O'Connell v. Casey

Loring, J.

The main facts in this case are as follows:

In 1907 the plaintiff and the defendant’s husband had a conversation about the sale of the defendant’s land and buildings where the husband carried on his business as a blacksmith. The plaintiff testified that the husband then employed him as a broker to get a customer for them at the price of $15,000. The husband testified that the plaintiff wanted him to put a price on them at that time; that he refused to do so, but said, “ If any one gave me an offer of $15,000 I would consider it with my wife.” In March, 1909, one Metcalf, an officer of the Farr Alpaca Company, “ came to ” the plaintiff to see if he had any land for sale fit for a manufacturing site for the Barlow Manufacturing Company. The Barlow Company was then occupying as tenant some land of the Alpaca Company, on which the Alpaca Company wished to construct a building for its own use, and the Alpaca Company wanted a lot for the Barlow Company to induce the Barlow Company to surrender the lease and move away. The plaintiff showed him the defendant’s lot and then called upon the defendant’s husband to see if the price remained unchanged. He was told by the husband that the price was unchanged. Thereupon he gave Mr. Metcalf $15,000 as the price. In July Metcalf told him that his company would like an option on the land at that price, but that he did not want the Alpaca Company to be known in the matter, as it would bring all the real estate brokers down on them. Whereupon the plaintiff prepared an option running to himself for $15,000 and took it to the husband, explaining to him (the husband) that the option ran to him (the plaintiff) because his customer did not want to *525be known in the matter. At that time the husband asked what the plaintiff’s charge would be in case the deal went through, and the plaintiff told him the" usual two per cent commission. To this the husband said that that would be satisfactory. As to this conversation there was no real dispute. The husband testified to it in substance. The husband then said in substance, “ This property is my wife’s; she is in the West; I will send the option to her.” The option was dated July 23, the day of this conversation. In this conversation the husband said that he made it a condition of the sale that the plaintiff should procure for his business of a blacksmith a property known as the Barlow lot. This Barlow lot had nothing to do with the Barlow Manufacturing Company. The plaintiff accordingly procured an option on this Barlow lot. Before that option had run out the defendant returned to Holyoke and refused to sign the option. The plaintiff testified that the husband told him that the reason why the defendant refused to sign the option was because she had been looking over his books and thought that if he moved his blacksmith business up to the Barlow lot he would lose local business which he then had to the amount of $800 to $1,000 a year. The plaintiff then said that his customer was the Alpaca Company, who wanted the defendant’s land for the Barlow Company, who were tenants of land belonging to the Alpaca Company which the Alpaca Company wished to occupy themselves, and that no one else would pay as much. To which the husband answered: “ If my wife won’t sign the deed, what can I do ? ” This was about the middle of August. On August 29 the husband and Metcalf agreed (subject to ratification by the defendant and the directors of the Alpaca Company) to a sale to that company for $18,000 and as much of the material of the building then occupied by the Barlow Company, which was to be torn down, as the husband should select for a new blacksmith shop. This was carried through on September 3.

1. The second ruling asked for was rightly refused.

The defendant’s husband testified that he bought the land here in question “ and put it in my wife’s name ”; that he put up the building which stood on it, occupied it for his business, and “ never paid any rent for the property to my wife or anything of that kind.” That he paid taxes, water rates, expenses *526for repairs, painting, plumbing and insurance, out of his own money; “ I did not always consult my wife about these things, sometimes I did ” ; that all the negotiations for the sale to the Alpaca Company were conducted by him, and the $18,000 received from it went into his bank account. There was no evidence that the defendant ever did anything about the premises beyond her testimony and that of her husband that she refused to sign the $15,000 option and after some time finally consented to sell for $18,000 and the old building material. It is significant in this connection that while the husband told the plaintiff that it was for his wife to decide upon the acceptance of the $15,000 option and finally disposed of that offer by the remark “ If my wife won’t sign the deed, what can I do,” he testified on the stand that when he sent the $15,000 option to her in the west he told her not to sign it until she came home. This warranted a finding that although the legal title stood in her name she left the whole management of this land and building to her husband.

2. The sixth ruling asked for was rightly refused. We are of opinion that although the jury could take the view just stated (that the defendant was the holder of the legal title only and left the whole management of the land and building to her husband) they could take the view that it was really a gift to the wife (see for example Cooley v. Cooley, 172 Mass. 476, 477; Lufkin v. Jakeman, 188 Mass. 528, 530). If they did take that view, the fact that they were husband and wife warranted a finding that the husband told his wife of the arrangement which he testified that he made in her behalf on July 23, 1909, with the plaintiff, for the usual commission of two per cent if the deal went through. If he did, there was evidence of a ratification. The defendant did not notify the plaintiff that she repudiated it. See in this connection Reid v. Miller, 205 Mass. 80. The jury were at liberty to refuse to credit the testimony of the defendant and her husband that she was not told of the plaintiff’s employment. Lindenbaum v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 197 Mass. 314.

3. The defendant has contended that there was no evidence of bad faith within the rule laid down in Cadigan v. Crabtree, 186 Mass. 7.

*527There might be a question as to this point being open to the defendant under the exceptions taken at the trial. But it is apparent from the answer made by the jury to the question put to them by the presiding justice and from the amount of the verdict, when taken in connection with the instructions given by the judge, that the jury found that the defendant revoked the plaintiff’s authority in bad faith. Under these circumstances it is more satisfactory to consider the point than to go into the niceties of the question whether it is or is not open to the defendant.

The defendant’s contention is that there could be no bad faith because the plaintiff did not disclose the name of his customer until after the defendant had revoked his authority. And she relies in this connection on Smith v. Kimball, 193 Mass. 582, where the broker did not at any time disclose his customer’s name.

But that contention is not well founded. The plaintiff’s testimony was: That about a week after the date of the option the defendant’s husband telephoned him that his wife “ didn’t care about selling, and he said, ‘ I am afraid we won’t be able to go along with it by the way she feels at present.’ ” That he went to the husband’s office the next day and the defendant then told him that his wife had been looking over his books, that she found that if he moved to the Barlow lot he would lose $800 to $1,000 of business (as stated in the beginning of this opinion), and ended with these words: “ She says she won’t do any business at present.” That he, the plaintiff, then said he was sorry because his customer was the Alpaca Company, and that they wanted it for the Barlow Company, “ who occupy a property that they wish to occupy, a property they wish to occupy themselves ” ; and that he (the plaintiff) then added, “I don’t know any similar concern that would be willing to pay you $15,000 for the property,” and the defendant ended the conversation with the remark, “I admit the price is good, and everything is satisfactory as far as you and I are concerned, but if my wife won’t sign the deed, what can I do?”

This was not (or at any rate could be found not to be) a revocation of the plaintiff’s authority to sell, but a refusal to sell for the price of $15,000, which up to that time had been the defendant’s price.

*528It was the defendant’s husband who testified that the plaintiff’s authority was revoked. The husband testified that at this interview “ he [the plaintiff] said, ‘ Since my efforts have been unsuccessful, I don’t mind telling you who this property was for. It was for the Farr Alpaca people.’ I said, 6 Don’t do anything more about it.’ I told him several times to do. no more about it.” Even on the husband’s testimony the plaintiff’s authority was not revoked (or it could be found that it was not revoked) until after the plaintiff disclosed the name of his customer. And even if this were not so the jury were at liberty to give credit to the plaintiff’s story that the defendant’s husband had gone no farther than to withdraw the price of $15,000 before he told him the name of his customer; and to find that after this disclosure had been made he was told to do no more about it.

There was abundant evidence of a revocation in bad faith, and the eleventh request for a ruling was rightly refused, since it assumed as a fact that the disclosure of the customer was made after the revocation of the plaintiff’s authority.

4. The defendant took an exception “ to that part of the charge which was to the effect that if the authority of the plaintiff was revoked not in good faith, it was a prevention and the plaintiff might recover just as if he had found a purchaser who offered $15,000.”

We are of opinion that this part of the charge was too favorable to the defendant. Where the principal revokes the broker’s authority in bad faith in order to secure to himself the fruits of the broker’s work without paying him for it, the revocation, being in fraud of the broker’s rights, is of no effect so far as those rights and the trade subsequently made are concerned. In such a case what is subsequently done is in legal contemplation done while the broker’s authority remains unrevoked. If the plaintiff’s authority in the case at bar was revoked in bad faith, the plaintiff was entitled to two per cent on the price paid ($18,000 and the old building material) not two per cent “ as if he had found a purchaser who offered $15,000.” Where a defendant prevents performance by the plaintiff, the plaintiff can sue, but if he sues, the amount which he is entitled to recover is not the same as if he had performed. See for example Barrie v. Quinby, 206 Mass. 259, 267, 268.

*529The part of the charge excepted to was too favorable to the defendant, and this exception must be overruled.

5. Where the evidence warrants the jury in finding that the negotiations had progressed to such a point that a revocation of the broker’s authority (if his authority is revoked) is made in bad faith, the question of the plaintiff’s being the efficient cause of the trade subsequently made does not arise. The fact that through the broker’s efforts the negotiations have reached the point where it can be found that his authority, if revoked, has been revoked in bad faith, is of itself a finding that he found the customer for his principal if his principal finally agrees on a price with the customer found by the broker. It is no part of the broker’s duty to see to the making of the contract between his principal and the customer found by him. Fitzpatrick v. Gilson, 176 Mass. 477, 479.

The exception to the refusal to give the fifth ruling asked for must be overruled.

6. The judge told the jury that the only purpose for which they could consider (1) the evidence that the husband told the plaintiff that there was no question but that the wife would sign the option because she generally did what he asked her, and (2) the evidence that the husband told the plaintiff that his wife had been looking over his books and had found out that he would lose $800 to $1,000 by moving his business to the Barlow lot, as he then proposed to do, was “ for the purpose of contradicting Mr. Casey’s testimony and affecting his credibility.” We are of opinion that these matters were material and therefore that the contradictory statements were competent on the witness’s credibility.

Exceptions overruled.