Court Opinion

ID: 3489574
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 21:18:48.816419+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:53:40.461879
License: Public Domain

There is no dispute as to the facts of this case and we have no difficulty as to the principles of law upon which it must be determined. The suit is for the recovery of commissions for the sale of real estate which the plaintiff claims to have effected as the defendant's agent. At the trial of the case the plaintiff was the only witness. It was proven by his testimony that in June, 1909, he called at the office of the defendant company, and in a conversation with one of its managing officers proposed to undertake the sale of certain property of the company on North avenue in Baltimore City, for the usual commissions of two and a half per cent. This offer was accepted, and the plaintiff later induced his father to purchase a portion of the property. The agreement between the company and the purchaser was executed on September 23, 1909. The price agreed upon was $8,000.00, of which $100.00 was then deposited and the balance was stipulated to be paid in cash upon the transfer of the property, or at the option of the purchaser, by his conveyance of eight designated ground rents, in which event the $100.00 previously paid was to be returned. It was provided that thirty days should be allowed for the examination of the title and that it should be good and marketable. By a subsequent agreement, endorsed on the original contract of sale, the time limited for the examination of the title was extended for an additional period of thirty days. The transaction was finally closed on December 14, 1909, by the transfer of *Page 3 
the property to the purchaser and his compliance with the terms of sale. The plaintiff then asked for his commissions, amounting to $200.00, at the rate of two and a half per cent of the purchase price, but the appellant declined to make the payment, and this suit resulted.
It appears that after the sale had been negotiated the agreement to which reference has been made was prepared by the attorney of the vendor company, and when it was about to be executed, the plaintiff, being himself a lawyer, examined it on behalf of his father as the purchaser. He subsequently acted for his father's interest in the examination of the title and discovered some supposed defects on account of which the defendant gave a bond of indemnity. The conduct of the plaintiff in the particulars thus indicated is said to have been incompatible with his agency for the defendant as the vendor of the property, and upon this ground the suit for the recovery of the commissions has been resisted.
The general rule is that "a party cannot in any agency of this kind act as an agent or broker for both vendor and vendee in respect to the same transaction, because in such case there is a necessary conflict between his interest and his duty." Raisin
v. Clark, 41 Md. 158; Slagle v. Russell, 114 Md. 426;Blake v. Stump, 73 Md. 172; Schwartze v. Yearly,31 Md. 270; Lucas v. Crenshaw, 116 Md. 465. There can be no doubt as to the purpose and effect of this sound and well-defined principle, and we have only to decide whether it applies to the special facts of this case. According to the evidence, the plaintiff did not undertake to represent the vendee in reference to the transaction until the sale had been procured and his duty to the vendor had been fully performed. It was testified without contradiction that during the negotiations for the sale he acted solely for the vendor company, his first service to his father as purchaser being rendered after the agreement of sale had been reduced to *Page 4 
writing by the company's attorney. The sale was then virtually accomplished and the agency of the appellee for that purpose was at an end. There was no subsisting or continuing duty with which his subsequent service to the purchaser was in conflict. The preparation of the formal contract of sale had been committed by the vendor to other hands, and it certainly could not be held that the inspection of the paper by the plaintiff in the interest of the purchaser for the mere purpose of ascertaining that the terms of sale were correctly expressed was incompatible with any relation to the vendor which he then sustained. The same view must be taken of the plaintiff's action in reference to the examination of the title. It was expressly agreed that the title to be conveyed should be good and marketable. The period mentioned in the agreement, and subsequently extended, was prescribed for the specific purpose of giving the purchaser an opportunity to have the title examined. The questions suggested by the plaintiff do not appear to have been unreasonable or to have been pressed with the view of avoiding the sale. On the contrary he appears from the proof to have induced the purchaser to pay a part of the premium on the bond given as a guaranty of the title in order that the transaction might be consummated. There was clearly nothing either in the plaintiff's inspection of the written contract, or in his examination of the title, as the representative of the vendee, that could be regarded as prejudicial to the vendor's interests. The case is simply one in which the agent employed to make the sale, after having successfully and completely performed that duty, subsequently acts for the purchaser in having the agreement of sale carried into effect according to its terms. Upon the undisputed facts we are unable to find that the appellee ever assumed to represent both the vendor and the vendee at the same time. The agencies he accepted for the parties to the sale were successive and not simultaneous. The rule which prohibits an agent from attempting to serve conflicting *Page 5 
interests has, therefore, no application to the conditions shown by this record.
As the defense interposed is not sustainable on the facts, and as the sale was concededly effected through the appellee's agency, he is entitled to the commissions which it was agreed he should receive as compensation. Livezy v. Miller, 61 Md. 343;Tinges v. Moale, 25 Md. 480; Hollyday v. Southern Agency,100 Md. 294; Walker v. Baldwin, 106 Md. 634; Martien v.Baltimore City, 109 Md. 269; Slagle v. Russell, Blake v.Stump, supra.
The prayers offered by the defendant below, which are contained in the single bill of exception before us, sought to deny or qualify the plaintiff's right of recovery on the ground that his service to the vendee, under the circumstances we have described, was inconsistent with his duty to the vendor. This theory is not supported by the evidence, and the prayers were properly refused.
The transaction involved in this case originated prior to the Act of 1910, Ch. 178, p. 5 (Code, Art. 2, § 17), relating to the subject of commissions for sale, leases and loans negotiated by brokers or agents, and we have hence no occasion to consider the case with reference to that statute.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *Page 6