Wolff v. Cohen

281 S.W. 646
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1926
DocketNo. 1225. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 281 S.W. 646 (Wolff v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolff v. Cohen, 281 S.W. 646 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This suit was brought by P. W. Brown and J. W. Holloway, as plaintiffs, against Ben Cohen, Adolph Wagner, and Boris Wolff, as defendants, in one of the district courts of Harris county. Por their cause of action as against defendants Cohen and Wagner, the plaintiffs alleged, in substance, that on or about April 1, 1922, Cohen and Wagner listed with plaintiffs, who were real estate agents and brokers in the city of Houston, two certain lots in the city of Houston at that time owned by Cohen and Wagner for sale on commission; that on or about April 23, 1922, plaintiffs found the defendant Boris Wolff, and' that he became at once interested in the property that Cohen and Wagner had listed with plaintiffs for sale, and that Wolff decided to buy the property, and would have bought it through plaintiffs, and would have paid $30,000 for it, on which amount plaintiffs would have realized ■a commission of 5 per cent., had not defendants Cohen and Wagner taken the property out of the hands of the plaintiffs and effected, through their own efforts, a sale of the property to one Edward H. Bailey, who was in truth and in fact acting not for himself in purchasing the property, but who was acting as the agent and attorney for the defendant Boris Wolff, and that the sale to Bailey was for the sum of $26,750. Plaintiffs alleged further that by reason of the facts just stated they were entitled to recover a commission as against Cohen.and Wagner of 5 per cent, on $30,000 but, if not, that they were entitled, in any event, to a commission of 5 per cent, on the amount that the property was actually sold for to Bailey as the agent of Wolff.

The plaintiffs Brown and Holloway, for cause of action as against Wolff, further alleged, in substance, that Wolff and one Moise Shornstein and the said Bailey, the two latter being the agents and acting for Wolff, entered into a fraudulent conspiracy with the defendants Ben Cohen and Adolph Wagner for the purpose and with the intention of defrauding and defeating plaintiffs out of their commission on the sale of the property by pretending that Bailey was the actual purchaser of the property and not their client, Boris Wolff, and that, because of such fraud and conspiracy on the part of Boris Wolff and his agents Shornstein and Bailey, plaintiffs ought to recover against Boris Wolff and Cohen and Wagner, jointly and severally, the commission that they had earned as real estate brokers in finding and producing the defendant Wolff as a purchaser of the property.

All defendants filed answer to the plaintiffs’ petition; all of them interposing a general demurrer and certain special exceptions and general denial and other special pleas not necessary to further mention. Defendants Ben Cohen and Adolph Wagner, after answering to the plaintiffs’ petition, filed a cross-action against their codefendant, Boris Wolff, in which, briefly stated, Cohen and Wagner alleged, in substance, as follows: That on or about April 26, 1922, one Moise Shornstein approached them with a view to purchasing the two lots that had been listed with the original plaintiffs for sale, at which time the plaintiffs, so far as Cohen and Wagner knew, had not found any purchaser for their property; that Shornstein stated and represented to them (Cohen and Wagner), that he was interested in the property as an investment, and that he wanted to buy it for himself as. his own investment, and, in substance, that no one else was interested in the property with him; that Shornstein stated and represented to them (Cohen and Wagner-) that if they sold the property to him there would be no agent’s commission to pay, and that, therefore, they could afford to sell him the property for a less sum of money than they could afford to sell for through agents; that these negotiations with Shornstein were finally concluded by his agreeing to purchase the two lots from Cohen and Wagner for a consideration of $26,750, and that Cohen and Wagner entered into a written contract with him (Shornstein) by the terms of which they agreed to sell to him, or his nominee, the property for $26,750; that at the time they entered into this executory contract, or earnest money receipt as some of the witpesses call it, they believed in good faith that Shorn-stein was the actual purchaser of the property and was buying it for himself as an investment, as he had represented to Cohen and Wagner, and that if they sold it to him they would not have any agent’s commission to pay, but that the amount of $26,750 would be net to them, as stated and represented by Shornstein; that as a matter of fact they would not have contracted to sell the property to Shornstein for the amount they did agree to sell for, had they known that Shorn-stein was acting at the time as the agent and stool pigeon of Boris Wolff; that as a matter of fact Shornstein was acting and contracting to buy the property solely as the agent and stool pigeon of Wolff, and was not buying it for himself, nor interested to any extent in the purchase thereof; that his statements and representations that he was buying the property for himself, or as an investment of his own, were wholly false; and that such statements were made with the wicked and fraudulent purpose of inducing Cohen and Wagner to enter into the executory contract to sell him the land as they did for $26,-750.

Cohen and Wagner further alleged that about May 26, 1922, approximately 30 days after the executory contract was entered into between them and Shornstein, the latter demanded that Cohen and Wagner make a general warranty deed conveying the two lots *648 that they had obligated themselves to sell to him or his nominee to Edward H. Bailey, who was also the agent and attorney for Boris WolfC, and that, having bound themselves by the written contract to convey the property to Shornstein, or his nominee, they felt obligated to carry out the contract and convey the property to Bailey, who had threatened to sue them for specific performance of the contract if they refused to make the deed to Bailey, although they alleged that at that time they suspicioned that WolfC was, in fact, the teal purchaser; but that they did not know and could not know for certain that he was, and that, in this situation, they (Oohen and Wagner) went ahead and performed their executory contract between themselves and Shornstein, and conveyed, by warranty deed, the two lots to Edward H. Bailey, who, on the same day, conveyed the property to WolfC, and who, along with Shornstein, was acting all the way through as the agent and attorney for WolfC.

Oohen and Wagner then alleged further in their cross-action that, by reason of the fraud and conspiracy between WolfC and his agents, Shornstein and Bailey, they were induced to execute the executory contract to Shornstein as they did, and that in consequence of that fraud and deceit they were damaged in whatever sum the plaintiffs Brown and Holloway might recover against them in this suit, and they prayed for recovery against WolfC accordingly.

Woifi? answered the cross-action only by general demurrer and general denial. The case was tried with a jury and was submitted upon special issues, and upon the answers judgment was rendered in favor of the original plaintiff's Brown and Holloway and against Ben Cohen and Adolph Wagner, the appellees here, for $1,448.23, and judgment was also‘rendered upon the verdict in favor of Cohen and Wagner on their cross-action for the same amount against the defendant WolfC, and WolfC alone prosecutes this appeal from that judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
281 S.W. 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolff-v-cohen-texapp-1926.