Plaintiffs leased a gasoline station from Gertrude Leix for a term of 5 years, beginning on April 1, 1953. The lease contained the following provisions pertinent to this appeal:
“It is agreed that if first party desires to sell the property at any time that second parties, or either of them, shall have the first option to purchase the same and the right to meet any offer.
“It is further agreed that in the event of the death of the first party, second parties may purchase the property from the estate of first party for the sum of $5,000 cash. In the event of a purchase by second parties under either one of the above options the lease shall terminate.”
On October 1,1957, defendant Malleck ivas appointed special guardian of lessor, who had been declared mentally incompetent. Upon expiration of the lease on April 1, 1958, the Glocksines remained in possession of the premises and continued to pay to the lessor’s estate the monthly payments prescribed in the lease. The lessor died in March, 1959, and in September, 1959, Paul Glocksine informed defendant Malleck (who had been appointed coadministrator of the deceased lessor’s estate) by letter that the plaintiffs were exercising their option to buy the leased premises from the lessor’s estate for $5,000. *118 Upon the defendants’ refusal to sell, plaintiffs sought relief in equity. Defendants appeal from the chancellor’s decree that they convey the property to plaintiffs in consideration of plaintiffs’ payment to the estate of $5,000.
In the court below plaintiffs argued successfully that at the expiration of the lease’s term they became, by holding over, tenants from year to year, subject to all of the provisions of the expired lease, and that as such they retained the right to exercise the options contained in the lease, which options, they maintained, had no specific expiration dates. It is true that the lease does not explicitly set forth the month, day, and year upon which the options were to expire. Since, however, the options were included in a lease for a definite term, it is reasonable to infer that it was the intent of the parties that the options had to be exercised during the term of the lease.
Durepo
v.
May
(1947), 73 RI 71, 75 (
Moreover, a finding that the option was established for an indefinite period contradicts inherent probabilities, for an option to purchase is of such a nature that it is nearly always intended to be of limited duration. See 1A Corbin, Contracts, § 273. The like *119 liltood of this being true is especially pronounced in the instant case, where there is a fixed price to provide for the contingency of the lessor’s death. That a lessor would bind himself to a tenant indefinitely by such an agreement, beyond the normal term of his lease, thereby depriving his estate of any potential increase in property values, is unlikely.
We are not unmindful of cases like
Starr
v.
Holck,
We hold, therefore, that the parties to the lease indicated Avith sufficient clarity that they intended the option to expire at the end of the lease term. The question then becomes whether the option could be exercised by the plaintiffs as tenants holding over. In
Scott
v.
Beecher,
“It is well settled that * * * when a tenant under a valid lease for years holds over, the law implies a contract on his part to renew the tenancy on the same terms for another year; but the landlord may treat him as a trespasser, or as a tenant holding upon the terms of the original lease.”
*120 This language, unqualified, is certainly broad enough to justify the Glocksines’ contention that since the option is a term of the lease, it may be exercised during a holdover tenancy.
However, in
Faraci
v.
Fassulo,
“A presumption arises from the holding over by the tenant and acceptance of rent by the landlord, in a case of a lease for a term of years, that the parties intend to renew the tenancy for a period of 1 year. There is no implication that the lease itself as a binding contract is to be continued in force. Its provisions may be inquired into to determine the terms under which the tenant holds and the nature of his tenancy. In an action to recover the rent, the liability would not be predicated upon the agreement of the tenant to pay as embodied in the lease, but upon the implied contract to pay according to the terms of the lease.”
See, also,
Longyear
v.
Jennings,
Our Court in its opinions has distinguished between the nature and terms of a renewal tenancy and those of a holdover tenancy. "When a lease contains an option to purchase during its term and an option to renew the lease “on the same terms”, a renewal of the lease carries with it the right to exercise the purchase option during the renewed term.
Meadow Heights Country Club
v.
Hinckley,
“The right to exercise the option ceased upon the expiration of the renewal term of the lease and it could not be exercised during the month-to-month holding over. Napper v. Rice, 127 W Va 157 (32 SE2d 41 );163 ALR 714 ; and Wright v. Barclay, 151 Neb 94 (36 NW2d 645 ).”
Cox, like the instant case, involved an option to purchase at a fixed price. The holdover tenancy was from month to month, rather than from year to year as plaintiff's here claim, but since the conditions *122 of all such holdover tenancies are determined from the terms of the expired lease, our conclusion in Cox relating to the expiration of the option upon commencement of the holdover tenancy is equally applicable in this case of Gloeksine. See, generally, Burby, Real Property, § 117 (2d ed, 1954).
Napper v. Rice, the West Virginia case relied upon in Cox, involved a 2-year lease containing an option to purchase within the lease term for a fixed price. In denying specific performance of the purchase option to a tenant holding over, the West Virginia supreme court of appeals said (p 166):
“Nor was the option to purchase extended by the holding over by the plaintiff after the expiration of the term of the lease. This option, while contained in a written lease, was no part of the lease proper, and was expressly limited to ‘the said period of 2 years from date, hereof’, and the lease contained no provision for its extension or renewal. The lessee, therefore, could not extend this period by the mere holding over and paying rent.”32 SE2d 41 , 46.
In Wright v. Barclay, the Nebraska case relied upon in Cox, the tenant under a 1-year lease containing an option to purchase if the lessor wished to sell during the term was likewise denied the right to exercise the option while holding over (pp 98, 99):
“We think an option contained in a lease to purchase the property and so destroy the tenancy is not 1 of the terms of the tenancy itself. While it may be made a provision of a lease and incorporated therein it is, nevertheless, a provision outside of the terms which regulate the relations between the parties as landlord and tenant. It is therefore not 1 of the terms of the original tenancy which will be incorporated into the tenancy created by a tenant holding over after the expiration of the lease. * * *
“If the parties to a lease desire that an option contained therein should extend beyond the term *123 thereof, to a tenant holding over, they can easily nse apt language to express that purpose but the law should not, by implication, enlarge the legal rights of a tenant holding over beyond the terms and conditions necessary to continue the landlord-tenant relationship.”36 NW2d 645 , 648.
The
Cox
decision and the cases cited therein do not, of course, invalidate the statement in
Meadow Heights Country Club
v.
Hinckley,
, The supreme court of Illinois has had occasion to decide a case very similar to Glocksine. In
Wanous
v.
Balaco
(1952), 412 Ill 545 (
“Plaintiff relies heavily upon Hindu Incense Manfg. Co. v. MacKensie, 403 Ill 390 (86 NE2d 214 ), claiming it to be decisive of the present case. In that case, the lease contained an option to purchase and an option to renew upon the same terms and conditions. The option to renew was properly exercised by the tenant and it was held that when the lease was renewed, all the provisions thereof, including the purchase option, were renewed. This *124 court there held that an option to purchase was an integral part of the lease and not an independent covenant. We cannot agree that the Hindu Incense Case is decisive here. In the case at bar there was no agreement or covenant for renewal. The continued possession coupled with the payment of rent did not renew the old lease, but created a new tenancy from year to year upon the same terms as the old. lease, only so far as they are applicable to the new condition of things. Weber v. Powers, 213 Il1 370; (72 NE 1070 , 68 LRA 610).
“Defendants, to sustain the decree below, cite cases from other jurisdictions which hold that a purchase option cannot be exercised by a holdover tenant. In those cases, however, it was held that an option to purchase is an independent covenant and for that reason does not become 1 of the terms of the holdover tenancy. Andreula v. Slovak Gymnastic Union, 140 NJ Eq 171 (53 A2d 191 ); Spaulding v. Yovino-Young, 30 Cal 2d 138 (180 P2d 691); Libin v. Peters, 118 Ind App 27 (75 NE2d 162 ). Since we have held that an option to purchase is not an independent covenant, these cases are not of persuasive effect.
“We believe, however, that even though a purchase option is held to be an integral part of a lease and, therefore, renewed when the lease is renewed, it is not such a provision as will be incorporated in a year-to-year tenancy created by operation of law. Not every provision in a written lease is made a part of a holdover tenancy — only those terms applicable to the new condition of things are so treated. For example, in Weber v. Powers, 213 Ill 370 (72 NE 1070 , 68 LRA 610), a power of attorney to confess judgment for rent due on a written lease was held inapplicable to a holdover tenancy. We believe that the option to purchase for a certain sum ‘during the term of this lease’ is not such a, provision as is applicable to the netv tenancy and the new condition of things.
“We, therefore, hold that the option was not a part of the holdover tenancy.”107 NE 792 , 793.
*125
The Michigan cases, including
Scott
v. Beecher,
Reversed. Costs to appellant.
Notes
Some ol the later eases which cite Farad have not spoken as precisely as did Farad, but have stated generally that when a tenant holds over “the law implies a contract to renew the tenancy on the same terms for another year.” E. g., Kokalis v. Whitehurst, 334 Mich 477, 480 (45 ALR2d 823). However, sueh eases have not involved options to purchase and they have recognized the continuing vitality of Farad.
For further support of the proposition that terms of a holdover tenancy are not necessarily the same as those of a preceding lease, see
Rice
v.
Atkinson, Deacon, Flliott Co.,
