Weller v. Phillip Gross Realty Co.

180 N.W. 927, 173 Wis. 447, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 33
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 180 N.W. 927 (Weller v. Phillip Gross Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weller v. Phillip Gross Realty Co., 180 N.W. 927, 173 Wis. 447, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 33 (Wis. 1921).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed January 11, 1921:

Kerwin, J.

The appellant excepted to the findings of fact, and the main controversy in this case turns on whether the facts found by the court below are supported by the evidence.

A great amount of testimony was taken in the case, much of which had little bearing upon the questions at issue. That an agency to sell the property in question was Created is not denied, but the vital question is, Did the plaintiffs produce a person ready and willing to buy the property in accordance with the terms of the agency ?

1. The following facts appear to be established without substantial dispute: The defendant, Phillip Gross Realty Company, and the Phillip Gross Hardware & Supply Company were corporations whose stock was owned by Phillip Gross, his son, Arthur Gross, and his son-in-law, Chas. E. Mueller, all residents of Milwaukee. The defendant Realty Company owned as lessee a ninety-nine-year lease upon a piece of property on the north side of Grand avenue. The owners of the fee, lessors, were Jacobs and others of Madison, and are referred to in the testimony as the Jacobs estate, and the lease as the Jacobs lease.

In February,- 1913, the hardware company occupied the building on the property covered by the Jacobs lease and the [450]*450Realty Company desired to dispose of that lease. The plaintiffs, Weller and Brockman, acted as agents for the Realty Company under the following contract of agency:

“Milwaukee, Wis., 1/14/14.
“Mr. W. B. Weller, City.
“Dear Sir: We hereby agree to lease the premises known as 126 and 128 Grand avenue — 42J4 x 100 feet — on the following terms and conditions:
“Rent to be $16,500 net per year to us for the balance of the term of ninety-nine (99) years as per lease now on said premises, payable quarterly in equal instalments, rent to start upon possession of present building. Conditions similar and to conform to present lease. Your parties must immediately, upon possession, commence erection of new buildings to cost not less than $100,000. During construction your people are to have an acceptable bond of $50,000 deposited with us until new building is erected. Taxes for first year to be adjusted.
“This proposition must be closed on or before February 16,1913. Yours truly,
“Phillip Gross Realty Company,
“Phillip Gross, President.
“Chas. E. Mueller, Secretar}c”

The agreement of agency is referred to in the printed case as Exhibit 1. Under the agency the plaintiffs sought to interest one Adolph Spiegel, who was in business in Milwaukee. Verbal proposals were carried back and forth between the Realty Company and Spiegel, and during the negotiations the Realty Company consented to a reduction of rent to $16,000 net per year.

The plaintiffs went to Spiegel with some concessions, and Spiegel’s lawyer drew an instrument which purported to accept the verbal terms and was signed in the name of the Public Drug Company, a corporation controlled by Spiegel, and contained a blank space and appropriate wording for acceptance by the Realty Company. The plaintiffs took this writing to the Realty Company on February 15, 1913, and presented it together with a check of $1,000 which Spiegel [451]*451had given them to induce acceptance of a previous offer on his part. The following is a copy of the instrument of acceptance, referred to in the case as Exhibit 3:

“Milwaukee, Wis., February 15, 1913. “To the Phillip Gross Realty Company:
Presented.
“Gentlemen: The undersigned accepts the proposition made on your behalf by Mr. W. B. Weller for the leasing of the premises known as 126 and 128 Grand avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and herewith delivers to Mr. Weller check for one thousand (1,000) dollars to bind the bargain. Rental to be sixteen thousand (16,000) dollars net per year, during the term; term of lease to be for ninety-nine (99) years, commencing November 1, 1913, or before if you deliver possession after thirty days’ written notice to that effect. One thousand (1,000) dollars herewith deposited with Mr. Weller to be applied toward the payment of the first month’s rental; check to be held until form of agreements are agreed upon. Your present interest in the lease you have with Jacobs and Robbins dated the 9th day of November, 1911, to be assigned to the undersigned no later than January 1, 1919. On delivery of possession, twelve thousand five hundred (12,500) dollars to be deposited with you to be held in trust until after the completion of the building, which is to be erected before January 1, 1920; you to pay five (5) per cent, interest per annum on such sum of $12,500 from the time of its deposit, semi-annually, and the said $12,500 to be applied on the first year’s rental after the completion of the said building.
“Taxes and insurance to be adjusted and prorated, lessee only to pay for the proportion of the year after possession.
“Lessee shall have the privilege of making repairs and alterations, and doing all things in connection therewith as if he were the owner of the present building.
“Yours, etc..
“Public Drug Company,
“By Adolph Spiegel, President.”

When this instrument, Exhibit 3, was presented to the officers of the Realty Company they refused to consider it until their attorney, Mr. Baker, had been consulted. After [452]*452Mr. Baker examined it he declared it too indefinite to warrant acceptance and advised that some instrument covering all the obligations to be assumed by each party should be executed. Mr. Baker, defendant’s attorney, stated he could not do it that day, and it was suggested by Mr. Weller, plaintiff, that Mr. Gold, Spiegel’s attorney, might do it. It was finally left to Mr. Gold to draw the paper.

On February 18, 1913, Mr. Gold submitted a draft of the proposed lease which did not meet the approval of Mr. Baker. Afterwards, on February 19, 1913, Mr. Baker submitted, at the solicitation of plaintiffs, a draft of a proposed lease, and on February 22, 1913, Mr. Gold submitted certain suggestions in the form of a letter, and on February 25, 1913, Mr. Gold and Mr. Glicksman submitted proposals with modifications. The matter of agreeing on “the form” of the lease or transaction had been left by the parties with their attorneys.

Nothing further seems to have been done by the parties to agree upon “the form” of lease or transaction at that time. In the language of counsel, the negotiations “were in a state of suspended animation — still alive, but not actively pressed.”

Rumors came to Mr. Spiegel that the defendant was negotiating with other persons, whereupon Mr. Gold commenced an action for specific performance in favor of Mr. Spiegel and filed notice of Its pendens. While the specific performance action was pending Mr. Baker suggested that they continue negotiations, and drew and delivered to Mr. Gold a proposed escrow agreement, and assured Mr.

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Related

Wauwatosa Realty Co. v. Paar
79 N.W.2d 125 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 N.W. 927, 173 Wis. 447, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weller-v-phillip-gross-realty-co-wis-1921.