This action was brought to recover commissions alleged to have been earned by the plaintiffs, real estate brokers, in selling certain *526real estate under an agreement made with defendants’ testator. The defendants by their answer denied all the material allegations of the complaint. Upon the trial it appeared that Henry Drisler, the defendants’ testator, on the 22d of February, 1897, went to the plaintiffs’ office in response to a letter written by them the day before, and announced that he accepted the offer made in their letter for the real estate in question. A contract was thereafter prepared •(by whom the record before us does not disclose) between Drisler and the plaintiff Whitehouse. It was under seal and bore date the twentyfirstof October, although not executed until the twenty-seventh of that month. By this contract Drisler agreed to sell and Whitehouse to purchase the real estate described upon terms therein specified. Drisler, before a conveyance had been made under the contract, died. His will was thereafter admitted to probate and letters testamentary issued •to these defendants, who, in pursuance of the contract with White-house and at his request, conveyed the premises to Amelia S. Rae, •the mother of Whitehouse. When the conveyance was made to Mrs. Rae the defendants did not know that the plaintiffs claimed to be acting as their brokers, and the first knowledge they had on that •subject was when a bill for commissions was presented several days later. The plaintiffs had never been employed "by the defendants to make, the sale, and the record before us is absolutely barren of anything to show that any agreement of that character had ever been made by their testator. The most that can be said to be established by the evidence introduced is that plaintiffs made the defendants’ testator an offer for the real estate, either on behalf of themselves •or some one else, which he accepted. This did not entitle them to •commissions. Before one can demand compensation for making a sale he must show that the owner has agreed to pay, or else facts must be presented from which that conclusion can be inferred. Here there was no employment in the first instance, and facts were not established from which an agreement to pay commissions could be inferred or implied. It follows that the exception taken by the defendant to the refusal to dismiss the complaint, at the close of plaintiffs’ case and at the close of the whole case, was well taken.
Upon the trial the .plaintiffs were permitted to prove, against the ■ •defendants’ objection and exception, that when Whitehouse signed the contract he did so, at the request of the defendants’ testator, for *527Mrs. Rae, to whom the conveyance was subsequently made. This, we think, was error. The contract was under seal. The name of Mrs. Rae did not appear in it. There was nothing upon its face to show that she was in any way connected with it, or interested in the subject-matter of it. It could not have been enforced against her by the defendants. ‘The covenant to buy was the personal covenant of Whitehouse, and it could only have been enforced against him. The rule is too well settled to require the citation of authorities, that a person is not obligated to perform covenants in a written instrument under seal unless he be a party to it. It is equally as well settled that paroi proof cannot be received for the purpose of showing that a contract under seal was really made for the benefit of or on behalf of some person not in any way appearing upon the face of or mentioned in the instrument. Referring to this rule, Judge Andrews, in Briggs v. Partridge (64 N. Y. 357), said: “We find no authority for the proposition that a contract under seal may be turned into the simple contract of a person not in any way appearing on its face to be a party to or interested in it, or proof de hors the instrument, that the nominal party was acting as the agent of another * * * The general rule is declared by Shaw, Oh. J., in Huntington v. Knox (7 Cush. 374), ‘where a contract is made by deed under seal, on technical grounds no one but a party to the deed is liable to be sued upon it, and, therefore, if made by an attorney or agent it must be made in the name of the principal in order that he may be a party, because otherwise he is not bound by it.’ ” To the same effect is Schaefer v. Henkel (75 N. Y. 378).
It follows that on account of the errors thus committed the judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellants to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellants to abide event.