The plaintiffs appeal from the Superior Court’s (Souter, J.) approval of a Master’s (Gary R. Cassavechia, Esq.) recommendation that their petition for declaratory judgment relating to an option to repurchase realty be dismissed. We affirm.
The case was submitted on an agreed statement of facts. The plaintiffs, Daniel H. and Mary Carroll, purchased a home in Somersworth in 1955. In 1975, the plaintiffs fell behind in their mortgage payments, and the Farmers Home Administration (FHA) instituted foreclosure proceedings on the property. To avoid foreclosure, the plaintiffs entered into an agreement with the defendant, Ronald Daigle, and his former wife whereby the property was conveyed to the Daigles for $20,000, the amount of the outstanding FHA mortgage. In return, the plaintiffs took back a three-year lease, which contained the following option to repurchase:
“At any time during the term of this lease, provided that all rental obligations are current, Lessee [the plaintiffs], for good and valuable separate consideration hereby acknowledged by Lessor [the Daigles], may purchase the demised premises from Lessor, upon payment to Lessor of an amount necessary to pay off any mortgage indebtedness Lessor is carrying on the demised premises plus an additional payment of One Thousand Three Hundred Twenty ($1,320.00) dollars.”
(Emphasis added.) Neither the lease itself nor the option-to-buy clause contained a renewal provision. The $1,320 represented a commission to the Daigles, who were local real estate agents.
The agreement also provided that in the event of any default by the plaintiffs under the lease, the Daigles were entitled to sell the property and to retain a six percent sales commission plus one-half of the equity. In addition, the plaintiffs agreed to pay all the expenses of the property, including the mortgage, property taxes, and insurance. In order to purchase the property, the Daigles *498 obtained bank financing and gave a mortgage on the house as security for the loan.
The three-year lease and option to buy expired on November 20, 1978, without the plaintiffs’ having exercised the option. The parties made no express agreement to extend the plaintiffs’ tenancy, and the plaintiffs continued to live in the house under the terms of the expired lease.
In the spring of 1980, the defendant refinanced the property after acquiring full title to it in a divorce action. He requested the plaintiffs to pay increased rent to cover the higher monthly mortgage payments. The plaintiffs agreed to do so, but they immediately applied to obtain FHA financing to repurchase the property under the option to buy contained in the expired lease. In November 1980, the plaintiffs received approval from the FHA in the amount of $32,000; however, the defendant refused to reconvey the property for less than fair market value, which at that time was approximately $50,000.
The plaintiffs then brought this declaratory-judgment action, seeking a ruling that they had a present right to exercise the option to repurchase as a term of their holdover tenancy or, in the alternative, that the defendant held title to the property under a constructive trust in favor of the plaintiffs. A master recommended that the plaintiffs’ petition be dismissed on the grounds that the option to repurchase could be exercised only during the term of the lease and that the option did not extend into the holdover tenancy. The master also found no basis for imposing a constructive trust. The superior court approved the master’s report, and the plaintiffs pursued this appeal.
The first issue is whether the plaintiffs’ holdover tenancy included, as a term, the option to repurchase contained in their expired lease. It is well established in this State that a tenant who holds over after the expiration of a term lease and pays rent is considered, at best, a tenant at will.
Prout’s v. McIntyre,
A holdover tenancy on the same terms as in the original lease is generally recognized as a
new
landlord-tenant relationship, which is distinct from the continuation of a tenancy based upon exercise of a renewal term of the lease or upon a subsequent express agreement between the parties. 1 American Law of Property § 3.83, at 361-62 (A. J. Casner ed. 1952). Treating a holdover tenancy as a new tenancy is consistent with the fact that, at the outset of the
*499
holdover tenancy, the landlord may elect to treat the tenant “as a trespasser, evict him or hold him as a tenant.”
Muse v. Merrimack Valley Nat’l Bank,
Although this court has not previously ruled on the precise issue before us in this case, courts in other States have had the opportunity to determine whether an option to purchase contained in a written lease with no renewal provision continues as a term of a holdover tenancy.
See generally
Annot.,
More persuasive, however, are the decisions of other jurisdictions which hold that a purchase option which may be exercised only during the term of the lease does not carry over into the holdover tenancy. These decisions are based on the fact that a provision which is expressly limited to the effective period of the lease cannot be considered to be applicable to the new holdover tenancy.
See, e.g., Wanous v. Balaco,
Despite the plaintiffs’ claim that the parties intended the repurchase option to continue as a term of the holdover tenancy, a plain reading of the option clause militates against such an interpretation. The option was expressly made applicable “during the term of this lease”; it was also, by its terms, supported by “separate consideration.” These factors, combined with the fact that the right to exercise the repurchase option was conditioned upon “all rental obligations . . . [being] current,”
see id.
at 142,
The reference in another clause of the lease to the landlord’s reasonable rights of entry and inspection “during the term of this lease and any renewal thereof” does not compel the conclusion either that the parties intended or anticipated a
renewal
of the original lease upon all its terms, or that the holdover tenancy could be construed as such a renewal. We hold that the master correctly
*500
ruled that the repurchase option, as contained in the plaintiffs’ three-year written lease, was not a term of their holdover tenancy.
Cf. Buxton v. Glennon,
We also affirm the master’s ruling that the plaintiffs were not entitled to equitable relief from their untimely exercise of the repurchase option. We have held that
“equity will grant relief to a lessee who has failed to exercise the option within the required time, if the delay is slight, the delay has not prejudiced the landlord, and the failure to grant relief would result in such hardship to the tenant as to make literal enforcement of the . . . [option] provision unconscionable.”
Fletcher v. Frisbee,
Alternatively, the plaintiffs argue that, under the circumstances of this case, the master erred in not imposing a constructive trust for their benefit. The plaintiffs properly cite the prerequisites for the imposition of a constructive trust: the existence of a fiduciary or confidential relationship,
Cornwell v. Cornwell,
Although the plaintiffs on appeal assert the existence of a fiduciary relationship between the parties based on a joint venture, the master made no finding regarding a fiduciary relationship. Given his ultimate determination that no basis existed for imposi
*501
tion of a constructive trust, we must assume that he necessarily-found that no fiduciary relationship existed between the plaintiffs and the defendant.
See Buxton v. Glennon,
A confidential relationship can exist whenever “one has gained the confidence of the other and purports to act or advise
with the other’s interest in mind,”
such as in a family or close personal relationship.
Cornwell v. Cornwell,
The facts of this case are substantially similar to those in
Wheelen v. Robinson.
In both
Wheelen
and the instant case, the defendants purchased the plaintiffs’ property to forestall a foreclosure, and the defendants gave the plaintiffs the opportunity to repurchase the property. Additionally, neither defendant refused to reconvey the property within the agreed-upon time period, and both defendants “stood ready [to reconvey] far beyond the reasonable time intended by the original commitment” by the plaintiffs.
Id.
at 1035,
Unlike the
Wheelen
case,
id.,
Affirmed.
