Vint v. Ashland

139 N.W.2d 457, 258 Iowa 591, 1966 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 714
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 11, 1966
Docket51821
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 139 N.W.2d 457 (Vint v. Ashland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vint v. Ashland, 139 N.W.2d 457, 258 Iowa 591, 1966 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 714 (iowa 1966).

Opinion

Stuart, J.

-Plaintiff has appealed from a judgment on a jury verdict against him in an action to recover a real-estate commission. He is a licensed real-estate broker specializing in motels. Defendant, owner of a motel in Clear Lake, gave plaintiff an exclusive listing for six months from the date of the written contract “and thereafter until revoked by thirty days notice in writing”.

Other pertinent provisions of the contract prepared by plaintiff are as follows:

“In consideration of the services so to be performed by said agent in mailing such sale or finding and sending to- the owner a satisfactory buyer or being instrumental in any manner whatever in -selling or causing a sale or transfer of said premises, the undersigned owner agrees to pay said agent as commission 10 percent on the price obtained if the property is sold or exchanged during the continuance of this agreement.”
(Defendant’s motel was then described and priced at $82,-500.)
“If the premises are sold within one year after the termina *593 tion of said agency but to a buyer with whom said agent had negotiated prior to said termination, then and in either such ease the agent shall be entitled to his commission hereunder.”

No sale was made during the six-month period and defendant gave the required written notice terminating the exclusive agency as of December 26, 1961. On December 29, 1961, defendant sold the motel to a party first contacted through plaintiff for $50,000. Plaintiff claimed the sale was made “to a buyer with whom he had negotiated” prior to the termination of the exclusive listing and brought suit to collect his commission when defendant refused to pay.

Plaintiff assigns three errors: (1) failure of the trial court to direct a verdict for plaintiff; (2) erroneous instruction as to the meaning of “negotiated” and (3) the failure to give a cautionary instruction limiting the purpose of a certain exhibit.

I. The first two assigned errors are interrelated and depend upon the meaning of negotiated. Before we can determine whether the evidence is such that it shows plaintiff “negotiated” with the purchaser as a matter of law, we must define negotiated as used here. For that reason we will first consider whether the trial court’s Instruction No. 6 correctly defined the term. The jury was told: * * the term ‘negotiated’, when used in an exclusive listing contract and as used in these instructions, means that the efforts of the broker, in his dealings with a prospective purchaser, whether through telephone conversations, letters or other communications, must be such that the interest of the prospective purchaser is created or aroused to the point that the prospective purchaser would be considered a likely purchaser at the time of the termination of the listing contract.

“The term ‘likely’ when used in these instructions means ‘probable’ or ‘reasonably to be expected’.”

Plaintiff claims the instruction was not proper because the contract itself defined negotiated. He claims the provision setting forth his duties during the period of the exclusive listing, also defines negotiated in the later paragraphs and that he negotiated with the prospect if he found him or sent him to the owner or was instrumental in any way whatever in causing the sale.

*594 We do not so read the contract. It was prepared by plaintiff and parties agree it is to be construed against him, if construction is necessary. We do not believe it is clear and unambiguous that plaintiff’s duties during the term of the exclusive listing define negotiations which entitle plaintiff to a commission for’ a sale made by someone else after -the exclusive listing has been terminated. The two clauses appear in separate paragraphs of the contract and are not connected by any terms appearing therein. The first clause set forth the consideration which entitled the agent to a commission if the property was sold during the period of the contract or any continuation. The contract was to continue in effect until the required notice of termination was given. The year period in which the broker was entitled to a commission if a sale was made to a party with whom he had negotiated commenced after the listing was terminated and was designed to protect him from a sale to a party with whom he had “negotiated”. There is nothing in the contract to equate negotiate with the broker’s duties during thé exclusive period.

Plaintiff also contends “negotiated” has a plain meaning known to the jury and it was unnecessary and improper to attempt to define the term. He claims the error was compounded by the use of “likely purchaser” which is less clear and less familiar than negotiated.

We do not agree the meaning of negotiated is so plain a defining instruction' is not required. It is a broad term with many meanings and connotations. The appropriate definition must be determined by the context in which it is used. Consequently, the cases which are most helpful are those in which-exclusive real-estate listing contracts have made the payment of commission after the term has expired dependent upon the sale being to one with whom the broker “had negotiated”. Such line of cases, though limited in number, exists.

There do not appear to be any Iowa cases in point and the trial court and defendant rely primarily on the case of Munson v. Furrer, 261 Wis. 634, 53 N.W.2d 697. The court there quotes from 12 C. J. S., Brokers, section 88, note 43, Bullis & Thomas v. Calvert, 162 La. 378, 110 So. 621, 623, and Werner v. Hendricks, 121 Pa. Super. 46, 182 A. 748, 749, 750, all of which sup *595 port the requirement that the prospect be a “likely purchaser” before it can be said the agent “negotiated”.

* * within the original term of the contract, the word ‘negotiated’ means that the efforts of the broker to interest a prospect must have proceeded to the point where the prospect would be considered a likely purchaser.” Munson v. Furrer, 261 Wis. 634, 639, 53 N.W.2d 697, 699.

In the Louisiana case, the court concluded “plaintiffs were not negotiating with Morgan during the term of the contract * * * in such manner as to interest him as a likely purchaser thereof, or beyond the mere fact of advising him that the land' was for sale but could not be purchased for the price which he seemed willing to give for it.” Bullis & Thomas v. Calvert, supra, loc. cit. 386 of 162 La.

In the Werner case, a newspaper route rather than the real estate was involved, but the exclusive listing provided for a commission if it was sold “to anyone with whom the broker had heretofore been negotiating.” There, the court said:

“To merely call attention to the route without further discussing the details, which necessarily must follow for the consummation of the transaction or sale, can hardly be called a negotiation. Unless the discussion can be brought to the point whereby the interest of the proposed buyer can be aroused or the terms of the sale discussed, it cannot be classified as a negotiation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 N.W.2d 457, 258 Iowa 591, 1966 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vint-v-ashland-iowa-1966.