The plaintiff, a real estate broker, sued in two counts to recover a commission. The first count alleged an employment “to sell certain premises” at Edgartown “for $35,000 net to the defendants”; that he “found a customer for said premises ready, willing and able to purchase at the price of $37,000”; and that the defendants owe him $1,850 as commission on said sale. The second count, upon an account annexed, claimed $1,850 as a commission at five per cent “for procuring customer . . . for sale of real estate at $37,000.” At the trial it appeared that no completed sale took place. The jury found for the plaintiff. The defendants allege error in the refusal of the trial judge to direct verdicts for the defendants; in the refusal to give their sixth request for instructions without modification; in the modification made; and in the refusal to submit to the jury an issue of double employment.
The motions for direction of verdicts were denied properly. No question of pleading was raised. There was controverted evidence from which the jury could find as follows: The defendants authorized the plaintiff as a broker to undertake to sell the property at a price of $35,000 plus commission. No terms other than price were then stated. The plaintiff, within an hour, obtained a customer at $37,000. He received a check to the order of one of the defendants for $1,000 and a writing signed by his customer which read: “Deposit paid, received $1,000 on account of the sale of the Hedden property, warranty deed to be delivered within thirty days.” He notified the payee by telephone of the sale and took the check to her. She expressed surprise, and commented on the disappointment it would be to another broker who also had the property for sale. She objected to delivery of a deed in thirty days, suggesting sixty days instead; and, for that reason, refused to sign the receipt for *503the deposit, but she took the check in part payment. This bore in one corner the words “Deposit on Hedden property, North Water Street, balance $36,000.” The plaintiff then saw the other defendant, and told her of the sale, of the giving of the check, and of the suggestion of sixty days for passing of papers. She approved the sale, the giving of the check to the other owner, who was her mother, because “she had full charge of the property,” and the sixty-day period.
The plaintiff and the purchaser then went to a lawyer who prepared a written agreement of purchase and sale at $37,000, papers to pass in sixty days, which was signed by the purchaser. The plaintiff instructed that they be sent by mail to the defendants for signature. Within an hour or two the husband of the mother called on the plaintiff and asked what he proposed to do for the other broker. On learning that nothing was to be done, he insisted that the commission be “split,” and, on plaintiff’s refusal, declared the sale could not be made. The plaintiff replied that he was too late, that a sale had been made and his wife had received the deposit; but the husband said, “You haven’t got the deed yet,” and went away. Next morning the mail brought to the plaintiff a note from the mother enclosing the check, unindorsed and uncashed, and saying, “There has been quité a misunderstanding.” The customer was ready, willing and able to pay $37,000 in cash, to wait sixty days or any reasonable time for delivery of deeds, to take a quitclaim if the defendants would not give a warranty deed, and to make, all customary adjustments of taxes and insurance. Here was sufficient evidence to. justify a verdict for the plaintiff, since it will support findings that the defendants authorized the plaintiff to list their property and offered to pay him a commission if he secured a customer ready, willing and able to purchase the property upon the terms understood between the sellers and the broker to be the terms of the sale, and that he procured such a customer. Palmer v. Wadsworth, 264 Mass. 18. The effort to revoke could have been found to be too late. See Elliott v. Kazajian, 255 Mass. 459, 461, 462.
It was no term of the employment that the broker should *504divide his commission with one who had nothing to do with his transaction. The judge could not rule that the offer required that a sale must be completed before any sum was due. Noyes v. Caldwell, 216 Mass. 525; Munroe v. Taylor, 191 Mass. 483, and Carpenter v. Blake, 251 Mass. 47, are not in point here.
The defendants requested the judge to instruct the jury: “If the jury shall find that . . . [the customer] never came to any agreement with the defendants or either of them as to the time for completion of the bargain, or whether a warranty or quitclaim deed was to be given, or other terms that were to govern the rights of the parties, then the verdict must be for the defendants.” He read this to the jury and added: “That is true, gentlemen, I give you that instruction, but I ought to say this about it, that if no express time was fixed in the talks as to when the deed was to be given, it was by implication of law in a reasonable time; and if . . . [the customer] was not able, ready and willing to pass the deed in a reasonable time, the plaintiff cannot recover a commission. On the other hand, if the time expressly talked of, and agreed by the defendants, was sixty days, then for the plaintiff to get a commission, . . . [the customer] must have been ready to pass title in the sixty days. In other words, . . . [the customer] must have been ready, in order for the plaintiff to recover, to put through the title within the time required by the defendants, whether it be sixty days or a reasonable time.
“Now as to the kind of deed that was to be given, the defendants apparently never agreed to give a warranty deed. That being so, the law would imply a mere quitclaim deed, and unless . . . [the customer] was ready to take a quitclaim deed with a good title, that is a quitclaim deed that would in fact pass a good title, then the plaintiff cannot recover a commission. But when you find out what the terms were that the defendants insisted on, — and I tell you that where nothing was said about any of the details, the law implies reasonable conduct on the part of the parties, — then for the plaintiff to recover his commission, . . . [the customer] must have been ready to carry out the contract *505according to the defendants’ terms, reasonable conduct being implied as to those terms that were not expressly talked about. And with that explanation I give this instruction that the defendants have requested.”
This was sufficiently favorable for the defendants. The instruction requested did not accurately state the law applicable in a possible view of the evidence. The jury could find that, at their first interviews with the broker, the owners said nothing as to any term of the contemplated sale except the price and commission; that, when he reported his negotiations and stated the terms, -no objection was made if the purchaser would agree to sixty days for delivery of the deed, as he did; that nothing was said as to the form of the deed, and that both defendants expressed satisfaction with sale and customer. There was no evidence that the property was subject to any mortgage so that an adjustment of principal or interest needed to be agreed upon. There were no such circumstances as appear in Doten v. Chase, 237 Mass. 218; Elliott v. Kazajian, supra; or Flax v. Sovrensky, 262 Mass. 60, to show that owners and broker understood that arrangements remained to be made between seller and buyer with regard to any terms of the trade. An agreement in express words on all terms between buyer and sellers was not essential. The law would furnish the necessary terms left unexpressed. The customer must be ready, willing and able to meet these terms, but if so willing, able and ready to meet the terms expressed by the owners and supplied by the law, then he fulfilled the conditions essential to recovery of a commission by the broker who obtained him.
There was evidence that the customer accompanied the plaintiff on the visits which he made to secure authority to make sale of the premises, and that he had stated his wish to acquire the property before the plaintiff set out on his quest. Both denied that he had employed the plaintiff to purchase for him, and that he knew of the latter’s authority to sell until they returned to the latter’s office. There was no other evidence of a double employment. The jury could have disbelieved the testimony, but disbelief alone would not be positive evidence to justify findings of employment *506or knowledge. D’Arcangelo v. Tartar, 265 Mass. 350, 352.
The judge was right in ruling that here was no sufficient evidence for the jury that a double employment existed. It follows that the order must be
Exceptions overruled.