Yurgelun v. Emery

Rugg, C.J.

This is an action of contract whereby the plaintiff, a real estate broker, seeks to recover compensa*572tian for services alleged to have been rendered to the defiendan! in procuring him a purchaser for his real estate. The report of the trial judge shows that the plaintiff testified that the defendant never was at his office, never telephoned to him or wrote to him relative to the property in question, and that he never had a record of listing the property at his office; that being with one Shats, who subsequently purchased the property of the defendant, relative to other real estate, Shats asked him if he knew who owned the Arnold Shoe Company factory, and stated that he would like to buy it and the price which he would be willing to pay. The plaintiff replied that he did not know who owned it but would find out and that “he probably could do better for” Shats than the price which he offered. Then the plaintiff saw the defendant, who was the owner of the property in question, and asked his price which the defendant refused to give until assured that the plaintiff was not “a curiosity seeker.” Thereafter the plaintiff and Shats interviewed the defendant at his factory. The property was inspected and Shats made an offer which was refused. The next day the plaintiff saw the defendant and the latter asked what his commission would be. The plaintiff asked the price of the property and was told that the price was $10,000. The plaintiff and Shats again examined the property and Shats made an offer of $8,500 which was refused by the defendant. The plaintiff made a suggestion to which the defendant would not agree. Later the defendant sold the property to Shats for $9,500.

It is manifest that the only scintilla of evidence upon which the plaintiff’s contention can rest is the single inquiry by the defendant as to the amount which the plaintiff would charge as commission. This was insufficient to warrant a finding that the defendant ever entered into any contractual relation express or implied with the plaintiff. One who merely asks the price of goods does not thereby become obligated to purchase. A prospective employer of labor or personal service does not assume contractual obligations merely by asking the price of such service. The *573findings of fact made by a trial judge are conclusive if there is any evidence to support them. In the case at bar there is no evidence whatever to support the ultimate finding of the trial judge in favor of the plaintiff. On his own testimony the plaintiff first visited the defendant because of an offer made to him by Shats for the defendant’s real estate as to which the plaintiff said he could probably do better. The defendant, when the matter was brought to his attention, never did or said anything to give rise to a contractual relation between him and the plaintiff.

The order of the Appellate Division, to the effect (1) that there was error by the trial judge in granting the plaintiff’s request for a finding in his favor and (2) that judgment should be entered for the defendant, was right and is

Affirmed.