Real Estate Exchange v. Kingston
Real Estate Exchange v. Kingston
Opinion of the Court
Appeal from a judgment denying plaintiff a commission for sale of property listed by defendants. Affirmed, with costs to defendants.
Kingstons listed their motel, service station and restaurant with plaintiff for sale. Malloys likewise listed their home for sale with plaintiff, who managed to get the
After a couple of months Malloys found their venture unprofitable, walked out and refused to make any payments after the two they had made. Litigation between Malloys and Kingstons followed and they compromised their differences, — each side going its own way.
Plaintiff admitted it was acting for both parties. It demanded a commission from both sides when the roof fell in. It admitted that when queried by the Kingstons as to whether it was acting in a dual capacity, it was so. In response to Kingston’s question as to whether plaintiff was claiming a commission from both sides, it responded that it was none of Kingston’s business. Plaintiff already had sued the Malloys for the commission.
Aside from the ethics of such an apparent unconscionable position, the fact that plaintiff agreed to and prepared the document substantiating such agreement, — it is choked with its own verbiage,- — and stuck with it. It received its commission portion of two payments. None was thereafter forthcoming, and absent any acceleration clause, the commission was payable only in the manner which the author of the agreement proposed and scrivened.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE, a corporation, and v. Mark Allen KINGSTON and Dorothy Kingston, and
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published