a purchaser for a six apartment building located at 3517-3519 Wyandotte Street in Kansas City, Mo., on a commission of $500, provided the property was sold for the price and sum of $18,500. There was no written contract of employment between the parties and no specification as to when the employment should end, so far as the record shows. '

Plaintiff then interested the firm of Bertche-Parker Bealty Co., doing business at Kansas City, Mo., as real estate brokers and as buyers and sellers of real estate for profit, and arranged a meeting between them and defendant, where negotiations relative to the disposal of the property were entered into.

The .testimony of plaintiff tends to show that the Bertche-Parker Bealty Co. entered the deal with the idea of purchasing and reselling the property at a profit, first securing a party to whom they might sell at a price over and above the upset price given them by the owner, They told plaintiff and defendant that they had in mind an Ohio man who would buy the property but this deal never matured, because of unsatisfactory terms. The testimony fails to show that plaintiff was instrumental in bringing the Ohio man into the deal.

It appears of record that the Bertche-Parker Company continued their efforts to find a purchaser for the flats, upon terms acceptable to defendant, and finally *260 succeeded in finding such purchaser in the person of one Mary Nevins, or the Nevins Estate.

Title to the real estate in question was in one Frank S. Stroheker. After some delay, involving the necessary disposition of a lot on Grand Avenue which it was proposed to trade in as part consideration on the apartment building, satisfactory terms were evolved and a contract entered into between Stroheker, acting for defendant, and the Bertche-Parker Realty Company, wherein said Stroheker is designated as seller and BertcheParker Company as buyer. This contract was introduced in evidence. An examination of it shows that, strictly speaking, it is neither a contract of sale of real estate nor a contract for a broker’s commission. It partakes of the elements of both and is a sort of hybrid, as it were. The part partaking of the nature of a contract for the sale of real estate reads as follows:

“This contract, made and entered into this 5th day of June, 1920, by and between Frank Stroheker, the sell.er, and Bertche-Parker Realty Company, the buyer.
Witnesseth: That seller has sold and agrees to convey as herein provided the following described real estate in Jackson County, Missouri, to-wit: All of Lot 18, in Block 9, Hyde Park, an addition in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri. Same being the real estate located at 3517-19 Wyandotte St. The seller is to convey said real estate subject to a first deed of trust, securing a note of $10,000 dated on or about the date of delivery of deed to said described property bearing interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable semiannually and due as follows: $250 one year after date, $250 two years after date and $250 three years after date, $250 four years after date and $9000 five years after date. Said loan of- $10,000 is to be procured through the agency of George O. Fluke and negotiated by Chas. H. Rechner. The seller to pay commission of $250 for the loan. If for .any reason the said George O. Fluke fails to procure said loan then this contract shall become null and void. For the price and sum of twenty *261 thousand dollars, to be paid to the buyer as follows: Five hundred dollars at the signing of this contract, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged by the seller and which is deposited with Bertche-Parker Eealty Company as part of the consideration of the sale, the balance whereof is to be paid in the following manner, to-wit: $4500 cash on delivery of deed as herein provided, and a second note of $5000 secured by second deed of trust on said real estate due three years after date and payable at the rate of $100 per month and interest. Said note to be executed by Mary Nevins in favor of the seller or his order. All deferred payments to be represented by notes secured by deed of trust on above described property containing usual provisions, drawing interest from date of deed at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, and monthly.”

Then follow clauses usually found in contracts for sale of real estate, relating (a) to payment of taxes by seller, (b) division of rentals between seller and buyer, (c) stipulation covering furnishing abstract, and correction of faults found therein. Up to this point there would seem to be no great difficulty in construing the contract as one for the sale of real estate, with Prank S. Strohekeiy as seller, and Bertche-Parker Eealty Co., as buyer. The part of the contract above quoted which reads “said note to be executed by Mary Nevins in favor of the seller or his order,” does not remove from the contract the element that the sale was made by Stroheker to Bertche-Parker Eealty Company. The element of uncertainty is incorporated into the contract, if, indeed, it is an element of uncertainty, in the last clause thereof, as follows:

“If the seller has kept his part of the contract by furnishing good title as herein provided, and the buyer fail to comply with the requirements within five days thereafter, then the money deposited as aforesaid is forfeited by the buyer, and this contract may or may not be thereafter operative, at the option of the seller. The seller agrees to pay the Pertche-Parker Realty Co. the *262 sum of $1000 as full compensation for negotiating the sale.”

The purpose and meaning of the contract must be construed in the light of the surrounding facts and circumstances in evidence. The sale and transfer of the property was consummated under the terms of said contract and the title thereto passed to the Nevins heirs. Thereupon the profits on the sale over and above the upset price were divided evenly between defendant and the Bertehe-Parker Realty Company, the latter receiving a check, dated July 7, 1920, for $783, payable to the order of Bertehe-Parker Realty Company, and signed by Prank B. Strohmeyer. Plaintiff thereafter, and upon the consummation of the deal, demanded a commission of $500 from defendant for having found a purchaser for the property. Payment was refused and this, suit followed, with result as above indicated.

Defendant’s first assignment of error is directed to the action of the court in refusing to give defendant’s peremptory instructions at the close of plaintiff’s case and again at the close of all the evidence.

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Related

Leonard v. Dougherty
296 S.W. 263 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 994, 213 Mo. App. 257, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tosh-v-kirshner-moctapp-1923.