JACOB EPSTEIN et al., Appellants,
v.
LAMIA ZAHLOUTE, Respondent.
California Court of Appeals. Second Dist., Div. Two.
Bloom & Bloom for Appellants.
No appearance for Respondent.
WILSON, J.
Plaintiffs' predecessor in interest executed a lease to defendant of an apartment for the terms of two years "with option for renewal each succeeding year thereafter, ..." Subsequently to the expiration of the two-year term plaintiffs brought this action to quiet title to the property and to cancel the lease. They have appealed from the judgment rendered in favor of defendant. *739
[1] The effect of the quoted provision of the lease amounts to the creation of a perpetuity. "A covenant for a lease to be renewed indefinitely at the option of the lessee, is, in effect, the creation of a perpetuity; it puts it in the power of one party to renew forever, and is therefore against the policy of the law." (Morrison v. Rossignol,
The Becker case is distinguishable for the further reason that the lease was not for a city lot while the lease in the instant case covers a city lot or a portion thereof and such a lease is invalid if for a period in excess of 99 years. (Civ. Code, 718.) A lease of a city lot, with the right of perpetual renewal, to a corporation whose term of existence is without limitation as to time would manifestly be equivalent to a lease in perpetuity and contrary to the inhibition of section 718. A similar lease to a natural person would be of like effect since the length of the lessee's life would be indeterminable. The court cannot conclude that the lessee in the instant case will not survive for a period exceeding 99 years hence the right to an annual renewal for an unlimited number of years purportedly granted to her by the lease is in violation of section 718. In Hart v. Hart (N.Y.),
Reversed with instructions to enter judgment in favor of plaintiffs quieting their title and canceling the lease.
Moore, P. J., and McComb, J., concurred.
