Court Opinion

ID: 3856091
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:41:20.294536+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:14:44.945826
License: Public Domain

Argued December 15, 1925.
Plaintiff, a licensed real estate broker, sued to recover a commission earned by finding a purchaser for defendant's property. The parties waived a trial by *Page 242 
jury and the trial judge found for plaintiff, and defendant appeals.
The five assignments of error filed complain of three matters: 1, the findings of fact by the trial judge; 2, the overruling of a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto; and 3, the refusal to grant a new trial. None of the assignments, except that complaining of the refusal to grant a new trial, is based on an exception and, as no point for binding instructions was presented, no motion for judgment non obstante veredicto could be made. A careful examination of the record has convinced us that a new trial was properly refused. There is evidence in the record to sustain a finding of the following facts: In October, 1922, defendant authorized plaintiff to procure a purchaser for one of his properties for $15,000 and agreed to pay it a commission of three per cent. On December 28, 1922, plaintiff's agent, Hall, told defendant that a Mrs. Walsh had inspected the property that day and that he was going immediately to Mr. Walsh's house to try to close the deal with him, if it was satisfactory to defendant and the latter was not going to give the tenant of the property the first opportunity to buy it. Defendant replied that Mr. Walsh could buy the house if Hall could make a deal with him. On the same day Mr. Walsh agreed with Hall to buy the property at $15,000 and paid plaintiff $200 on account of the purchase price. The next day Hall went to see defendant to tell him about the sale, but before he had the opportunity to speak defendant said, "the house is sold, the tenant bought it," and refused to sell to Mr. Walsh. The next day, December 29th, defendant sold the property to his tenant. Mr. Walsh was ready, willing and able to buy the property and make settlement upon any reasonable agreement which might be required.
Plaintiff was entitled to its commission. While it did not have the exclusive right to sell the property *Page 243 
placed in its hands, when its agent told defendant that he was about to undertake to close a deal with a person named and defendant assented to the proposition, plaintiff was entitled to a reasonable time within which to report the result of the intended interview with its prospective purchaser. Defendant did not have the right to use plaintiff's efforts to sell his property as a means of making a sale to his tenant and escaping the payment of a commission. There are no facts which take the case out of the familiar rule that an agent has earned and is entitled to recover his commission when he produces a person who is able and willing to buy the property at the price and terms fixed by the owner. See Weller v. Hochman, 81 Pa. Super. 58; Krewson v. Fisher, 78 Pa. Super. 509, and Sowney v. Bair, 269 Pa. 448. The evidence fully warranted the finding of the trial judge and judgment was properly entered thereon.
The fifth assignment of error is overruled, all of the others are dismissed, and the judgment is affirmed.