Court Opinion

ID: 3820752
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 07:55:45.474438+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:13:43.845338
License: Public Domain

It will be observed that defendants "sought the plaintiff and orally represented and promised the plaintiff that they (the said defendants) would be able to purchase said farm as cheaply, from the said Mrs. M. G. Addington, as the plaintiff could and would, in addition thereto induce the said Mrs. M. G. Addington to pay them a commission for the sale of said farm, and orally promised and agreed with the plaintiff that, if he would purchase said farm through the said defendants, Pryor-Gardner   Co., they would divide the commission upon the purchase with the plaintiff, and give the plaintiff one-half thereof." Case-made, p. 2. Thus it is seen the plaintiff was not induced to enter this oral contract with defendants in order that he might obtain the farm from Mrs. Addington at a sum less than she had offered it to him, or for less than it was really worth. It was understood by the parties that Pryor-Gardner   Co. could purchase the farm from Mrs. Addington as cheaply as plaintiff could. Plaintiff could also purchase it just as cheaply without *Page 615 
the intervention of the real estate brokers. Hence the only reason why he agreed that defendants might make the sale was that he might obtain one-half the commission, and thus indirectly, but at the cost of Mrs. Addington, reduce the purchase price of the farm.
Of course it is not shown by the petition that Mrs. Addington had, or had not, been advised of the two-faced character of her agents. It may be that she knew they were to divide the commission, but it is more probable that she did not. Under the doctrine laid down by this court in Plotner v. Chillson  Chillson, 21 Okla. 224, 95 P. 775, 129 Am. St. Rep. 776, it occurs to us that, where a petition shows that an agent, or broker, is obtaining commission from both parties, it must affirmatively appear that both parties knew his relationship and assented thereto. The opinion in the above case does not state this rule in positive words, yet it is impossible to avoid such inference. At any rate, the effect of such a contract, as that shown to exist between the plaintiff and defendants, is to work a civil wrong against Mrs. Addington.
It is a fraudulent scheme, amounting to a conspiracy, the sole object of which is to take an undue advantage of one who, as in this case, was entitled to the unswerving loyalty and honesty of her agent. If such a contract works a civil wrong, the courts will not enforce it, for the reason that such conduct, being reprehensible and unfair, is against public policy. As was said in McKinley v. Williams, 74 Fed. 95, 20 C. C. A. 313:
"To permit the agent of a vendor to become interested as the purchaser or as the agent of a purchaser in the subject-matter of the agency inaugurates so dangerous a conflict between duty and self-interest that the law wisely and peremptorily prohibits it. An agent of a vendor, who speculates in the subject-matter of his agency, or intentionally becomes interested in it as a purchaser, or as the agent of a purchaser, violates his contract of agency, betrays his trust, forfeits his commission as agent, and becomes indebted to his principal for the profits he gains by his breach of duty."
In 9 Cyc. 468, it is said:
"An agreement is illegal and void where its object is the *Page 616 
commission of a civil wrong against a third person, although the wrong may not be an indictable offense or crime, either at common law or under the statutes. This is true for an example * * * of an agreement to perpetrate a fraud upon a third person."
An agreement that has for its purpose, or which necessarily results in, the accomplishment of a wrong, or which tends to produce disloyalty or unfaithfulness to those persons whose interests a fiduciary has in charge, will not be enforced by the courts of the state.
We are therefore of the opinion that the judgment of the superior court of Oklahoma county is correct and should be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.