Court Opinion

ID: 6432516
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:09:32.301727+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:15.390590
License: Public Domain

Rugg, C. J.
This is a suit in equity to compel the defendants to convey real estate to the plaintiff. The .evidence is not reported, and no objections or exceptions were filed to the master’s report. The only question presented is whether the decree dismissing the bill was warranted on the pleadings and the report. Huntress v. Hanley, 195 Mass. 236, 239. No point now is made as to the statute of frauds, for the averments and proof absent in Harrigan v. Dodge, 200 Mass. 357, have been supplied.
A real estate agent or broker is not an agent of general powers. As a rule he has no authority to bind his principal beyond the terms of the specific authority conferred upon him by the agreement for employment. Commonly he is, in the strict sense, a special agent for a single object, and has no power to bind his principal beyond the limitations conferred by the precise terms of his contract of agency. This doctrine has been more frequently applied-in this Commonwealth to merchandise brokers than to real estate agents. Coddington v. Goddard, 16 Gray, 436, 445. Stollenwerck v. Thatcher, 115 Mass. 224, 227. But there is no reason for a distinction in this respect between an agent or broker to *464sell merchandise and one to sell real estate. The relation between a landowner and the real estate agent or broker naturally imports a single transaction for a definite and strictly limited purpose, with circumscribed instructions within which conduct must be rigorously confined. No hardship is wrought, either upon the broker or those with whom he deals, by adherence to this rule. The very nature of the employment is such that a third party has an implied notice that he is dealing with a special agent of restricted authority, and hence he must ascertain at his peril the bounds of that authority. This precise question has not been much discussed in this Commonwealth (see Cohen v. Jackson, 210 Mass. 328), but decisions mother jurisdictions are numerous.* Undoubtedly certain incidental powers may flow even from such an agency, but it cannot extend to substantial variations from the terms of the authority given.
The master has found that the defendants placed the real estate in question in the hands of a real estate agent for sale, but with the limitation upon his authority that no sale should be made except to a purchaser agreeable to Mrs. Dodge, the widow of the testator through whom the defendants acquired title. There is no explicit finding that the agent even by fraudulent means procured the assent of Mrs. Dodge to a sale to the plaintiff. The paragraph in the report dealing with this subject is in these words:
“About the middle of December, 1906, he found a purchaser in the person of the [plaintiff] and on December 15 he went to the home of Mrs. Dodge, and told her that he could sell the property to the [plaintiff], if she would consent. Allen says she th.en and there consented to the sale. The [plaintiff], Harrigan, had been convicted of illicit liquor selling, and it was notorious in the town of Danvers that he and the house in which he lived were constantly under the eyes of the police, and his house had been raided more than once. This was well known to Mr. Allen, but *465in Ms anxiety to make a sale, he did not frankly tell Mrs. Dodge who the purchaser was.”
This is equivocal at most. It certainly does not go to the extent of a finding of assent on the part of Mrs. Dodge. Allen’s testimony that she assented may have been disbelieved by the master. The finding that within a few days after this interview, Mrs. Dodge, having in the meantime made inquiries, “wrote Allen that she objected to any sale to the [plaintiff],” confirms the inference that the master did not intend to make a finding that she ever assented. This does not indicate the withdrawal of an assent once given, but the decision for the first time of the question whether she should assent. Passing that, there is a further finding that there were two Harrigans, one the plaintiff and the other who had been superintendent of the Danvers waterworks, and that Allen led Mrs. Dodge to believe that the prospective purchaser was the latter Harrigan. If an appearance of assent was procured under these circumstances it was not a real assent, because there was no meeting of minds upon the identity of the prospective purchaser between Mrs. Dodge and Allen. She thought he was one person, while Allen knew he was a different person. There could be no assent to a sale to the plaintiff under these circumstances. Such is the express finding of the master.
The value of the receipt given by one of the heirs as a binding agreement depends upon the fact of assent by Mrs. Dodge. It is of no avail unless she had given an assent, for it was procured through a misrepresentation that she had assented.
The agent clearly exceeded his authority, for he failed to comply with the condition precedent, that the proposed purchaser should be a person satisfactory as a neighbor to Mrs. Dodge. The contract being plainly in excess of his authority, was not binding upon the defendants. Cases like Brooks v. Shaw, 197 Mass. 376, and Lloyd v. Grace; [1912] A. C. 716, where a principal was held responsible for the acts of a general agent, have no bearing upon the authority or responsibility of a real estate agent or broker. It becomes unnecessary to consider the other grounds of defense.

Decree affirmed with costs.

 De Sollar v. Hanscome, 158 U. S. 216. Hamer v. Sharp, L. R. 19 Eq. 108. Rosenbaum v. Belson, [1900] 2 Ch. 267. Robertson v. Allen, 107 C. C. A. 254,263. Sullivant v. Jahren, 71 Kans. 127,132. Shirley v. Coffin, 103 Texas, 537. Smith v. Craig, 61 Wash. 528. John Gund Brewing Co. v. Tourtelotte, 108 Minn. 71, 74. Halsey v. Monteiro, 92 Va. 581. Monson v. Kill, 144 Ill. 248. Everman v. Herndon, 71 Miss. 823.