The purpose of the bill in this case is to enforce specifically a lease of certain real estate in the city of Mackinac Island. After hearing the proofs the chancellor granted the prayer of the bill and defendants appeal. It appears from the record that defendants leased from Kate Chambers the rink property at Mackinac Island city situate on lot 288 on Main street for 5 years from May 1, 1913, at an annual rental of $150. The defendants were builders and contractors and used the building in the operation of their business. In the following year it is said the defendants expressed themselves as being dissatisfied with the lease and threatened to surrender it. In a talk with Tillie Bird, one of the plaintiffs, and, her brother-in-law, Rousseau, it was agreed that defendants should remodel the rink for a movie theatre and they would pay the rent. Subsequently this was
“For the other three years of the extension for which no rental is mentioned herein, the rate of the rent and the time of payment shall be determined by the party of the first part, her agents or assigns.”
Upon receiving this extension defendants made a written lease with plaintiffs for the balance of their time, amounting to practically 8 years. This lease provided for a yearly rental of $150 except the last 3 years. As to those years the lease provided as follows:
“The last three years of this lease the rent to be raised. Amount to be fixed by parties of the first part.”
The 3 years which were affected by these provisions were the years 1920, 1921 and 1922. Plaintiffs paid the stipulated rent up to the beginning of the 3 years when they requested the defendants to fix the rent which they should pay during the last 3 years. The defendants hesitated about doing this, although Kate Chambers had fixed their rent at $500 a year. Defendants advised plaintiffs that they wanted the property themselves and that they did' not care to fix any rent, but after some pressure they finally fixed the rent at $2,500 a year. This rental was so out of proportion to the real value that plaintiffs refused to pay it. It was contended by them that this rental
The defendants contended in the lower court, and do here, that the last 3 years of this lease is void for uncertainty, inasmuch as no rental is fixed. The questions argued are whether the lease for the last 3 years of 1920, 1921 and 1922 is void for uncertainty. If it be not void for uncertainty, has the court the power to fix a reasonable rental if the defendants refused to do so in accordance with the contract? These are the only questions in the case.
Both counsel have briefed this question with considerable care. After an examination of the authorities cited by them we are impressed that the question whether the lease is void for uncertainty is a close one on the law. It is argued by plaintiffs that the lease for the concluding 3 years is not within the zone of uncertainty which avoids contracts. Speaking generally on the question, it is said in 24 Cyc. pp. 992, 993, that:
“A contract need not presently fix all of the terms of the new lease; it may furnish a certain and definite method for their ascertainment and determination in the future. * * * It is not uncommon to leave some of the provisions of the contract to be completed by future actions, as where the rent of the.new term, or the value of the lessee’s improvements, is left to be fixed by valuation, arbitration or appraisal. Such stipulations bind the parties; but, if the arbitration provided for should in fact fail, this does not give the lessor the right to dispossess the tenant during the*611 extended term, and the lessor’s delay in having the property valued, upon which valuation the new rent depends, will not preclude him from collecting the new rent for any part of the new term.”
The American & English Encyclopaedia of Law (2d Ed.), p. 686, commenting upon the same question, says:
“An agreement to renew a lease may be void for uncertainty where it leaves the terms for the renewal uncertain, as where it leaves no certain basis for the ascertainment of the rent to be paid. Although the renewal is not to be upon the terms of the present lease, the terms of the renewal need not be definitely fixed, if a means of definitely fixing them be provided.. A covenant to renew at the ‘best rent’ has been sustained. And provisions for fixing the rent on renewal upon the basis of a valuation of the premises by appraisers, whose appointment is provided in the lease, are quite common and do not render the covenants, for renewal invalid for uncertainty.”
In the case under consideration the parties agreed in the present lease that:
“The last three years of this lease the rent to be raised. Amount to be fixed by parties of the first part.”
The question arises whether the agreement that defendants shall fix the rental for the last 8 years is a means provided for definitely fixing the rental. If it is, then the contract should be enforced. If it does not furnish a means for definitely fixing it then specific performance should be refused.
In Slade v. City of Lexington, 141 Ky. 214 (132 S. W. 404, 32 L. R. A. [N. S.] 201), it was held that a contract between a municipálity and a water company, which provided that the contract shall, at the expiration of a certain time, be renewed upon such terms as are mutually agreed upon at that time, is
It was held in Kaufmann v. Liggett, 209 Pa. 87 (58 Atl. 129, 67 L. R. A. 353), that where the provision in the lease was that there should be a renewal on terms to be fixed by persons chosen by the parties, it was enforceable.
In Town of Bristol v. Water Works, 19 R. I. 413 (34 Atl. 359, 32 L. R. A. 740), the provision was that the town might purchase the water works for a fair and reasonable price to be agreed upon by the parties or fixed by arbitrators appointed for that purpose. The contract was held enforceable. In this case it was observed that:
“In such a case the courts hold that the manner of determining the price is a matter of form rather than of substance; and if it becomes evident That it cannot be determined in the manner provided for in the contract, by reason of the refusal of one party to do what, in equity, he ought to do, the court will determine it upon an application of the other.”
See, also, Schneider v. Hildenbrand & Co., 14 Tex. Civ. App. 34 (36 S. W. 784); Coles v. Peck, 96 Ind. 333; Rutgers v. Hunter, 6 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) 215.
The defendants counsel cites the following cases giving illustrations of contracts, which are void for uncertainty: Howe v. Larkin, 119 Fed. 1005; Howard v. Tomicich, 81 Miss. 703 (33 South. 493); Sammis v. Town of Huntington, 171 N. Y. Supp. 965; Gault v. Stormont, 51 Mich. 636; Wardell v. Williams, 62 Mich. 54 (4 Am. St. Rep. 814); Dayton v. Stone, 111 Mich. 196.
It will be unnecessary to review these authorities further than to say we think they involve contracts m;ore difficult of enforcement than the present one, although some of them are very close to the border
“At the end of twenty-five years the water company was as much bound to renew the contract as the city was bound. The plain meaning of the writing is that the contract is to be renewed at the end of twenty-five years. It could not be renewed by one alone; so it is evident that both parties were bound to renew. The only distinction between this case and the Joy Case [138 U. S. 1 (11 Sup. Ct. 243)] is that in the Joy Case the agreement used the words ‘reasonable and equitable terms to be agreed on,’ and here the words ‘reasonable and equitable’ are not used. But the sense is manifestly the same. If the words ‘reasonable and equitable? had been used, they would have added nothing to the sense, and the rule is that the omission of what is necessarily implied is immaterial. The water company by its charter was bound to serve the city on reasonable terms, The council, acting for the city, could only demand of the water company the services contemplated in its charter on reasonable terms. So, when the parties*614 made the stipulation that they would renew the contract for twenty-five years longer, upon terms as mutually agreed upon at the time, it necessarily meant that the agreement was to be made on reasonable terms. Neither of the parties could foresee what changes twenty-five years would bring about. Neither could tell then what would be reasonable terms at the end of twenty-five years, and so the agreement was expressed as it was.”
If, then, a reasonable rental was contemplated by the lease, it was defendants’ duty to fix a reasonable rent, and the question arises, Have they done so? Much testimony was taken upon this phase of the case fey the. chancellor. The conclusion reached by him was that $1,000 a year was, under the circumstances, a reasonable rent. After going over the testimony we are of the opinion that if any error was made by the chancellor on this phase of the case it was not in favor of plaintiffs. We are inclined to confirm his finding.
The decree will, therefore, be affirmed, with costs to plaintiff.