Oviatt Building Associates, a limited partnership, sued Ralph M. Parsons, doing business as The Ralph M. Parsons Company, for unpaid rent accrued under an oral agreement for rental of space by defendant in the Oviatt Building in downtown Los Angeles. Defendant moved to dismiss the third amended complaint and the action as sham, fictitious, and frivolous; also for entry of summary judgment in his favor; at the same time he demurred to the complaint, relying principally upon the statute of frauds. The court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend and granted the motions, stating in the minute order: “The contract pleaded is unenforceable for uncertainty and indefiniteness.” From the ensuing judgment plaintiffs appeal.
The determinative question is the correctness of the ruling upon demurrer for, as appears later, the showing upon motion for summary judgment was not sufficient to warrant that relief; the other motions turned upon the same questions as the demurrer.
The third amended complaint alleges that plaintiffs acquired ownership of the Oviatt Building in September 1956, and at the same time acquired their predecessor’s interest in all existing agreements between said predecessor, James Oviatt, and said defendant, which agreements were upon the same terms and conditions as the one made by the parties to the action (as hereinafter outlined) : that defendant had been a tenant of space in the building for 14 years prior to the making of the agreement upon which plaintiffs sue, and had occupied varying amounts of space in the building; “that Defendants are engineers and are engaged in the business of engineering large projects such as refineries, dams and similar projects throughout the world, and at all times herein mentioned required office space for personnel to an extent in keeping with engagements and projects from time to time in work; that Defendants’ requirements for such office space varied substantially from time to time, and such requirements increased when projects are in work and in turn decreased when projects are completed.” Following acquisition of the building by plaintiffs, defendant represented that his head office was located in the Oviatt Building and “that office space in said building would not, under any circumstances, be relinquished until all office space in other buildings was first abandoned, and then only in the event that their needs and requirements were contracted to such an extent that they would no longer require office
Obviously, this was a “requirements contract” with a new twist, i.e., application to a new field of activity. The law pertaining to such contracts has been developed in the field of sales and is discussed almost altogether in that connection, but the question presented by requirement contracts is one of mutuality of obligation and there is nothing about that branch of the law which should preclude its application to other types of contracts. The question is strictly one of contract and whether its terms are sufficiently definite to be enforceable.
The general rules of requirement contracts are well settled and are stated in the following quotations.
1 Williston on Contracts (third ed.) section 104A, page 402: “A bargain to sell all that a buyer may require or use in his business, where the buyer promises to buy all of his requirements from the one source, or the seller promises to sell all that he produces to one purchaser is, by the weight of authority, held to be based on consideration. ‘Agreements to buy or sell what will be “needed” or “required” have been enforced by the courts with little difficulty, where the surrounding circumstances indicate the approximate scope of the promise. ’ Such agreements are termed ‘ requirement ’ contracts. ’ ’
46 Am.Jur., section 63, page 254: “The weight of authority supports the rule that a valid agreement is formed when one party agrees to furnish, and the other to accept and pay for, a commodity in such quantity as the buyer’s business will require or need for a designated period of time. This rule has been applied to agreements for such quantity as the buyer ‘wants,’ where the term ‘want’ is interpreted as meaning ‘needs.’ ”
Within, Summary of California Law (seventh ed.) section 75, page 81: “(2)
Needs or Requirements Contract.
Where the proposal is to furnish all goods of a certain kind which the other party may
need
or require in a certain business for a definite period, acceptance results in a contract. The ac
El Rio Oils Ltd.
v.
Pacific Coast Asphalt Co.,
These principles were applied in
Ames-Brooks Co.
v.
Aetna Ins. Co.,
The California cases of
Associated Oil Co.
v.
Myers,
There is nothing about a contract to furnish existing and future needs for rental space that differs essentially from one covering the furnishing of all requirements of oil (El Rio Oils, Ltd. v. Pacific Coast Asphalt Co., supra), or of any other commodity. None of the ancient real property concepts is offended by testing the validity of the instant contract through application of the same principles.
The complaint at bar shows that defendant had a variable need for floor space, expanding and contracting with the condition of business; it had been established in the Los Angeles community for many years and actually was needing and using a large quantity of floor space, both before and after the making of the agreement now under consideration. Defendant agreed to buy all his needed space from plaintiffs and plaintiffs agreed to supply that need to the extent of their ability. All of the elements of a requirement contract are present.
Any uncertainties originally inhering in the agreement had been dissipated at the time of the breach. The major one, quantity of subject matter, had been fixed by practical construction and later agreement upon the needed space, which was designated in defendant’s notice of intent to vacate as the 4th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 10th, 11th and 12th floors, and parts of the 5th and 9th floors; it is the rental for that space, agreed upon and actually used by defendant, which plaintiffs seek to recover. This subsequent agreement upon a matter left open in the original agreement cures any weakness growing out of that defect.
(Noel
v.
Dumont Builders, Inc.,
The statute of frauds (Civ. Code, § 1624, subds. 1, 4, Code Civ. Proc., § 1973, subds. 1, 4) is not a bar to enforcement of the instant agreement for it is one whose perform
“The fact that it is not probable or likely to be performed within a year from the date it is made does not make it invalid if by its terms it is possible that the contract may be performed within a year after it is made. [Citation.]
“In the present case there was nothing in the terms of the contract that prevented it from being performed within a year from the date of the agreement. It was possible that during the year plaintiff’s wells might have been pumped dry or for some other reason, due to earth movements or mechanical difficulties, it would be no longer feasible to produce from them.” See
Columbia Pictures Corp.
v.
DeToth,
Respondent’s effort to differentiate between subdivisions 1 and 4 of the statute of frauds must prove sterile. Those subdivisions are applied indiscriminately to leases in this state and as if they were exact equivalents. Subdivision 1 refers to an agreement “that by its terms is not to be performed within a year from the making thereof.” Subdivision 4: “An agreement for the leasing for a longer period than one year.” The language of the two subdivisions expresses the same thought, that the agreement or lease must be so worded that it cannot be performed within a year.
Subdivision 4 does not apply to a lease for an indefinite term which can be performed within a year. (Cf.
Kendall
v.
Southward, infra,
Counsel for respondent offers as a basis for rejecting the doctrine of requirement contracts within the domain of leases of real property an argument that the instant contract offends the rule against perpetuities, in that, “ [t]he alleged agreement contains conditions precedent as to vesting which may not occur within the period of the rule (Civ. Code, § 715.2).”
3
That rule has no application to vested interests.
(Haggerty
v.
City of Oakland,
Respondent’s argument overlooks the cardinal proposition that there was an immediate vesting of all rights under the lease, for defendant was in possession at the time it was made and it became immediately effective. Defendant thereby acquired a present right to occupancy of all office space then in its possession and a potential occupancy of all other available office space in the building; the right to possession of the additional space immediately vested though the enjoyment of possession was postponed until defendant’s requirements should entitle
it
to possession of additional available space in the building. “Subject to the possible exception of certain gifts of future interests to a class . . . both the rule against remoteness of vesting and the rule against suspension of the absolute power of alienation are ordinarily inapplicable to vested estates. They apply only to future contingent estates.” (38 Cal.Jur.2d, § 14, p. 459.) Postponement of possession or enjoyment of an interest that is vested does not bring the rule against perpetuities into operation. “The rule against perpetuities . . . relates only to vesting and does not apply to vested future estates though possession and enjoyment be postponed indefinitely.”
(Caffroy
v.
Fremlin,
A lease which becomes immediately effective vests in all respects at that time, and rights under it, though exer
This principle is made plain by authorities dealing with a right of perpetual renewal. We do not deal here with that right but authorities discussing it do lend emphasis to the principle that all phases of a leasehold become vested at the same time.
32 Am.Jur., section 967, page 813: “It has been generally held that a provision in a lease for perpetual renewal is not violative either of the rule against perpetuities or of statutes limiting the period during which the absolute power of alienation may be suspended. The reason for this is that the covenant to renew may be taken as part of the lessee’s present interest. It is obvious that a perpetual lease, or a lease containing a covenant for perpetual renewal, is not a restraint or limitation upon the power of alienation of the fee, for there are at all times persons in being who by joining can convey the fee.” This language was quoted with approval in
Ehrhart
v.
Spencer,
Conley
v.
Gaylock,
Williams
v.
J. M. High Co.,
The annotation in
Becker
v.
Submarine Oil Co.,
Epstein
v.
Zahloute,
We would emphasize the fact previously stated, that we do not deal with an option for perpetual renewal here, but
Respondent suggests a possibility that Civil Code section 718 is applicable here—the section which prohibits leasing of town or city lots for a period in excess of 99 years.
4
Again counsel relies upon
Morrison
v.
Bossignol, supra,
The motion for summary judgment should have been denied. That procedure is not one for testing the sufficiency of the complaint or answer. To warrant the granting of the motion a supporting affidavit must be filed which shows the existence of a sufficient cause of action or defense in favor of the moving party.
“A
summary judgment is proper only if the affidavits in support of the moving party ‘would be sufficient to sustain judgment in his favor. . . .’ ”
(Desny
v.
Wilder,
Other points raised by counsel need no discussion.
Judgment reversed.
Fox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 8, 1963,
Notes
For present purposes we accept, as we must, all allegations of fact to be true and are not concerned with the amount, if any, which plaintiffs may recover after a trial.
As the judgment must be reversed on other grounds, we call attention to the cases of
San Francisco Brewing Corp.
v.
Bowman,
Civ. Code, § 715.2: “No interest in real or personal property shall be good unless it must vest, if at all, not later than 21 years after some life in being at the creation of the interest and any period of gestation involved in the situation to which the limitation applies. ...”
Civ. Code, § 718: “No lease or grant of any town or city lot, winch reserves any rent or service of any kind, and which provides for a leasing or granting period in excess of 99 years, shall be valid. ...”
Civ. Code, § 717: “No lease or grant of land for agricultural or horticultural purposes for a longer period than fifteen years, in which shall be reserved any rent or service of any kind, shall be valid ....’’
