Court Opinion

ID: 6426913
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:04:42.752308+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:01.762452
License: Public Domain

Loring, J.
The second instruction requested should have been given. The defendant had the right to assume in this *12instruction tliat the plaintiff claimed to have been employed by the defendant as a broker. In both counts of his declaration he made allegations to that effect. He so testified : and his counsel in this court so contended in the brief on which the case was submitted.
It is admitted that a broker .has no claim to be paid for his services if he undertakes to act for both vendor and vendee. The reasons for the rule are fully set forth in Alvord v. Cook, 174 Mass. 120. But it is contended that that principle is not applicable in this case, because, first, the plaintiff had an option from Boss, and was not acting as his agent; second, the defendant fixed the price he was willing to pay, and there was no question open as to it; and, third, the evidence discloses the fact that the defendant knew the plaintiff was acting for Ross.
The plaintiff testified that at the time of his conversation with the defendant he had the sale of the property in his hands for Asa Ross. We think it doubtful whether, taking all the plaintiff’s testimony together, that statement is to be taken literally ; that is to say, that it is to be taken as a characterization of what he afterwards testified to, that what he afterwards testified to was not an option, but was an employment by Ross of him as a broker; or whether, on the other hand, it was an inaccurate way of referring to what he afterwards testified to without characterizing that transaction, leaving it open for him to contend that all that passed between him and Ross was the giving to him of an option on the property for $6,000. The question which construction was the true one was a question which had to be determined by the jury, and the defendant in this instruction rightly asked to have it so determined.
The fact that in the offer which the plaintiff claimed made him the defendant’s broker the defendant named the price which he was willing to pay the owner of the building and the sum,he was willing to pay the plaintiff is immaterial. Whatever were the relations of the plaintiff to Ross, or anybody else, up to the time of that conversation, as soon as the plaintiff acceded to the defendant’s proposition that the defendant should pay the plaintiff for his services in the purchase of this property, the plaintiff came into a relation, of confidence with the defendant such that it was his duty to act in the *13defendant’s interest in the transaction in every reasonable way; after that the defendant had a right to believe that if the plaintiff then knew, or in the course of the proceedings discovered, any facts which he, the defendant, contemplating a purchase, ought to know, the plaintiff would disclose them, whether these facts related to the views or desires of the seller, to the price at which he would consent to sell if he could not get more, to the condition, qualities, or value of the property as bearing upon the price which the purchaser could reasonably afford to pay for it, or to anything else in the interest of the proposing purchaser. For example, if the plaintiff had known, or had reason to think, that the property could be bought for less than the sum named by the defendant as the sum he was willing to pay, it became his duty, upon accepting the defendant’s promise to pay him for his services in the transaction, to disclose that to the defendant. The fact that the principal names a sum as the sum he is willing to pay is in no sense final. One of the benefits which such a principal is entitled to receive from the broker whose services he secures by his promise to pay for them is information and aid enabling him to get the property for less than he is, without that information and aid, willing to pay. And in this case the defendant finally paid less than the sum originally named by him through the plaintiff’s services in getting Ross to throw in the coal and insurance.
It is barely possible that what passed between the plaintiff and defendant might have been interpreted to be a promise to pay $100 for something other than a commission for the plaintiff’s services as a broker in purchasing the land in question. But that question does not arise in this action. This was an action to recover from the defendant a commission for services rendered by the plaintiff to the defendant in the purchase of the land in question. The plaintiff testified that he was employed as a broker, and his counsel so contended in the Superior Court and before this court. By the very form of the action the plaintiff contended that he acted as a broker for the defendant; and, so long as he prosecutes this action and not another action, the plaintiff must make good his right to be paid as a broker, and the defendant makes out a defence if he shows that the plaintiff has not rendered to him the duties owed by a broker to his principal.
*14The evidence cannot be said to disclose the fact that the defendant knew that the plaintiff was acting for Ross. On cross-examination the plaintiff testified that in the conversation between the plaintiff and the defendant the defendant said, “ I think you make $500 out of that ”; that up to that time he had not informed the defendant that he could get all that he made over $6,000, but that the defendant “ guessed pretty near,” that “he guessed pretty close; he said I was making $500.” This was all the evidence on that point.
The plaintiff’s contention that if he acted for both purchaser and seller that fact should have been set up in the answer is correct; but that point does not appear to have been taken at the trial, and is not before us in this bill of exceptions. Bass v. Edwards, 126 Mass. 445.
The presiding justice was right in refusing to instruct the jury to find for the defendant. On the evidence the jury could have found that the plaintiff never became a broker for Ross, but that all that passed between them was the giving to the plaintiff of an oral option on the land at $6,000. If Ross merely gave the plaintiff an option on the land at $6,000, the plaintiff owed him no duty by reason thereof, and he could, without violating any duty to Ross, elect not to exercise that option and undertake the duties incident to acting as a broker for the defendant. The previous existence of this option which the plaintiff in the case supposed had elected not to exercise was not in any way inconsistent with his being a broker for the defendant; by his election not to exercise the option any possible interest on the part ' of the plaintiff in the land ceased, and the existence of the prior option was not a material fact which the plaintiff in good faith was bound to disclose to his principal. The option having been given by word of mouth was not binding on Ross; but had the existence of the option been material this would have made no difference; the existence of such an arrangement, even if not binding, would have incapacitated one from accepting duties inconsistent with his interests under the arrangement.

¡New trial ordered.