Court Opinion

ID: 6275506
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 15:58:18.630142+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:02.884351
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Rige, P. J.,
It is conceded that the defendant employed the plaintiff, a real estate broker, to procure a purchaser for certain real estate the defendant desired to sell and agreed to pay him a commission of two per cent, and that the plaintiff procured a purchaser, one Walker, to whom the defendant, after negotiations in which the plaintiff participated, deeded the property. On the trial of this action to recover the commission, the defendant claimed that the plaintiff agreed to wait therefor until the first of several notes given by Walker for the purchase money should be paid, and that these notes were not paid. The plaintiff positively denied that any such agreement was made, and as the question of fact was submitted to the jury with the very instruction the defendant asked in his second point, the verdict for the plaintiff must be regarded as conclusively settling that question so far as review on appeal is concerned.
The second ground of defense relied on at the trial was that the plaintiff made an agreement with Walker, whereby Walker was to pay him a commission for procuring the same real estate for him. That there was such an agreement between the plaintiff and Walker is undisputed. Walker testified that before the transaction between him and the defendant was closed (we quote from 'his deposition) : “ Mr. Evans and myself went out to look at the property, which was some time, of course, previous to 'May 2, and Mr. Evans suggested that the property *368could be bought on very reasonable terms and that he naturally would help me all he could, and that his commission would be $500 cash and what we call a yellow trap, which at that time was in the stable — a trap with yellow running gears —which I refused to allow him, but I told him that I would pay him the $500.” The plaintiff testified upon the same subject as follows : “ My arrangement with Walker was to give me, I think it was, $500 and some personal property in case the matter went through in a trade arrangement. Q. Five hundred dollars and what ? A. Five hundred dollars and a carriage, or some trade arrangement; I don’t remember exactly what it was.” The exact time that this agreement between the plaintiff and Walker was made is left in obscurity by the testimony, but as it was after the plaintiff had called the property to the attention of Walker, it seems probable it was after the plaintiff had been employed by the defendant. At any rate, there is no such clear and satisfactory testimony as would support a finding that, at the time the defendant employed him, he had any knowledge of any agreement between the plaintiff and Walker. In other words, the defendant did not employ the plaintiff and agree to pay him a commission with knowledge that the plaintiff was already employed by Walker to secure the property, and was to be compensated if he succeeded. But there is testimony which would sustain a finding that the negotiations which resulted in the sale to Walker extended over a considerable period of time, and that before the sale was consummated the plaintiff informed the defendant of his arrangement with Walker above described. And while the testimony does not show that, before the oral agreement for sale was made, the defendant expressly objected (except as such objection may be inferred from his letter of April 12 in which he stated that he considered it a mistake on the part of the plaintiff to ask a commission of Walker), neither does it show that he expressly agreed' to the plaintiff acting for Walker, or expressly waived any legal defense he he had growing out of this agreement of the plaintiff to act for Walker. The nearest approach to proof of such express agreement or waiver is defendant’s letter to the plaintiff of May 9, in which, implying to plaintiff’s letter of the same date, he says : “ I was particular to tell you that I could not assure *369your commission at once but would pay out of the first money got from the deal and sooner if I had it.” This, it is to be noticed, was after the sale was consummated and was not an unconditional promise, but at most was an admission that he had • made a qualified promise.
It is a rule of public policy that an agent for the sale of property cannot at the same time act as the agent for the purchaser thereof, and thus become entitled to compensation from both vendor and purchaser. This rule, intended to be preventive of the possibility of wrong, rather than remedial of actual wrong done, has been rigidly enforced in transactions of this nature since the case of Everhart v. Searle, 71 Pa. 256, was decided. It is needless to cite the numerous cases in which the doctrine of that case has been recognized and applied. But in Rice v. Davis, 136 Pa. 439, the learned trial judge, while fully recognizing the general rule, thought, and so charged, that the testimony going to show the knowledge of the vendor, who was the defendant in the case, of the fact that the plaintiff was to receive compensation from the purchaser of the property which the plaintiff had been employed by the defendant to sell, and the failure of the vendor to object, would if believed by the jury, take the case out of the operation of the rule. Thus, when the case came into the Supreme Court, the record showed that the question, whether knowledge and failure to dissent would be sufficient to prevent the application of the rule laid down in Everhart v. Searle, was distinctly raised. Hence, what is said in the opinion of the Supreme Court cannot be regarded as mere generalization not necessary to the decision, but must be regarded as a distinct, emphatic and binding statement of the rule of law applicable to such a state of facts. After stating that the general principle underlying the case that an agent for the sale of property cannot at the same time act as agent for the purchaser thereof, and thus entitle himself to compensation from both vendor and vendee, is founded on the infallible declaration that “ no -man can serve two masters,” and showing the parallel between the case in hand and Ever-hart v. Searle, Justice Stebjrett said: “ Conceding, for the sake of argument, that it would be competent for persons, circumstanced as the parties in this case were, to waive or suspend, by mutual agreement, the operation of a rule of public *370policy, it cannot be successfully contended that such agreement may be inferred either from knowledge of the fact that such rule has been violated or from silence or failure to dissent at the time, or from all these combined. Nothing short of clear and satisfactory proof of an express agreement to do so should be regarded as sufficient for that purpose.” He then goes on to say that there appeared to be no evidence that would warrant either the court or jury in saying that the rule insisted on by the defendent was waived by him. “ He had a right to be silent, even if he knew that the plaintiff had undertaken to serve two masters, and intended to claim compensation from both.” In concluding the opinion he says: “ Rules of law', such as that under consideration, intended to be preventive of the possibility of wrong, rather than remedial of actual wrong, should, be rigidly enforced, unless it clearly appears that the parties, for whose protection they were intended, have, with full knowledge of all the circumstances, agreed to waive their rights thereunder.” The judgment was reversed without a venire. This language was reiterated in Finch v. Comrade’s Executor, 154 Pa. 326, and in the recent decision of our court in Marshall v. Reed, 32 Pa. Superior Ct. 60, and we know of no case in which the statement of the general rule has been modified or qualified in the slightest degree.
Applying these principles to the case in hand, we are constrained to say that even if the instructions quoted in the first, second and third assignments were not erroneous as far as they went, they did not go far enough to give to the jury a full statement of the rule of law applicable to the case, and we do not see that the defect was cured in other portions of the charge. This may have been due to a misapprehension of the plaintiff’s testimony. .As we understand it, he did not swear that he told the defendant of his arrangement with Walker, “ before making his arrangement with Mr. Rockett,” but only that he told him before the deal was consummated. Unexplained, these instructions to which we have alluded might have been taken by the jury to mean that the controlling questions were, first, whether the plaintiff had agreed to wait for his commission; second, whether the plaintiff disclosed to the defendant, or concealed from him, the fact that he was getting a commission from Walker. The jury, as we have seen, could *371well find that he did not conceal the fact, and that the defendant knew it before the sale was fully consummated, and their verdict for the plaintiff may have been based upon their supposition that this being so, no sufficient defense had been made out. The first and second assignments are sustained.
But the request for binding instructions, which was refused, raises distinctly the question whether there was such waiver of the rule of public policy as was required in order to enable the plaintiff to recover. We are constrained to hold that a mere qualified promise, such as that referred to in the letter of May 9, which promise was not made until the transaction was completed, is not sufficient to take the case out of the operation of the rule so clearly expressed in Rice v. Davis. Therefore the point should have been affirmed.
Judgment reversed.