Court Opinion

ID: 7306828
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 20:55:01.295619+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:19:30.472710
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
William J. Brennan, Jr., J. A. D.
Defendant appeals from a judgment entered for plaintiff in the Law Division, Hudson County, upon a jury verdict.
The parties are licensed real estate brokers. Defendant was paid a commission of $3,525 for effecting a sale at $90,000 of an apartment house of Prudential Insurance Company to G. M. E. and C. Corporation. Plaintiff’s judgment anfounts to one-half of that commission plus interest.
We need consider only one ground of error alleged, namely, that the trial court improperly denied defendant’s motion for involuntary dismissal at the end of plaintiff’s case.
Accepting plaintiff’s evidence as true and giving him, the evidential benefit of all inferences logically and legitimately to be drawn therefrom, Marschalk v. Weber, 11 N. J. *251Super. 16 (App. Div. 1950), certif. den, 6 N. J. 569 (1951), he proved that C. V. Everett, defendant’s president, employed him to produce a buyer “ready, willing and able” to buy the property at the same $90,000 price paid by G. M. E. and C. Corporation, and promised to pay one-half of the commission “coining from Prudential” for the services, telling him that G. M. E. and C. Corporation regretted its bargain and “wanted to get out from under” the contract. Plaintiff produced one Driver, and Everett accepted Driver’s $500 check as an initial deposit. Everett prepared a proposed contract between G. M. E. and C. Corporation and Driver for a sale at $90,000 to be closed May 15, 1950. Driver’s attorney suggested some changes to which Everett agreed. Driver executed the instrument and it was delivered to Everett together with Driver’s $3,000 “deposit” check. However, G. M. E. and C. Corporation refused to sign the agreement. On April 27, 1950, Everett sent the $500 and the $3,000 checks to plaintiff for return to Driver with a letter stating “very much to my surprise and chagrin Mr. Garfinkel and Mr. Mettle concluded at the last moment that they will not dispose of the property at this time.” Garfinkel and Mettle are principals of the G. M. E. and C. Corporation.
 Defendant’s motion was grounded in part on the alleged absence of sufficient proof at the trial of Driver’s financial readiness and ability to complete the purchase. The terms of payment provided in the proposed agreement are $3,000 “deposit,” $20,500 “cash” on delivery of deed, and $66,500 “subject to a first purchase money mortgage held by Prudential Insurance Company.” The $3,000 “deposit”, was made, which sufficed as evidence to prove Driver’s ability to meet that part of the purchase price; and, as the conveyance was to be “subject to” the $66,500 mortgage, no evidence of financial readiness and ability was necessary as to that amount. There was, however, insufficient evidence that Driver was prepared and able to meet the $20,500 “cash” payment. His payments aggregating $3,500 are not prima facie proof of his ability to meet the much larger payment at *252its due date. Cf. Homan v. Griffin, 94 N. J. L. 345 (Sup. Ct. 1920).
In accordance with general principles governing the burden of proof in civil actions, plaintiff was obliged to bear the burden of establishing that he had performed his agreement. 8 Am. Jur., Brokers, sec. 222, p. 1117. Proof of performance in a case such as this must usually include proof of the financial readiness and ability of the offered purchaser to complete the transaction. The broker is not relieved of the burden of proof of establishing the purchaser’s readiness and ability to complete the transaction merely because, as here, when the offer was presented there was no objection on the ground that the purchaser was not ready, willing and able to buy. Colburn v. Seymour, 32 Colo. 430, 76 P. 1058 (Colo. Sup. Ct. 1904); C. O. Frick Co. v. Baetzel, 71 Ohio App. 301, 47 N. E. 2d 1019 (Ct. App. Ohio, 1942); Dreyfuss et al. v. Boling, 60 A. 2d 230 (Mun. Ct. App. D. C. 1948); Abbott v. Floyd, 136 Cal. App. 365, 28 P. 2d 929 (Dist. Ct. App. 1934); Annotation, 156 A. L. R. 602, 611; but see Stanton v. Barnes, 72 Kan. 541, 84 P. 116 (Kan. Sup. Ct. 1906). Of course, plaintiff earned his commission if he performed his engagement, whether or not G. M. E. and C. Corporation accepted Driver’s offer; the contract, as testified to by plaintiff, did not condition the payment of the commission upon the owner’s acceptance of any offer produced, and defendant is liable if the offer, though rejected, met the authorized terms. But when Driver’s offer was rejected, neither G. M. E. and C. Corporation nor Everett was questioning plaintiff’s services or Driver’s financial readiness and ability. In effect the property was withdrawn from the market and plaintiff’s agency was terminated. If at that time plaintiff had performed his services he was entitled to his commission; otherwise, he was not. The burden, however, was upon him to show that he had performed and air essential element of his proof of performance was that Driver was a purchaser ready, able and willing to buy. Dreyfuss v. Boling, supra.
*253What was said in the Seymour case by the Colorado Supreme Court may be adapted to the situation here:
“* « The refusal ® * * to consummate the sale has not damaged the plaintiff, unless he can show that (if the owner had not decided not to sell) * * * the sale would have been made. Elow can he show this, except by proving- that at the time the contract was repudiated, * ® *, he was in a position to have effected a sale in conformity with the conditions under which the property was placed in his hands? Certainly he has not been prevented from earning his commissions by the mere fact that the (owner) refused to sell the property unless he proves that, but for the conduct of the (owner), the sale would have been consummated. The refusal of the owner to sell according to contract does not prove—neither does it raise a presumption—that the alleged purchaser was able to purchase, but renders the (defendant) liable ® * * for commissions, the same as though ihe sale had actually been effected, provided Ihe (plaintiff) establishes that the proposed purchaser was ready, able, and willing to make the purchase upon the terms stipulated by the owner * * *.
* * * (Plaintiff) must show, before he is entitled to recover his commissions, that he performed those acts which, according to the contract of his employment, it was necessary for him to perform in order to become entitled to the compensation agreed upon.”
To hold otherwise it would be necessary to rule that when defendant advised plaintiff that the owner had decided not to sell, and that the deal was off, defendant thereby agreed to pay plaintiff a commission although he had not performed his services and had presented a worthless offer. “Such is not the law. In order to recover (his) commission it was incumbent upon (him) to prove that (he) had earned it.” Dreyfuss v. Boling, supra.
Plaintiff argues, however, that Everett accepted Driver as a purchaser and in that circumstance it was unnecessary to prove in any respect Driver’s pecuniary readiness and ability to complete the transaction, relying on Thompson v. Briscoe, 108 N. J. L. 387 (E. & A. 1931) and Calabrese v. Adelman, 7 N. J. Misc. 406 (Sup. Ct. 1929). Neither of those cases is controlling here. In the Thompson case, unlike this one, the owner executed the proposed contract with the purchaser *254produced by the plaintiff broker and for that reason it was held that the defendant broker could not escape paying the plaintiff the promised commission by saying that the purchaser was thereafter unable to conclude the bargain. In the Calabrese case there was evidence to support the finding that the agreement was that the commission was payable if the plaintiff produced a buyer acceptable to defendant; it was only after the defendant came to a satisfactory understanding with the purchaser produced by the broker that “the defendant stated for the first time that he was not the owner.”
Here, the plaintiff knew that G. M. E. and C. Corporation, and not the defendant, was the owner and that his engagement was to effect a sale for G. M. E. and C. Corporation. The proofs do not show that the defendant’s agency included the authority to accept a proposal on behalf of Gr. M. E. and C. Corporation, and without such proof there is no basis for the contention that the ease is within the holding in Thompson v. Briscoe, supra. Plaintiff was aware, therefore, that G. M. E. and C. Corporation was free to and might reject, as it did, the offer of a purchaser produced by plaintiff who was tendered by him as ready, willing and able to meet the terms of sale. Thus, there being no evidence sufficient to support an inference either that Everett bound defendant to pay the commission whether or not the owner accepted the proposal, provided plaintiff produced a buyer satisfactory to Everett, (which is the deficiency in the proof which distinguishes Calabrese v. Adelman), or that defendant had authority to bind the owner to a sale, plaintiff was not relieved of the burden of establishing Driver’s financial readiness and ability to complete the transaction. See S. Hekemian & Co. v. Rivara, 121 N. J. L. 418 (Sup. Ct. 1938), affirmed 122 N. J. L. 523 (E. & A. 1939); Homan v. Griffin, supra; cf. Mutchnick v. Davis, 130 App. Div. 417, 114 N. Y. S. 997 (1909).
Plaintiff also argues that, because defendant specified only the denial of the making of any agreement as a defense in the pretrial order, plaintiff was obliged to meet only that *255issue. This plainly is without merit. The question of Driver’s financial readiness and ability was put in issue by defendant’s answer denying the allegations of paragraph 5 of the complaint that “plaintiff produced a purchaser, ready, willing and able to purchase said premises.” Rule 3:16 as amended and in effect at the time of the pretrial conference provides that the pretrial order “with the pleadings as ordered to be amended controls the subsequent course of action, unless modified at the trial to prevent manifest injustice.” Neither expressly nor inferentially is there an admission in the pretrial order of Driver’s financial readiness and ability nor any waiver of proof of that fact. In light of the amended rule mere omission to iterate therein the denial in the answer does not have the effect of such admission or such waiver.
The judgment is reversed and the canse is returned to the Law Division for a new trial.
Costs to abide the event.