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An acquisition agent who set up a deal between a buyer and seller had acted on his own behalf, and not as an agent for the buyer

The litigation in Conway v Prince Eze [2018] EWHC 29 (Ch) concerned the abortive sale of a London property for £5m. The sellers claimed that they had been forced to sell their home at a reduced price of £4.2m after the Nigerian businessman failed to complete the agreement that he had signed, and sued for damages for breach of contract. They claimed the difference between the price agreed with him and the price achieved on the subsequent sale to another purchaser, as well as costs that they had incurred because they needed bridging finance to complete their purchase of another property.

The buyer defended the claim, alleging that the transaction was void or voidable because the sellers had agreed to pay a third party, who had found the property and introduced it to him, a “secret commission” in the sum of £75,000 to secure the sale. He rejected suggestions that he had pulled out of the deal because of a fall in oil prices, and sought the return of his £500,000 deposit.

The judge upheld the seller’s claim. In his judgment, the relationship between the third party, Mr Obahor, who had acted for himself, and the buyer did not engage the law on secret commissions and bribes. Mr Obahor had negotiated for the purchase of the property on behalf of a non-existent buyer and had then gone looking for someone who would actually buy the property from the seller. He had introduced the property to the buyer as a salesman, and not as an agent, and was paid commission totalling £150,000 for having done so. The buyer had used Mr Obahor to facilitate the transaction; he did not regard him as a trusted adviser and had asked someone else to oversee matters and give him any necessary advice. So there was no inherent reason why he should not be paid by either side or, indeed, by both parties to the transaction.

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