179 A. 866 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1935
Argued March 6, 1935. This was an action of assumpsit for rent of a garage for the four months beginning April 1, 1928.
Plaintiff relied on an informal writing with Kolb Bread Bakery, Inc., which showed on its face that it was an agreement to make a lease, rather than a lease itself. See Zook v. Zook,
It contemplated a lease for one year from April 1, 1926, at a rental of $150 a month, "with the privilege of extending the lease four more years" at the same rental; and the execution of a formal lease after the "proper papers" had been drawn.
No formal lease agreement was ever prepared or signed; a witness for the plaintiff testifying that before Kolb Bread Bakery, Inc. entered into possession of the premises and while the parties were discussing certain changes to be made in the building the president of the Kolb Bread Bakery, Inc. said the informal writing was satisfactory to him and the plaintiff said it was likewise satisfactory to him, and they verbally adopted the preliminary writing as the lease.
The court below entered a compulsory non-suit — and subsequently refused to take it off, — on the ground that parol evidence was necessary to establish the lease relied on, and, as the term of the lease was for more than three years, the letting was invalid under the Statute of Frauds.
If the appellant's contention is correct — that the lease, in effect, called for a term of one year, with the privilege of extending the lease for a further term of four years, (See Canonico v. Lucente,
While parties to a lease, not within the Statute of Frauds, may subsequently modify it by parol, and be outside the parolevidence rule, (25 R.C.L. 708) they cannot by parol establish a lease for more than three years, for that is forbidden by theStatute of Frauds. The adoption or ratification of a lease for more than three years, in order to be valid, must be in writing: Dumn v. Rothermel, supra; Willis-Winchester Co. v. Clay,
On the other hand, if the preliminary writing intended a lease for one year, with the privilege of extending it fromyear to year for four more years, then the plaintiff had no case, for the defendant had paid the rent in full to April 1, 1928 and had the right to surrender the premises at the end of any leasehold year: Walter v. Transue,
This defendant was not a party to the preliminary writing but had taken over the business of Kolb Bread Bakery, Inc. with all its assets and assumed its liabilities.
Whichever horn of the dilemma is taken, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
Judgment affirmed. *168