West Realty & Investment Co. v. Hite

283 S.W. 481
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1926
DocketNo. 634-4495
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 481 (West Realty & Investment Co. v. Hite) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Realty & Investment Co. v. Hite, 283 S.W. 481 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

SPEER, J.

This suit was brought by West Realty & Investment Company, a corporation, against Rosalie D. Hite and another to recover commissions alleged -to be due the realty company for services performed as a real estate agent upon an allegation that one Blake had been employed by the defendants as a real estate agent to sell the property in controversy, and that he in turn had made an equitable assignment of one-half the com-, mission to be earned to the realty company in consideration of its making the sale or finding a purchaser. The petition alleged that the corporation had performed the services for which it was employed, and that Blake had refused to institute suit for its benefit. Pending the suit, the claim of the corporation was transferred to a partnership doing business under the same name, which intervened and became the plaintiffs. After issue was duly joined, the cause was tried before the court without a jury, resulting in a judgment in favor of the defendants. Upon appeal by the plaintiffs, that judgment was affirmed. 275 S. W. 1112. The writ of error brings before us the sole question whether or not under the facts proven judgment should have been for the plaintiffs.

In granting the writ of error herein, the Supreme Court indicated the point off its dissatisfaction as follows:

“We are not sure plaintiffs in error did not make a case when the broker found a purchaser at terms specified by seller.”

The principles of law applicable to the questions involved are not difficult of statement, but there is at times great difficulty in applying principles to the facts of a given case, and this is one of them. Generally, it will be conceded that, when a broker employed to sell property has found a purchaser who is ready, able, and willing to buy at the price and upon the terms specified in the broker’s contract of employment, he has earned his commission, even though through some fault or inability of the owner the deal is never actually consummated. The rule extends even to those cases where the commission is to be payable only upon the consummation of thé sale, if such consummation [482]*482is prevented through, the fault of the owner. The law will not permit the owner to deny to the broker his right to recover a commission where the broker himself has fully complied as far as possible, and where his only dereliction is produced entirely through the fault of the owner himself. So that in this case, conceding that Blake’s employment contemplated that his commissions were to be paid upon a consummation of the sale, nevertheless the undisputed facts showing that the purchaser, Sterling, was ready, able, and willing to buy .upon the terms offered, and that the deal failed only through the unwillingness of defendants in error to close, it must be held that the owner is liable for a payment of the commissions as though the deal had been actually consummated.

A careful reading of the entire testimony has convinced us that in the last analysis it shows that defendants in error, through defendant in error Rosalie D. Hite, employed Blake, as broker, to sell the property in question for $45,000 cash, and 29 annual payments of $20,000 each, without interest, and that Blake, through the assistance of plaintiffs in error’s assignor, procured a purchaser who was ready, able, and willing to purchase the property for that price and on those terms, and was at all times ready and willing to close the deal accordingly. The only reason the sale was not consummated appears from the uncontradicted evidence to be that, after reaching Houston, Miss Hite, from a consultation with her attorneys, concluded that the purchaser, under such a sale and terms, would have it within his power, by refusing to make the annual payments, as they fell due, to compel the owners to sue upon the contract when he would be able to defeat a recovery of the property by the-payment of an immediate cash sum equal to the present value of the unmatured installments. This was not what the defendants in error wanted. They wanted to make sure of a fixed and certain income for the period of years without the possibility of a cash discount based upon the present worth of such a contract. For this reason, only, the sale was never consummated. If defendants in error employed Blake to sell the property upon the terms indicated, necessarily there was implied a credit to the purchaser to the extent of the $20,000 a year for 29 years. They knew, as everyone must be held to know, that the law became a part of that contract, and the respective legal rights and remedies of the parties thereto entered into the contract. If it is true, as they believed, that the purchaser could in any event satisfy a foreclosure or prevent a recovery of the land after default by a cash payment of the present value of his unmatured notes, then they contemplated this very situation in the contract, and would not be permitted to urge this as a grounds for breaching their agreement to pay a commission to their broker who had performed the full services of his employment merely because in legal contemplation they had changed their mind. But it is insisted by defendants in error, and both courts below have so found, that the broker, Blake, was not employed to sell the. property or to find a purchaser upon a fixed price and given terms, but that the owners at all times reserved the right to approve or disapprove any offer that might be submitted, in which event, of course, they would not be liable for a commission, except upon the acceptance of a purchaser. The contract of agency was oral, and no one testified with respect thereto, except Blake. His authority proceeded from negotations with Miss Hite covering a period of time of about eight years. After the negotations with Sterling were begun, several letters and telegrams were exchanged between the parties. Some of these letters which had been received by Blake had been destroyed by him. He testified :

“Evidently there had been letters or telegrams from these ladies received by me before I wrote these two of the 7th and 10th of October, 19221, but I tore them up. I know where they are. I just read the letters and destroyed them. The letters were from Miss Hite, and were in regard to the terms of the sale of this property. You want me to state them just as I remember them? Well, of course, their proposition to me was $25,000 in cash, I mean Miss Hite. I never wrote to Mrs. Williams at all. Miss Hite’s letter to me offered to take $25,000 in cash, and 30 payments of $20,000 annually. That was my understanding of how they would sell the property. Those annual payments of $20',000 each were to be without interest. Then a second letter fromher or a telegram stated that they wanted the first $20,000 payment in advance, making the cash payment $45,000 and 29 payments without interest. In other words, the total consideration for this property after this deal was started was supposed to he $625,000, payable $45,000 in cash and 29 payments of $20,000, without interest. That was the proposition. I think she said in those letters she would allow us 2% per cent, commission in case of a sale. That was based — let’s see, how did we get that? — anyway, she agreed to allow us 2]4 per cent, commission. Then we added something like $500. Yes, 2% per cent, on $250,-000. * * * Mr. West first told me that he had a party that would meet the proposition. I had told him about the proposition either verbally or in writing, I have forgotton which— probably both. Then I think the next day he told me it was R. S. Sterling, and we went to see Mr. Sterling together. That is my recollection. My statement is that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
283 S.W. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-realty-investment-co-v-hite-texcommnapp-1926.