Defendant-respondent owned real property which he desired to exchange for other property. Plaintiff-appellant found a person who owned real property which the defendant agreed to take in exchange for his own. The parties met to sign the binder to the exchange but before signing it the defendant exacted from the plaintiff a promise that he would wait for his commission until the exchange was actually effected. Accordingly, the following clause was inserted: “ It is understood by the brokers in this deal that no commissions are to be paid until title is passed; if for any reason title cannot be passed no commissions are to be paid whatever.”
The contract with this clause in it was signed by the owners of the respective parcels of real estate and by the brokers including the plaintiff, the other brokers being certain persons who had aided the plaintiff in bringing about the agreement. Signing of the contract for the exchange was to have taken place on January 22, 1901, but was adjourned to January twenty-fourth, and further to January twenty-eighth, at which last named date the defendant failed to appear and, so far as the record shows, has failed to perform his part of the agreement although for all that appears the other party was ready, able and willing to perform his part. The complaint was dismissed upon the ground that the clause quoted above from the binder barred his claim inasmuch as title had not passed and therefore plaintiff’s commission was not due.
Even admitting that the clause in question is binding upon the plaintiff, the question still remains: How far binding ? By no reasonable construction of the language used can it be said that it contemplated an arbitrary refusal of the defendant to consummate the exchange. Its fair intendment was that if the consummation of the exchange was prevented by circumstances beyond the defendant’s control, then, in that case, the plaintiff must lose his commission. It *262would be unreasonable to give the language employed a meaning such as would place it absolutely within the power of the defendant not only to arbitrarily wipe out the plaintiff’s earned commission, but to nullify the entire agreement of exchange as well. For a writing whose binding effect is subordinated to the mere whim or caprice of one of the parties to it is no contract at all.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Hendrick, J., concurs.