Wagner & Truax Co. v. Barnett Enterprises

447 So. 2d 1255, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 8353
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 1984
DocketCA 0986
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 447 So. 2d 1255 (Wagner & Truax Co. v. Barnett Enterprises) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner & Truax Co. v. Barnett Enterprises, 447 So. 2d 1255, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 8353 (La. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

447 So.2d 1255 (1984)

WAGNER & TRUAX CO., INC.
v.
BARNETT ENTERPRISES, INC.

No. CA 0986.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

March 14, 1984.
Rehearing Denied April 25, 1984.

*1256 Edwin O. Schlesinger, Steeg & O'Connor, New Orleans, for Wagner & Truax Co., Inc., plaintiff-appellee.

Michael H. Bagot, Bagot & Gniady, New Orleans, for Barnett Enterprises, Inc., defendant-appellant.

Before SCHOTT, BARRY and WARD, JJ.

WARD, Judge.

This is a suit for payment of a real estate commission that Wagner & Truax Co., Inc. claims it earned by the efforts of its agent in procuring a lease of commercial property owned by defendant Barnett Enterprises, Inc. Wagner & Truax sued Barnett as the owner of the property and Farnsworth-Samuel, Ltd., as Barnett's listing agent, claiming both are liable to Wagner & Truax for the commission. The Civil District Court, Orleans Parish, Robert A. Katz, J., entered judgment in favor of Wagner & Truax and against Barnett for three and one-half percent of accrued and future rent under the lease and Barnett has appealed. Judgment was also rendered against Wagner & Truax and in favor of Farnsworth-Samuel, Ltd, denying Wagner & Truax's claim. Although Wagner & Truax has filed its brief asking that we affirm, it did not appeal the judgment against it and that judgment is therefore final.

We reverse in light of the facts and the law.

Barnett owns the property and had used it at one time as a retail outlet for its furniture business. Beginning in 1975, Barnett listed the property through a series of consecutive agreements with real estate agents: Stan Weber and Associates, *1257 Inc., Farnsworth-Samuel, Ltd., Latter and Blum, Inc., and Charles L. Crawford. Pat's Furniture Showrooms of New Orleans, Inc., leased the property on January 16, 1978, when Charles L. Crawford was the agent.

Pat's Furniture's president, J. Patton Mashburn, had been first introduced to the property in 1976 by an agent of Stan Weber, but little or nothing else was done to negotiate a lease. Real estate agents often work together, and later, in January of 1977, while the property was listed with Farnsworth-Samuel, Newton Fisk of Wagner & Truax contacted Mashburn with the approval of Farnsworth-Samuel and again showed Mashburn the property. In the spring of 1977 Fisk participated in three or four meetings to negotiate terms of a lease with Mashburn, Barnett and Farnsworth-Samuel. The parties, however, were unable to reach an agreement because Barnett demanded a percentage rental and Mashburn refused to pay it. When these negotiations failed, Mashburn began negotiating to lease property for a store in another city. After those negotiations also failed, in September of 1977 Mashburn told Fisk that although he was still interested in the Barnett property he would handle the matter himself. In spite of this, Fisk sent copies of a proposed lease to Mashburn and Barnett, but each received proposals with different lease forms, and each ignored the proposal. Fisk continued to contact Barnett through September and October, but his calls were unsolicited and sometimes they were about other properties. On October 3, 1977, Barnett listed the property with another broker, Charles Crawford, and after Crawford advertised the property Mashburn began negotiations with him. After Barnett, Crawford, and Mashburn met three or four times, those negotiations culminated in a lease of the property from Barnett to Pat's Furniture on January 16, 1978. Other evidence in the record indicates Barnett attempted to circumvent an obligation to pay a commission, although ultimately Barnett paid a commission of 1% to Charles Crawford.

Wagner & Truax, as a submitting broker affiliated with Farnsworth-Samuel, first filed suit only against Barnett, claiming there was either a contract between it and Barnett, or that it may rely on the listing contract between Barnett and Farnsworth-Samuel. That contract had a standard provision giving Farnsworth-Samuel the right to affiliate and work with other brokers to promote the lease of the property, and it provided for a commission to Farnsworth-Samuel, the listing broker, of 7% of the gross rent collected by the lessor. The listing contract, in existence from September 20, 1976 until March 20, 1977, also contained a broker's protective provision and required payment of the commission upon: "The sale, exchange or lease of said property, within one year after termination of this Authorization and all extensions hereof, to parties with whom [Farnsworth-Samuel] has negotiated before the termination [of the listing contract]..."

The record shows first, Wagner & Truax was a broker affiliated with Farnsworth-Samuel within the meaning of the listing agreement; second, Wagner & Truax, through Newton Fisk, had negotiated with Mashburn during the existence of the listing agreement; and third, the property was leased to Mashburn within the one year "protective" period. The record also shows that it is a custom among local real estate brokers that a listing broker, in this case Farnsworth-Samuel, evenly split commissions earned with a submitting broker, such as Wagner & Truax.

Although Farnsworth-Samuel had not yet sued Barnett, it claimed a commission was due. On May 4, 1981, after the filing of this lawsuit by Wagner & Truax against Barnett, Barnett and Farnsworth-Samuel compromised Farnsworth-Samuel's claims, and Barnett paid Farnsworth-Samuel $13,500. Upon learning of this, and fearing Farnsworth-Samuel may be a necessary party, Wagner & Truax joined Farnsworth-Samuel as a defendant in October, 1981. After Wagner & Truax sued Farnsworth-Samuel, Wagner & Truax discovered Barnett had promised to hold Farnsworth-Samuel harmless for any judgment in favor of *1258 Wagner & Truax. The Trial Judge, nevertheless, rendered judgment against Wagner & Truax and in favor of Farnsworth-Samuel. Since Wagner & Truax did not appeal, we do not have to decide if there was a contract between Wagner & Truax and Farnsworth-Samuel, nor if the Trial Judge erred when he found none existed.

Wagner & Truax takes two approaches to support its claim against Barnett. First, it contends that there was a contract, although not a written one, between it and Barnett. In the alternative, Wagner & Truax contends that it was a third party beneficiary of the listing contract between Barnett and Farnsworth-Samuel, contending its agent, Newton Fisk, brought Mashburn to Farnsworth-Samuel who negotiated with Mashburn during the existence of its listing contract. Since Barnett leased to Mashburn within one year after termination of the listing contract, Barnett owes Farnsworth-Samuel a commission by virtue of the protective provisions. Wagner & Truax, as an affiliated broker, was then entitled to one-half of Farnsworth-Samuel's commission in accord with the custom of the trade. Wagner & Truax strongly argues that Barnett's promise to pay Farnsworth-Samuel a commission when earned through its efforts or through those of any affiliated broker, was a stipulation pour autrui and that Wagner & Truax, an affiliated broker, was a third party beneficiary, and it may recover from Barnett.

The Trial Judge did not reach the question of whether there was a contract between Barnett and Wagner & Truax because he found that Wagner & Truax was the third party beneficiary of Barnett's promise to Farnsworth-Samuel, and he held that Barnett owed Wagner & Truax one-half of Farnsworth-Samuel's seven percent commission.

We believe the Trial Judge erred.

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Bluebook (online)
447 So. 2d 1255, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 8353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-truax-co-v-barnett-enterprises-lactapp-1984.