44 Mo. 25 | Mo. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a petition in the nature of a bill in equity, praying for the specific execution, on the part of the defendant, of his covenant to renew a lease. The covenant is in these words : “If this lease shall not be terminated by forfeiture or any other cause before the expiration of the five years, then said lessee or his ‘legal assigns shall be entitled to a renewal of the same for five years longer; provided said parties can agree upon terms, or that said lessee is willing to give as much as any other responsible party will agree to give.”
The conditions upon which this covenant for renewal was to be executed have been complied with, and it is not insisted that its non-execution would not be injurious to the plaintiffs. The case would therefore seem to fall within the jurisdiction of chancery, and warrant a decree for a specific performance of the covenant on the part of the lessor. But it is insisted on the part of the defendant that the covenant is vague and uncertain; that equity will not give certainty and definiteness to an. obligation which the parties have left uncertain and indefinite; that it is only where . the terms of a covenant for renewal are express and unequivocal that specific performance will be enforced in chancery. The uncertainty and indefiniteness complained of, upon which the defense is rested, are supposed to attach to the provision respecting the qicanium of rent to be reserved for the renewal term of the lease. The provision itself is express and unequivocal, although it fails to fix a specific amount of rent. That was to be determined by what other responsible parties would “ agree to give” at the expiration of the first term of five years. The amount of rent thus to be reserved is no more uncertain or indefinite than it is in all that class of cases where the amount of rent for the renewal terms is left to be determined by the valuation of third parties. In these cases it is not denied that the covenant for renewal is sufficiently definite, express, and unequiv