Summary
In Riverside Land Co. v. Big Rock Stone Material Co., 183 Ark. 1061, 40 S.W.2d 423, 425 (1931), the Arkansas Supreme Court noted that a waiver of notice of renewal will be found "where the facts warrant it."
Summary of this case from C.R. Anthony Co. v. Wal-Mart Properties, Inc.Opinion
Opinion delivered June 22, 1931.
1. LANDLORD AND TENANT — HOLDING OVER AT END OF TERM. — At common law, a tenant under a lease for a term of years, by holding over at the end of the term without any new agreement and paying rent according to the terms of the lease, which has been accepted by the lessor, becomes a tenant from year to year. 2. LANDLORD AND TENANT — CONSTRUCTION OF LEASE. — The distinction between a stipulation for renewal of a lease and one for extension of a lease is that in the former a new lease should be executed or at least the lessee should do everything required of him to procure the execution of a new lease, but in the latter the execution of a new lease is not necessary, and the parties continue under the original lease by complying with the extension agreement. 3. LANDLORD AND TENANT — EXTENSION OF LEASE. — Where no notice of extension to be given by the lessee is provided for in a lease, the lessee, by retaining possession of the premises after expiration of the lease, will be deemed to have elected to renew it according to the terms of the lease. 4. LANDLORD AND TENANT — EXTENSION OF LEASE. — Where a lease provides that the lessee may renew the lease or extend its provisions upon giving notice before termination of the lease, the giving of such notice constitutes a condition precedent, upon the nonperformance of which the right of renewal or extension may be forfeited. 5. LANDLORD AND TENANT — EXTENSION OF LEASE. — Where a lessee, having a privilege of extending the lease, holds over, even without any notice to the lessor of his election to extend the lease for a further term, his holding over constitutes an election so to extend, and he is entitled, as against the lessor, to hold for a further term. 6. LANDLORD AND TENANT — EXTENSION OF LEASE — WAIVER OF FORFEITURE. — Where a lease for ten years contained a provision for extensions of ten years each up to ninety years upon the lessee giving timely notice, and after the first ten-year period the lessee, without giving notice of an extension, continued to pay rent at a rate agreed upon by the lessor, and made improvements which would be lost if the lease were forfeited, and no notice of forfeiture was ever given by the lessor during the second ten-year period, a finding by the chancellor that a forfeiture was waived will be sustained.
Appeal from Pulaski chancery Court; Frank H. Dodge, Chancellor; affirmed.
Frauenthal, Sherrill Johnson and Donham Fulk, for appellant.
Rose, Hemingway, Cantrell Loughborough, for appellee.
STATEMENT OF FACTS.
Appellee brought this suit in equity against appellant to quiet its title and right of possession in certain leased premises against appellant. The suit was defended on the ground that the term of the lease had expired, and that appellee was occupying the leased premises as a tenant from month to month, and judgment was asked for the recovery of the possession of the premises by appellant by way of cross-complaint.
Both appellant and appellee are domestic corporations. Appellant is lessor and appellee is lessee by virtue of successive assignments of the leased premises. Appellee is engaged in the business of selling sand for building purposes, and in connection therewith maintains a plant upon the premises described in the lease.
The lease in question was a written one duly executed on the first day of January, 1910. The leased premises consist of 4 1/2 acres of ground bordering on the Arkansas River on the one side and the right-of-way of a railroad on the other. The lease contemplated that a switch track should be laid on the premises to connect with the railroad above referred to, and that the sand was to be excavated from the bed of the Arkansas River. In one clause of the lease, there was an agreement that the 4 1/2 acres of land was valued at $7,500 and that the lessee agreed to pay six per cent. of that value, amounting to $450 a year, payable monthly in advance during the continuance of the lease, at the rate of $37.50 per month. The lessee also agreed to pay as part of the rent all taxes on the leased premises. The lease expressly provided that it was for a period of ten years from the first day of January, 1910, to the last day of December, 1919. The lease also contained a provision that it might be extended for a further period of ten years under the same terms and conditions except that it contained a clause looking to an appraisal of the property and for fixing the rental at six per cent. of its appraised value for the extended period. This rental was also to be payable in advance. The lease further provided that the parties should share equally in the making of said appraisal, and that the lease might be extended as many times as the lessee or assigns should desire, not to exceed in all ninety years, each extension being for a period of ten years, and that new appraisals as specified in the lease should be made at the time of each extension. The lease contained a clause that, in case the lessee wished to extend the lease, he should give thirty days' notice in writing before the expiration thereof to the lessor that he desired such extension and name in said notice an appraiser who should act for him in appraising the property. Then provision is made for the lessor to appoint an appraiser within ten days thereafter. When the lease expired, all buildings and fixtures were to become the property of the lessor, but the lessee might remove the machinery.
The lease was originally executed by the Riverside Land Company to Mord Roberts. On July 16, 1916, Roberts assigned said lease to the Southern Sand Company. In 1924 that company by A. C. Butterworth, its president, assigned the lease to the Southern Material Construction Company. In 1926, the latter company assigned it to appellee, Big Rock Stone Material Company, which is now in possession of the leased property. No written or verbal notice was given by the lessee prior to the expiration of the original term on December 31, 1919, of an intention to exercise the option for an extension of the lease for an additional period of ten years.
The Southern Sand Company, as assignee of the original lessee, was in possession of the leased premises and remained in possession thereafter, continuing to pay the original monthly rental of $37.50 per month, and nothing was said or done by either party about the matter until sometime in December, 1920. At that time A. C. Butterworth, president of the Southern Sand Company, spoke to Moorhead Wright, secretary of appellant company, with regard to an extension of the lease. He told Wright that he had not examined the lease closely, and did not know that its terms expired on the last day of December, 1919. This conversation occurred at a club house of which they both were members, and Wright told Butterworth to write him a letter in regard to the matter. Butterworth wrote him a letter dated December 18, 1920, to the effect that the Southern Sand Company desired an extension of the lease and suggested a rental of $40 per month, instead of $37.50, which was being paid at that time. The matter dragged along by proposals and counter proposals from the parties until the latter part of the year 1921. At that time appellant had received a proposition from the parties to rent the property at $75 per month. The directors of appellant company except Wright believed that the lease had expired. At the suggestion of Wright, however, it was agreed that the Southern Sand Company, being in possession, should first be given the refusal at that price. Wright notified Butterworth that the rent would he $75 per month thereafter. This increase in rent was acceptable to the Southern Sand Company; and beginning on January 1, 1922, that company began paying rent at $75 per month, which was continued by its assigns until the first of January, 1930.
At the end of this extension period, written notice was given as prescribed by the lease that the lessee desired a second ten-year extension of the lease from January 1, 1930, according to the provision of the lease and designated an appraiser to act for it. On December 3, 1929 appellant replied to appellee, who was then in possession of the lease by assignment, that the lease had expired long since, and that appellee and its predecessors in title had been occupying the property on a month to month rental basis since the first of January, 1920. Other facts relating to this branch of the case will be stated or referred to in the opinion.
The chancellor found the issues in favor of appellee, and it was decreed that appellant should be enjoined from interfering with the quiet enjoyment of appellee under the lease including its right to such extended period from January 1, 1930, to January 1, 1940; and it was decreed further that the rate of monthly rental for the extended period should be fixed as provided in the lease. The case is here on appeal.
(after stating the facts). Counsel for appellant seek a reversal of the decree under the common-law rule adhered to by this court that a tenant under a lease for a term of years by holding over at the end of the term without any new agreement, and paying rent according to the terms of the lease, which has been accepted by the lessor, becomes a tenant from year to year. Belding v. Texas Produce Co., 61 Ark. 377, 33 S.W. 421; Lamew v. Townsend, 147 Ark. 282, 227 S.W. 593; and Jonesboro Trust Co. v. Harbough, 155 Ark. 416, 244 S.W. 455.
We do not think the principle of law announced in these cases had any application under the terms of the lease under consideration. In these cases the leases were for a fixed term, and contained no provision looking to their renewal or the extension of their term. Here the parties provided for the continuance of the lease upon the compliance with certain conditions prescribed therein. This distinction is expressly recognized in Lamew v. Townsend, supra.
This court has also recognized that there is a difference between a stipulation for the renewal of a lease and one for its extension. The reason is that where a renewal is provided for, a new lease should be executed or at least the lessee should do everything required of him to procure the execution of a new one so that the failure of the lessor to execute a new lease would work an estoppel against him. In the case of an extension clause, the execution of a new lease is not necessary, and the parties continue under the provisions of the original lease by complying with the extension agreement. Neal v. Harris, 140 Ark. 619, 216 S.W. 6; and Keith v. McGregor, 163 Ark. 203, 259 S.W. 725. Other cases recognizing and upholding this principle by this court might be cited, but the question is so well-settled in this State that we deem it unnecessary to do so.
Counsel for both parties in this case have called our attention to numerous decisions of courts of last resort of other States upon the question, but for the same reason we do not deem it necessary to cite or review them. Most of them may be found under the case notes to 29 L.R.A. (N.S.) 174, and 64 A.L.R. 316.
Where no notice of extension to be given by the lessee is provided for in the lease itself, the lessee, by retaining possession of the premises after the expiration of the terms of the lease, will be deemed to have elected to renew or extend it according to the terms of the lease. Hays v. Goldman, 71 Ark. 251, 72 S.W. 563.
Where a lease provides that the lessee shall have the privilege of renewing the lease or extending its provisions upon giving notice for a certain length of time before the termination of the lease, the giving of such notice constitutes a condition precedent, upon the nonperformance of which the right of renewal or extension of the lease may be forfeited. Bluthenthal v. Atkinson, 93 Ark. 252, 124 S.W. 510. That case also holds that, where the form of the notice is not prescribed in the lease, it may be given verbally. The court also expressly recognized in that case, although the giving of the notice was a condition precedent, it might be waived by the parties. The court held that under the facts of that particular case, however, there was no waiver.
In an extensive case note to 64 A.L.R. 316, it is said that the general rule is that where a lessee, having a privilege of extending the lease, holds over, even without any notice to the lessor of his election to extend the lease for a further term, his holding over constitutes an election so to extend, and he is entitled as against the lessor to hold for a further term. Among the cases cited in support of the rule is Lamew v. Townsend, 147 Ark. 282, 227 S.W. 593. To the same effect see 16 R.C.L. 894.
In the case at bar, the lease prescribed as a condition precedent to the exercise of the right by the lessee to extend the lease the giving of notice in writing within a specified time before the expiration of the first term of the lease, and such condition must be complied with or it must be waived by the lessor. There is no contention in the present case that this condition was complied with; but it is strongly insisted that the compliance with such condition was waived by the lessor. Other cases holding that provisions of this sort with regard to the giving notice for the extension of the lease may be waived by the parties are the following: Kramer v. Cook, 7 Gray (Mass.) 550; Long v. Stafford, 103 N.Y. 274, 8 N.E. 522; and Probst v. Rochester Steam Laundry Co., (New York) 64 N.E. 504.
It is plain from reading the case of Bluthenthal v. Atkinson, 93 Ark. 252, 124 S.W. 510, that where the lease provides that the tenant must give notice of his intention to renew or extend the lease, a failure to give such notice within the required time will justify the landlord in treating the lease as not extended or renewed. It is equally plain from the opinion in that case that the lessor may waive such notice, and that he will be treated as having done so where the facts warrant it.
Bearing in mind these settled principles of law, we now come to the question whether the chancery court was justified in finding under the facts that the written notice for an extension of the lease was waived by the parties. Under the provisions of the lease, the parties contemplated that the term of ten years provided in the lease might be extended by repeated exercise of the power given by the lease until the whole term amounted to ninety years. It is true that no notice in writing was given by the lessee under the terms of the lease before the expiration of the first term. It is equally certain that the parties contemplated an extension of the lease.
The business to he carried on upon the leased premises was that of excavating sand from the bed of the Arkansas River, storing it in bins, and shipping it over the tracks of an adjacent railroad. The leased premises only contained 4 1/2 acres of land. This was sufficient for the purpose. The sand is taken from the bed of the Arkansas River by extensive machinery erected for that purpose, stored in the bins on the leased premises, and then carried by switch tracks on the leased ground to the right-of-way of an adjacent railroad.
The original lessee was Mord Roberts, who, pursuant to a provision of the lease, assigned it to a corporation of which A. C. Butterworth was president. The latter gave as an excuse for not complying with the provisions of the lease as to notice that he thought from what Roberts had told him that the lease was for ninety years, and that the provision only related to the appraisal which fixed the rental value of the property. In any event his company continued the operation of the plant after the expiration of the first ten-year period and continued to pay the rent under the terms of the original lease. This showed that the lessee expected to extend the lease under its terms; for he will be presumed to have known that the provisions of the lease were. On the other hand, the fact that the lessor accepted the rent knowing that the lease had a clause looking to an extension of its provisions under certain terms tended to show that it did not intend to assert its right of forfeiture but waived its right to declare the lease at an end.
This view is made manifest by the conduct of the parties. It seems that Butterworth had charge of the matter for appellee and Wright for appellant. Butterworth approached Wright about the matter at a club house of which they both were members. They continued to negotiate about the extension of the lease generally with regard to the new rental for more than a year after they first took up the matter. Wright told Butterworth that his company had been offered a rental of $75 a month. During the latter part of 1921, Butterworth accepted this proposal for the new rent for the balance of the second ten-year period. Thereafter, he continued to pay rent in that amount, and appellant continued to accept it for the balance of the second ten-year period. The question of the lease being terminated at the end of the first ten-year period did not come up again until appellee gave the notice for a second extension near the end of the second ten-year period. This of itself showed that the parties considered that the lease had been extended by fixing a new monthly rental contract to begin in January, 1922. It will be remembered that the lease expressly provided for an extension of the term for successive ten-year periods until the full term of ninety years was reached by giving the written notice and appointing appraisers to fix the rental value for the new extension period.
Butterworth testified that Wright agreed to an extension of the lease at a monthly rental of $75 per month in advance beginning from the first day of January, 1922. Wright also testified that he thought this new rental was for an extended time of the lease. He was asked the specific question if it was for the remaining period or the next ten-year term, and replied, "Yes." It is true that the two remaining directors of appellant company testified that they considered that the lease had expired at the end of the first ten-year period when the lessee failed to give the written notice, but it does not appear that they ever acted upon this conclusion or notified the lessee that such construction would be put into effect. They admitted that Wright had authority to act for the lessor and that he did do so. It was plain from the testimony of Wright that appellant did not intend to declare the lease forfeited because of the failure of the lessee to give the required notice, but that it intended to waive the giving of such notice and actually did so by agreeing to the advancement and accepting it for the balance of the second ten-year period.
Butterworth testified that, relying upon this, appellee after the beginning of the year 1922 made improvements upon the leased premises of the estimated value of $40,000, which it would not have done had it understood that it was continuing under a month to month or year to year rental. It is true that the main value of the improvements was machinery which appellee had a right to remove when its lease expired, but a considerable amount of it was expended in erecting bins and other buildings which would necessarily have to be left on the leased premise. Then too, according to the testimony of Butterworth, which is not attempted to be disputed, the machinery would not be of much value as second-hand machinery. It could only be used in the operation of plants of this sort, and the situation of the ground at that point with relation to the Arkansas River and to an adjacent railroad made it valuable for the purpose for which it was used. Another site equally favorable for the purpose would have to be secured before the machinery could be used by appellee. In any event, according to the testimony of Butterworth, which was not attempted to be disputed, improvements of the estimated value of $40,000, would be practically lost to appellee if the lease should be construed to be terminated at the end of the first ten-year period. Appellant under the circumstances must have known that these improvements were contemplated, and that they were actually made by appellee after the advanced rental was fixed upon, and appellee commenced to pay it in advance upon the first day of each month.
When we consider that the lease itself contemplated successive extensions of the ten-year period upon the fixing of a new rental at the end of each period, and, that the amount of that new rental was fixed in pursuance of the terms of the lease, we are of the opinion that these facts, considered in connection with the surrounding circumstances, warranted the chancellor in finding that the notice in writing required to be given was waived by the lessor. Therefore, the decree will be affirmed.