Vancortlandt v. Cotter

14 Conn. Supp. 324, 1946 Conn. Super. LEXIS 99
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 10, 1946
DocketFile No. 8064
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Conn. Supp. 324 (Vancortlandt v. Cotter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vancortlandt v. Cotter, 14 Conn. Supp. 324, 1946 Conn. Super. LEXIS 99 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1946).

Opinion

FITZGERALD, J.

This is an action of interpleader brought by the plaintiffs as stakeholders of a fund in the amount of $2425. The plaintiffs, who are sisters, reside in New York City. Through their deceased father they became the owners of twenty-nine acres located in Sharon, Connecticut, and of a commodious dwelling thereon. In 1945, and for some years prior thereto, they were desirous of selling this property. In August, 1943, they entered into a written contract with -Previews, Incorporated, for the listing and publication of the property in a booklet annually edited by the corporation. In this manner a wide attention to properties on the market therein listed is brought to real-estate brokers and to members of the public. In addition to a stipulation in the contract providing for a retainer to the corporation and a final fee to it upon sale of the property, there is a further provision that the plaintiffs will pay “one standard full commission to the broker who makes the sale.” This contract was in force on the dates hereinafter considered. On page 40 of 'the 1945 edition of Previews there appears a picture of the front of the house and a detailed description of the property in its entirety. The asking price therein specified is $85,000.

In late November, 1945, Mr. and Mrs. Morton-Smith of New York submitted an offer of purchase to the plaintiffs in the amount of $48,500 which was accepted. In preparing the closing papers the New York attorney for the plaintiffs recognized that the defendants Perkins and Walter of Brattleboro, Vt., comprising a partnership, might be in a position to assert [326]*326a claim for commission in whole or in part notwithstanding the fact that it was the defendant Cotter of Sharon through whom the Morton-Smiths submitted the offer which was accepted. The plaintiffs have been placed in a quandry. They are willing to pay a commission of 5 per cent of the purchase price but wish to avoid the expense, anxiety and inconvenience attending a lawsuit instigated by a broker whose claim they may deny in favor of another. Title to the property was finally conveyed to Mrs. Morton-Smith in January, 1946, for the price agreed upon, and the plaintiffs continue to hold the sum of $2425 for payment over to either or both sets of claimants-defendants as the court shall direct.

The defendants, as sole claimants to the fund, have filed their respective claims and have been heard upon them. In passing it may be noted that the procedure followed in the case is that outlined in the memoranda of the trial court in Blanchard v. Voghel, 12 Conn. Sup. 210 and 12 Conn. Sup. 213.

As between the two sets of defendants — Mrs. Cotter on the one hand and Messrs. Perkins and Walter on the other — the question presented is: Which is entitled to the commission as having constituted the efficient‘or effective procuring cause of the sale? There are cases in which two or more brokers have been held entitled to share a single commission on the theory of a “joint adventure.” In the court’s opinion the facts in the case at bar preclude adopting this theory and ordering a division of the fund. See cases collected in annotations appearing in 48 A. L. R. 1055, 1069 and 138 A. L. R. 968, 989.

The basis of the Perkins-Walter claim may be stated thus: The Morton-Smiths were interested in acquiring property located anywhere between northwestern Connecticut and central Vermont. In the office of the partners at Brattleboro on Saturday afternoon, October 20, 1945, Mrs. Morton-Smith, in company with her husband, remarked about the plaintiff’s property, which was listed and described in her own copy of Previews at page 40, saying in substance: “Here’s a place that would interest us but there are only 29 acres.” Whereupon Walter, who formerly lived in Sharon and who knew the neighborhood, stated that he thought adjoining property could be acquired to make up the shortage in acreage. He suggested that the Morton-Smiths go to Sharon and see Mrs. Cotter, who would show them over the property, adding that Mrs. Cotter had the keys to the house. Apparently Mrs. Cotter’s interest [327]*327in the property was known to Walter through an independent listing of her own. The Morton-Smiths did go to Sharon and did look up Mrs. Cotter who took them upon the plaintiffs’ property. The keys of the house were in the possession of the caretaker and had never been in her possession. The Morton-Smiths told Mrs. Cotter that Walter had suggested they look her up. It can be found that the interest of the Morton-Smiths in the plaintiffs’ property was occasioned by the information given them by Walter that property adjoining that of the plaintiffs could be acquired for supplemental purposes.

Shortly after the Morton-Smiths were first shown the plaintiffs’ property by Mrs. Cotter, they telephoned her from New York and asked that she make arrangement to have the house opened for further inspection by them, adding that she need not be present. This arrangement was made.

The basis of the Cotter claim may be stated thus: After she made the arrangement for further inspection referred to in the preceding paragraph, the Morton-Smiths had no further communication with her for a few weeks. Up to this time no figure had been given her by the Morton-Smiths to submit to the plaintiffs although she had told one of 'them that the Morton-Smiths might become interested in buying. During the interval when Mrs. Cotter heard nothing from the Morton-Smiths, they in turn had engaged a Mr. Thoms of Litchfield to make an offer of purchase to the plaintiffs and to the owner of adjoining property. Thoms was successful insofar as the adjoining property was concerned but his authorized proposition to the plaintiffs of $40,000 for their property was rejected by them. The Morton-Smiths, through Thoms, then brought Mrs. Cotter back into the picture. Thoms apparently realized that his efforts to acquire the plaintiffs’ property at a figure within reach of his customers would prove futile. He is not a claimant here and has been paid by the Morton- Smiths as their personal agent.

Mrs. Cotter knew the plaintiffs for some time. The property had been listed with her since 1943 on a nonexclusive basis and she had made Independent efforts to sell it. At one time she had a prospective purchaser for $45,000 but the offer was rejected. Acting now on behalf of the Morton-Smiths, Mrs. Cotter submitted various figures to the plaintiffs — $40,000, $45,000, $46,500 — for their acceptance. All were rejected as not being sufficient. On or about November 28, 1945, after telling the [328]*328Morton'Smiths that their offer would have to be substantially increased to effect an acceptance, Mrs. Cotter was authorised by them to submit the figure of $48,500, which proved to be acceptable.

It is to be further noted that Walter never had any contact with the plaintiffs and throughout the negotiations never had any contact by letter or telephone or other means with Mrs. Cotter, or she with him. His first knowledge of the sale or agreement of sale came after the New York attorney for the plaintiffs learned through Mr. Morton'Smith that Walter had initially suggested to him and his wife to see Mrs. Cotter. In passing it may be also noted that Walter telephoned another broker in Salisbury by the name of Robinson on the October afternoon the Morton'Smiths were in his Brattleboro office. Certain phases of the evidence strongly suggest that Walter had in mind that Robinson and he act in concert respecting the possible sale of the plaintiffs’ property to the Morton'Smiths.

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Related

Rosenfield v. Wall
109 A. 409 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1920)
Murphy v. Linskey
109 A. 412 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1920)
Roche v. Curtin
37 A.2d 805 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1944)
Housatonic Valley Insurance Agency, Inc. v. Klipstein
5 A.2d 16 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1939)
Blanchard v. Voghel
12 Conn. Super. Ct. 213 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1943)
Blanchard v. Voghel
12 Conn. Super. Ct. 210 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Conn. Supp. 324, 1946 Conn. Super. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vancortlandt-v-cotter-pactcompl-1946.