Defendants appeal as of right from an order denying defendants’ motion for summary disposition and granting plaintiff’s motion for summary disposition. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand. 1
*480 In 1960, defendants’ and plaintiff’s predecessors in interest entered into a sand and gravel contract granting plaintiff’s predecessor the exclusive right to extract sand and gravel from deposits on defendants’ predecessors’ property in exchange for an annual payment of a minimum royalty. Defendants, who amended the contract in 1987, terminated the contract in 1995 because it had been in existence for over thirty-five years without plaintiff extracting any sand or gravel. Seeking to have the contract enforced, plaintiff filed this declaratory judgment action. Defendants filed a counterclaim and affirmative defenses, stating that the contract was unconscionable and violated the rule against perpetuities. Both parties submitted motions for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (9). The lower court granted only plaintiff’s motion. Although we agree with the court that the rule against perpetuities does not apply to this property interest, we find that the pleadings were sufficient to state a claim of unconscionability.
Appellate review of a motion for summary disposition is de novo.
Singerman v Municipal Service Bureau, Inc,
Defendants argue that the lower court erred in granting plaintiff summary disposition on the basis that the contract was conscionable. We agree. The examination of a contract for unconscionability involves inquiries for both procedural and substantive unconscionability.
Northwest Acceptance Corp v Almont Gravel, Inc,
(1) What is the relative bargaining power of the parties, their relative economic strength, the alternative sources of supply, in a word, what are their options?; (2) Is the challenged term substantively reasonable? [Id. (citing Allen v Michigan Bell Telephone Co,18 Mich App 632 , 637-638;171 NW2d 689 [1969]).]
Reasonableness is the primary consideration.
Stenke v Masland Development Co, Inc,
Here, defendants alleged in their counterclaim both that their predecessors in interest were unrepresented by counsel during negotiations and execution of the original contract and that defendants were *482 unrepresented during the negotiations and execution of the 1987 amendment. Additionally, defendants’ pleadings contain several allegations of unreasonableness attributed to the length of time since the contract’s inception, during which plaintiff never extracted sand or gravel from the property. When these allegations are accepted as true, we cannot conclude that they are defenses so clearly untenable as a matter of law that no factual development could possibly deny plaintiff’s right to recovery. However, in granting plaintiff’s motion for summary disposition, the lower court made a contrary determination that the contract was “easily comprehensible” and did not involve “trickery.” This determination constitutes a finding of fact that is inappropriate to make when considering a motion for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) or (9). Because motions pursuant to these two subrules concern only the sufficiency of the pleadings, the lower court was required to presume that defendants’ allegations were true and was not permitted to create its own factual findings. In re Smith Estate, supra at 288. Accordingly, the court should not have granted plaintiff summary disposition on this basis.
Next, defendants argue that the lower court erred in granting plaintiff summary disposition on the basis that the parties’ contract did not violate the rule against perpetuities. We disagree. The rule against perpetuities, which is codified at MCL 554.51; MSA 26.49(1), is violated if, at the time the instrument creating a future estate comes into operation, it is not certain that the estate will either vest or fail to vest within twenty-one years of the death of a person named in the instrument.
Stevens Mineral Co v Mich
*483
igan,
Plaintiff’s property interest pursuant to the contract in this case is properly characterized as a profit á prendre in the form of the right to extract and acquire defendants’ sand and gravel. A profit á prendre is the right to acquire, by severance or removal from another’s land, something previously constituting part of the land.
VanAlstine v Swanson,
Defendants argue that the lower court should have applied the rule against perpetuities in this case because plaintiffs profit á prendre will not vest until plaintiff begins extracting sand or gravel from the property.
3
For their position, defendants primarily rely on this Court’s statement in
Stevens, supra
at 698, that until the profit á prendre ”is actually exercised and possession is taken, it is a floating, indefinite, and incorporeal right.” This statement in
Stevens
was
*485
derived from
Harlow v Lake Superior Iron Co,
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings regarding defendants’ unconscionability claim. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Notes
In addition to the arguments that we address in this opinion, defendants also argue that plaintiff’s property interest violates public policy and that the dormant minerals act, MCL 554.291
et seq.;
MSA 26.1163(1)
et seq.,
applies to the property interest. We need not address these arguments because defendants did not make these arguments to the lower
*480
court, instead raising them for the first time on appeal.
Vander Bossche v Valley Pub,
203 Mch App 632, 641;
We note that our conclusion is consistent with decisions of other courts that, when confronted with this issue in varying factual contexts, have also held that the rule against perpetuities does not apply to a profit á prendre because it is a vested property interest. See
Greenshields v Warren Petroleum Corp,
248 F2d 61, 70-71 (CA 10, 1957) (contractual right to explore for and acquire title to gas and oil);
Rousselot v Spanier,
60 Cal App 3d 238, 242-243; 131 Cal Rptr 438 (1976) (reservation of nonpossessoiy interest in oil and gas);
Goetz v Goetz,
174 Kan 30, 36, 38;
In a related discussion concerning royalty interests in gas and oil, the Arkansas Supreme Court made the following observation pertinent to defendants’ argument in this case:
It is hard for us to conceive of an estate in real property which vests barrel by barrel or stratum by stratum. In the analogous case of a profit a prendre, such as the perpetual right to take game or fish from another’s land, the estate in real property is a present vested interest which is unaffected by the rule against perpetuities. Gray, The Rule Against Perpetuities (4th Ed.), § 279. Although the owner of such a privilege acquires a personal property interest whenever he bags a duck or lands a fish, this action is merely an incident in the enjoyment of the estate in real property. [Hanson v Ware,224 Ark 430 , 437;274 SW2d 359 (1955). ]
