Myers v. Ellison
Decision Date | 30 June 1947 |
Docket Number | 6 Div. 534. |
Citation | 31 So.2d 353,249 Ala. 367 |
Parties | MYERS et al. v. ELLISON et al. |
Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
Arthur Fite and Newton & Selman, all of Jasper, for appellants.
Curtis Maddox & Johnson, of Jasper, for appellees.
G. H Myers and wife are the plaintiffs in a bill in equity to set aside a deed of 370 acres of land which they made to Dodd and Ellison, a firm of real estate brokers of Jasper, Alabama. The other defendants, except the First National Bank where the papers were deposited in escrow are Crawford and McCullar, who were subpurchasers of some of the property from Dodd and Ellison.
Plaintiffs who owned the land, employed Ellison as agent to sell it and first quoted a price of $9,500. Ellison interested Crawford in the property and subsequently reported to Myers that Crawford would not pay the price, but that he would pay $8,000. Ellison testified: 'He [Crawford] was well known to these people [the Myerses] and he [Crawford] wanted to buy it for $8,000.' (Record p. 60.) Myers first declined this latter offer but later told Ellison he would accept it if the commission would come from the purchaser, that is, Myers to receive $8,000 net for the property. Here the testimony varies. Myers says he was to reserve, for a certain reduction in price, 40 acres from the sale if he should so desire and Ellison denies this, claiming that the sale was for the entire tract 'with no strings attached.' At any rate, the deed was made for the entire 370 acres but was not made to Crawford at all, but Dodd and Ellison were named in the conveyance as the grantees. The Myerses executed the deed without reading it, claiming that they put dependence in Ellison that the transaction was being consummated in the manner agreed upon, that is, that Crawford was buying the entire property with their right of reserving 40 acres for themselves, if they should desire.
The evidence in certain aspects is conflicting, but after a painstaking study of the record we have become convinced Ellison led the Myerses to believe they were selling the entire land to Crawford; that he failed to advise them of anything to the contrary or that they were executing a deed to himself and his partner or that these agents were the real grantees and purchasers of the property; and that under no circumstances would the grantors have parted with title to any of the property had they known McCullar (a relative of the Myerses with whom there was bad feeling) was to be included in the scheme as a purchaser. As to the understanding about the reservation of 40 acres, we make no decision since the conclusion we have reached makes it unnecessary.
The trial court found all issues in favor of defendants and dismissed the bill, probably on the theory that since the Myerses were getting the full price, as last quoted by them, they had no just complaint. Ellison, it seems, thought likewise and when Myers offered to repudiate the transaction Ellison objected, stating that it did not make any difference to whem the deed was made. The law controlling such a transaction, however, requires a different decision.
An agent sustains a position of trust toward his principal and in all transactions affecting the subject of his agency, the law dictates that he must act in the utmost good faith and must make known to his principal each and all material facts within his knowledge which in any way affect the transaction and subject matter of his agency. Lauderdale v. Peace Baptist Church, 246 Ala. 178(9, 10), 19 So.2d 538; Dudley v. Colonial Lumber Co., 223 Ala. 533, 137 So. 429; 3 C.J.S., Agency, § 138a, page 6.
The law sedulously regards this principle and acts of an agent which tend to violate this fiduciary obligation are prima facie voidable (Broughton v. Detroit Trust Co., 271 Mich. 701, 261 N.W. 115; 3 C.J.S., Agency, § 144a [2], page 22), and are considered in law, as 'frauds upon confidence bestowed.' 3 C.J.S., Agency, § 138a, page 7.
Consonant with this duty of utmost loyalty and good faith, a selling agent may not himself directly or indirectly become the purchaser of the property entrusted to him for sale without the full knowledge and consent of his principal. The pertinent rule is thus stated in 3 C.J.S., Agency, § 144a, page 20:
This court in the Lauderdale case, supra, illustrated the principle with quotations from our earlier decisions, where is the following observation: 246 Ala. at page 181, 19 So.2d at page 541.
The extent to which the law frowns on the undisclosed purchase by the agent of his principal's property is thus explained in 1 Mechem on Agency § 1198, 2d Ed.:
In the light of these settled principles, and the prima facie voidableness of the sale under the circumstances related, it must be held that Myers had a right to rescind the sale and the bill was well filed for that purpose. 62 A.L.R. 63 Annotation; 2 C.J., § 360, page 703; 3 C.J.S., Agency, § 144(3), page 22. True, agent...
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