United Interchange, Inc., of Mass. v. Harding

145 A.2d 94, 154 Me. 128, 1958 Me. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 13, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 145 A.2d 94 (United Interchange, Inc., of Mass. v. Harding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Interchange, Inc., of Mass. v. Harding, 145 A.2d 94, 154 Me. 128, 1958 Me. LEXIS 85 (Me. 1958).

Opinion

Webber, J.

On report. This was a petition for a declaratory judgment sounding in equity and designed to test the constitutionality of the provisions of R. S., 1954, Chap. 84, as amended by P. L., 1957, Chap. 32, as applied to the business activities of the petitioners.

Prior to the 1957 amendment, Subsec. I of Sec. 2 of Chap. 84 as amended by P. L., 1955, Chap. 299, Sec. 2 read as follows:

“Sec. 2. Definitions and exceptions.
I. A ‘real estate broker’ is any person, firm, partnership, association or corporation who for a compensation or valuable consideration sells or offers for sale, buys or offers to buy, or negotiates. the purchase or sale or exchange of real estate, or who leases or offers to lease, or rents or offers for rent, or lists or offers to list for sale, lease or rent, any real estate or the improvements thereon for others, as a whole or partial vocation.”

In 1957 a new class or group to be embraced within the definition of “real estate broker” was added by the following language:

“A ‘real estate broker’ shall also include any person, firm, partnership, association or corporation *130 who engages in the business, for a fee, in connection with any contract whereby he undertakes to promote the sale of real estate through the listing of such property in a publication, issued primarily for such purpose or for referral of information concerning properties to licensed real estate brokers, or both.” (P. L., 1957, Chap. 32)

The petitioner, United Interchange, Inc., of Massachusetts, a Massachusetts corporation, is engaged primarily in the business of selling specialized magazine advertising. It has a contractual relationship with petitioner, Universal Interchange, Inc., a California corporation, which publishes among others two publications known respectively as the “Buyers Digest” and the “Brokers Bulletin.” The petitioners Guarraia and Stevens are sales representatives for United. The respondents are the Attorney General as the chief enforcement officer for the State and the Maine Real Estate Commission as the licensing and supervisory authority.

The Buyers Digest is a magazine published monthly and containing advertising of business and income producing properties for sale, lease or exchange. It also includes editorial comment and news of the trade. It is sent free of charge to libraries, Chambers of Commerce and the like. The Brokers Bulletin is a pamphlet published at regular intervals at least six times a month. It is in the nature of an advance sheet designed to keep the subscribers informed as to properties currently available. Both publications are distributed without charge to subscribers on a limited and controlled circulation basis. Both depend entirely upon advertising for revenue.

The sales methods of United employ both mail solicitation and personal interviews. In the first instance the owner of a business or income producing property may receive a *131 solicitation by mail setting forth the nature of the services offered by United and enclosing a reply card on which the potential advertiser may indicate his further interest. Upon receipt of a completed reply card, United sends a salesman to interview the customer. If the salesman is successful, the customer signs a contract to purchase advertising space in the Buyers Digest. The salesman also compiles an advertising data sheet which will guide the composition of the advertisement. The contract is then sent for approval and credit screening to the home office of United. If the contract is accepted, the advertiser is notified by mail. The advertisement is then published in the Brokers Bulletin and in succeeding issues of the Buyers Digest. The customer is entitled to five successive publications of his advertisement unless the property is sooner sold. The contract price is computed upon the amount of space purchased and is in no way contingent upon a sale of the property. United has been doing a substantial and steadily increasing business in Maine.

The activities described obviously fall within the meaning of the statutory language “to promote the sale of real estate through the listing of such property in a publication, issued primarily for such purpose or for referral of information concerning properties to licensed real estate brokers, or both.” Thus, if the law be constitutional, the petitioners are not merely engaged in the sale and publication of magazine advertising but by operation of the law have been suddenly transformed into real estate brokers and salesmen.

It seems significant to note that prior to the 1957 amendment, the above quoted definition of a “real estate broker,” taken alone, had no more application to the activities of the petitioners than it would have to the advertising operations of a daily newspaper. Yet this definition as it stood prior to 1957 seems quite fully to describe all the factors that we commonly associate with real estate brokerage or salesman *132 ship. In short, it never would have occurred to anyone that the purveyor of advertising space was in reality a real estate broker or salesman until by arbitrary legislative definition he was made so.

If the petitioners are subject to the law as now written, what are the practical results ? They must satisfy every requirement of It. S., 1954, Chap. 84 before they can lawfully engage in their business of selling and publishing advertisements. They must each procure a license from the Real Estate Commission as required by Sec. 3. They must offer proof which satisfies the Commission that they are trustworthy and competent to transact the business of a real estate broker or salesman as required by Sec. 4. They must submit to a written or oral examination by the Commission as to their qualifications to act as a broker or salesman of real estate and must pay an examination fee, all as required by Sec. 5. They must pay initial and annual renewal license fees as required by Sec. 7. The nonresident broker must appoint the Secretary of the Commission his agent for service of process as required by Sec. 10.

We are greatly aided in our decision by the very recent opinion of the Connecticut court in United Interchange v. Spellacy (1957), 144 Conn. 647, 136 A. (2nd) 801. The plaintiffs there were engaged in the identical business now being conducted by the petitioners here. Exactly the same methods were employed. The same publications were involved. The court was therefore called upon to decide the same issues of law on the same facts as are presented here. The opinion therefore has unusual relevancy. In 1955 the General Assembly had amended a definition of “real estate business” (and by reference the definitions of broker and salesman) to include “engaging in the business, for a fee, in connection with any contract whereby any person undertakes to promote the sale of real estate through the listing of such property in a publication issued primarily for such *133 purpose or for referral of information concerning properties to licensed real estate brokers or both.” It may be noted that this language was adopted practically verbatim by the Maine Legislature in the amendment to our statute enacted in 1957.

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Bluebook (online)
145 A.2d 94, 154 Me. 128, 1958 Me. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-interchange-inc-of-mass-v-harding-me-1958.