Fink v. Williamson
Decision Date | 23 April 1945 |
Docket Number | Civil 4620 |
Citation | 62 Ariz. 379,158 P.2d 159 |
Parties | LUCY M. FINK, Appellant, v. STANLEY WILLIAMSON, Appellee |
Court | Arizona Supreme Court |
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of the County of Pima. Evo De Concini, Judge.
Judgment affirmed.
Messrs Darnell & Robertson, for Appellant.
Mr Clifford R. McFall, for Appellee.
This is an appeal from the superior court. No findings of fact were made, but before judgment the court rendered an opinion setting forth the views of the court on different phases of the case.
We will refer to the parties as plaintiff and defendant as designated in the trial court.
Plaintiff was a duly licensed real estate broker in Tucson, Arizona, and defendant was the owner of the property involved. Plaintiff, the broker, showed the property of defendant to a Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Hostetter on March 10, 1942. The defendant was temporarily in Los Angeles, California. After showing the property to the Hostetters, plaintiff sent the following telegram to defendant:
That same evening, March 10th, the defendant wired the plaintiff as follows:
When plaintiff received an answer to his telegram from defendant he telephoned Mr. Hostetter that he had received a wire from her and that she wanted $ 35,000 for the property furnished.
After plaintiff had shown the Hostetters the property during the day of March 10th, Mr. Hostetter went immediately to the office of the Arizona Trust Company, in Tucson, and started negotiations there with Mr. R. A. Schendel, a realtor salesman, for the purchase of the property. The original figure submitted to Schendel was the same as the one submitted to Williamson. Mr. Schendel talked that evening with defendant by telephone, but defendant claims that she did not know that Hostetter was Schendel's customer, and the defendant after negotiations and reduction in price closed the deal with Schendel for the property to be purchased by his customer. Defendant returned to Tucson March 19th, and signed a preliminary agreement on March 21st in the office of the Arizona Trust Company.
Williamson continued negotiating with the Hostetters, and under his testimony it is shown that he saw them several times during the week he first showed them the property and gave them information they wanted. We take the following from his testimony:
On March 24th, after plaintiff had heard that defendant had sold her property to the Hostetters, he wrote her a letter and demanded his commission for the sale.
The trial court entered its judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in the sum of $ 1300 and costs.
The sale of the property was by R. A. Schendel and commission paid to him.
The question for determination here is, was the plaintiff entitled to a commission? To entitle him to a commission he would have to be the efficient, proximate and procuring cause. Evidently the court so found, and the evidence discloses, that plaintiff was the immediate and efficient cause of the sale of the property to the purchaser. This is shown by the testimony of Mr. Hostetter.
We think the trial court's ruling under the evidence, that plaintiff was the efficient or procuring cause of the sale of the property, is justified by the expressions of this court. In Garver v. Thoman, 15 Ariz. 38, 135 P. 724, 727, Justice Ross expressly stated:
In the opinion of the court in Miller Cattle Co. v. Chambers, 36 Ariz. 282, 285 P. 277, 279, are many observations that are pertinent to the inquiry here.
The case of Hafner v. Herron, 165 Ill. 242, 46 N.E. 211, is referred to in the decision with the following comment:
". . . the broker not only found the purchaser, but introduced him to the principal before the sale was consummated. . . ."
Other decisions are also referred to in this opinion which indicate that the broker who finds and introduces the purchaser is the immediate and efficient cause of the sale.
The decision in Fornara v. Wolpe, 26 Ariz. 383, 226 P. 203, seems to us to be determinative of the question here. In that case the agent, as in the case at bar, brought the property involved to the notice of the lessee and introduced him to the owner. The owner later closed the deal directly with the lessee. The brokers were allowed their commission. The court said, 26 Ariz. at page 392, 226 Pac. at page 206:
In their briefs defendant places considerable reliance on 12 C. J. S., Brokers, p. 207, § 91. The rule applicable to this case, however, is set forth in Section 92, p. 213, as follows:
The case of Cunliff v. Hausman, 97 Mo.App. 467, 71 S.W. 368, has a fact situation very similar to the cause under consideration. There a real estate dealer put in communication with the owner of a lot a prospective purchaser. The agent was authorized to sell at a certain price. The purchaser postponed the deal, went to another agent of the owner and received a purchase price from him at a slightly reduced price. It was held that the first agent was entitled to a commission for the sale. The effect of the decision is that the first agent was the procuring cause of the sale. In the case at bar the plaintiff and not the agent who consummated the deal, was the procuring cause.
The owner of property, listing it for sale with different brokers, cannot reduce the selling price to one and not the other provided the brokers are showing the property to the same customer. The seller must remain neutral to rival brokers. This statement is supported by the case of Hovey v. Aaron, 133 Mo.App. 573, 113 S.W. 718, 721, wherein it is stated:
". . . If defendant, while plaintiff's authority to sell stood unrevoked, chose to sell the property, either in person or through another agent, to a customer procured by the efforts of plaintiffs for a less price than that which plaintiffs were authorized to offer, that was his privilege, but he will not be permitted to reap the fruits of plaintiffs' labor and then deny them their just reward. . . ."
This point is also set out in the case of McGuire v. Sinnett, 158 Or. 390, 76 P.2d 472, 476, from which we quote:
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