Court Opinion

ID: 3860895
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:49:27.320233+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:21:16.901534
License: Public Domain

Argued Oct. 13, 1925.
The plaintiffs in this action seek to recover commissions, as real estate brokers, upon a sale of a property formerly owned by the defendants on South Seventeenth Street, Philadelphia. The pleadings established that the plaintiffs were not the efficient and procuring cause of the sale; that they had nothing to do with the negotiations leading up to the sale and that if *Page 592 
plaintiffs are entitled to recover commissions it must be upon the ground that the defendants had entered into a contract, by the terms of which the latter had obligated themselves to pay plaintiffs a commission whether the sale was made through the efforts of the broker or by the principal, personally or acting through another agent. The court below deemed the evidence presented by plaintiffs insufficient to warrant a finding in their favor and entered a compulsory nonsuit, which it subsequently refused to take off. The plaintiffs appeal.
A broker can acquire an exclusive right of sale only by a contract in unequivocal terms, expressed or necessarily implied: Wilson v. Franklin, 282 Pa. 189; Turner v. Baker, 225 Pa. 359. The evidence in support of plaintiffs' contention that they had the exclusive right to sell the property, at the time it was sold, did not measure up to this standard. The only witness who testified that the defendants had conferred upon the plaintiffs any authority to sell the property was John Van Pelt, one of the plaintiffs. He testified that the firm of Yarrow  Van Pelt, of which he was a member, had acted as agents of the defendants in the purchase of the property, in 1920, and that at the time settlement of said purchase was made that firm had been employed to act as agents for the leasing of the property and the collection of the rents. The witness repeatedly said in his testimony, generally in answer to leading questions, that Yarrow Van Pelt were employed as the exclusive agents, but it is manifest from an impartial examination of the record that he was testifying to a legal conclusion. The alleged contract was oral and according to the witness it was made with but one of the defendants, namely, Michael Casaccio. When he attempted to repeat the words of Michael, this is all that the latter seems to have said at the time, June 1920, "Yes, and they said that, even then, when they were just buying the property, if you could get *Page 593 
them a good profit they would consider selling it. They would like to sell it if they could get a profit." The court then instructed the witness to give the entire conversation as accurately as he could recall it; whereupon the witness added: "And that as I had helped them out in buying the property, they would not deal with any other agent than us, than our firm." The witness said that this statement was made by Michael Casaccio, in the presence of his family, his brother and his wife. The testimony above quoted is all upon which the plaintiffs found their claim that Yarrow  Van Pelt were employed as the exclusive agents to sell the property. It was totally insufficient to complete a contract. The price at which the property was to be sold was not mentioned, nor was the compensation which Yarrow 
Van Pelt would receive, nor the amount of profit which would be satisfactory to the defendants. There was no suggestion as to the time within which the property was to be sold; nor the terms of the sale. The witness further testified that the firm of Yarrow Van Pelt was dissolved on January 2, 1923; this, of course, put an end to the agency of that firm. In order to establish the agency of the plaintiff firm this witness testified that on December 15, 1922, he had a conversation with Michael Casaccio and that "He (Michael) said I had always represented him and that he wanted me to continue to represent him; that I had purchased the property and helped him to buy it when he really lacked the amounts at various times to make payments; that I had helped him out, and he wanted me to continue as his agent." It must be kept in mind that in ascertaining the terms of an oral contract it is important to inquire just what was said by the parties sought to be charged. The construction which a witness puts upon what was said is less important. The words of Michael Casaccio above quoted are all the competent evidence upon which the present firm of Van Pelt  Co. can pretend to found a *Page 594 
claim that their employment was that of an exclusive agency for the sale of the property and are altogether insufficient for that purpose. The language might very properly be referred to the agency for the leasing of the property and the collection of rents, which had been held by the firm of Yarrow  Van Pelt. Even if the employment of Yarrow  Van Pelt could by any possibility be construed as an exclusive agency to sell the property, the employment of Van Pelt, after Yarrow had retired, as indicated by the testimony last above quoted, certainly put an end to the exclusive character of the agency; Turner v. Baker, supra; Thompson v. Foldman, 1 Pa. Super. 209. There was not even an attempt to show that Michael Casaccio had authority to contract for the other defendants. The court did not err in refusing to take off the non-suit.
The judgment is affirmed.