¶ 1. MS Real Estate Holdings, LLC, formerly Tidy-View Dairy, Inc., ("Tidy-View") appeals a grant of summary judgment in favor of the Donald E Fox Family Trust, the Jean A. Fox Revocable Living Trust, Jean A. Fox, Michael J. Fox, Thomas E Fox, Karen L. Brazee, Carol L. Brewer, Ellen J. Fox, and Amy J. Alaniz (collectively, "the Foxes"). Tidy-View argues the circuit court erred in concluding its Right of First Refusal ("ROFR") agreement with Jean and Donald Fox was indefinite as to duration and terminable after a reasonable time. We agree with Tidy-View, reverse the judgment, and remand for further рroceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
¶ 2. In 1998, Tidy-View agreed to the ROFR with Jean and Donald Fox. The ROFR grants Tidy-View two rights: a right of first refusal to purchase property located in Outagamie County, and a right of first refusal to lease the property. The purchase provision of the ROFR states:
SECTION 1: RIGHT OF FIRST REFUSAL TO PURCHASE
Fox grants and conveys to Tidy-View a first right to purchase the Property, or any part thereof, for the same*311 price and on the same terms which Fox is willing to transfer such Property to another party. Prior to such transfer, Fox shall deliver to Tidy-View a written copy of the Offer, which Fox is willing to accept. Tidy-View shall then have 15 (fifteen) days in which to accept or reject the Offer according to its price, terms and conditions. If the Offer is accepted, the transfer shall be closed in accordance with the Offer with Tidy-View as purchaser. If the Offer is rejected, Fox may complete the sale in strict compliance with the Offer. If the sale is not closed, this first right of refusal shall again take effect.
The lease provisions are similar to this purchase provision, but also contain a subsection governing the duration of Tidy-View's lease rights:
SECTION 2: RIGHT TO LEASE
2.1 Leasing Rights. Fox grants and conveys to Tidy-View a first right to lease the Property, or any part thereof, for the same price and on the same terms which Fox is willing to Lease such Property to another party. Prior to execution of any Lease, Fox shall deliver to Tidy-View a written copy of the Lease, which Fox is willing to accept. Tidy-View shall then have 15 (fifteen) days in which to accept or reject the Lease according to its price, terms and conditions. If the Lease is accepted, Tidy-View shall be obligated to make all payments in accordance with the Lease with Tidy-View as Lessee. If the Lease is rejected, Fox may execute the Lease as Lessor with the other party as Lessee. If the Lease is not executed, the first right to lease shall again take effect.
2.2 Continuing Rights. This Section 2 right shall continue for any subsequent renewal of a Lease with another party or upon the entering into of a new Lease with any other party. It is specifically intended that this leasing right shall not extinguish unless waived by Tidy-View.
¶ 3. Tidy-View began leasing the property in 2001. In 2007, Donald Fox signed a five-year lease extension with Tidy-View, to expire in January 2012. On July 29, 2011, and again оn October 26, 2011, Jean Fox
¶ 4. Tidy-View commenced this lawsuit against the Foxes, arguing it was permitted to lеase the property under the Tinedale offer's terms. On March 6, 2012, Jean Fox notified Tidy-View that she was terminating the ROFR in its entirety, claiming it was unenforceable for vagueness as to its term.
¶ 5. The Foxes initially filed a motion to dismiss Tidy-View's lawsuit, arguing the Tinedale proposal was never acceptable and, therefore, Tidy-View could not exercise its lease rights under those terms. Later, the Foxes sought summary judgment, arguing the ROFR was void upon Jean Fox's notice of termination. The parties reachеd an interim agreement regarding whether Tidy-View could lease under the terms of the Tinedale offer. Thus, the sole remaining issue before the court was whether the ROFR was terminable for indefiniteness.
DISCUSSION
¶ 7. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. Chapman v. B.C. Ziegler & Co.,
¶ 9. It is undisputed the ROFR does not include a definite temporal limitation. That is, the agreement does not identify when the attendant rights and obligations are extinguished or lapse. Indeed, by binding the parties' "heirs, personal representatives, successors in interest and assigns," it appears the parties envisioned a long-term contractual relationship.
¶ 10. The Foxes persuaded the circuit court that the parties' failure to include a definite temporal limitation rendered the ROFR indefinite, and therefore terminable after a reasonable time. "As a general rule, when a contract is of indefinite duration, we will imply a reasonable time for performance." Schneider v. Schneider,
1. Enforceability of Section 1, the ROFR's purchase provision
¶ 12. We begin with the purchase provision's plain language. See BV/B1, LLC v. InvestorsBank,
¶ 13. We conclude a right of first refusal to purchase, such as the one contained in Section 1 of the ROFR, is not amenable to the general rule of indefiniteness applied by the circuit court. The right, by its very nature, is intended to lie dormant until a specified triggering event occurs. See Wilber Lime Prods., Inc. v. Ahrndt,
¶ 14. In Schneider, we determined a right of first refusal to purchase was not indefinite because it could be triggered at any time by a sale. There, two brothers —John and Allen — agreed they would only sell property they owned аs tenants in common with the other's consent and, failing that, only after first giving the other the right to purchase it. Schneider,
¶ 15. We decided the right of first refusal to purchase in Schneider was nevertheless sufficiently definite because it was "terminable by either party at any time." Id. at 176. Any attempt to sell by one brother required the other's consent; if that was withheld, a sixty-day option to purchase was triggered. Id. Thus, a sale could occur at any time; to the brother, if he exercised the option, or to a third party, if the brother еlected not to exercise the option or consented to the sale. Id. Under Schneider, a sale is the defining event that gives a right of first refusal sufficient temporal definition.
¶ 16. We conclude Schneider controls this case with respect to Section 1 of the ROFR. While the right of first refusal to purchase in the present case is not temporally limited, it may be "activated" at any time by an offer to purchase the property. After the Foxes receive such an offer, Tidy-View has a fifteen-day window to agree to purchase under the terms of that offer; if Tidy-View elects not to exercise its rights, the Foxes may proceed with the sale to a third party.
¶ 17. Thus, the Foxes may sell the property at any time; either to Tidy-View, in accordance with Section 1, or to a third party, if Tidy-View chooses not to exercise its rights. The agreement is sufficiently definite because it specifies an event — sale of the property — upon which the contract ends. See Pallange v. Mueller, 206
¶ 18. In concluding the ROFR could be terminated after a reasonable time, the circuit court stated there was "no language suggesting an intent to continue the ROFR indefinitely." The court was apparently concerned that, without an explicit tеmporal limitation, the ROFR would burden the land in perpetuity. This concern, at least as it pertains to the ROFR's purchase provision, was overstated. The court invoked Gray v. Stadler,
¶ 19. The Foxes argue "interpreting the ROFR to last into eternity unless the Fox [family] or its heirs, successors or assigns sell the Property is against public policy." This argument is devoid of authority and will
¶ 20. Next, the Foxes urge us to hold that the ROFR's purchase provision creates an impermissible restraint on alienation because its terms are not reasonable. A right of first refusal "is not a restraint on alienation of property if its terms are reasonable as to price and time." Bruns,
¶ 21. The Foxes misconstrue the nature of the reasonableness inquiry. With rights of first refusal to purchase, two contracts are in play. The first, often for modest consideration, purchases the right to buy property before anyone else at a designated price. The second contract is the ultimate purchase agreement between buyer and seller. In assessing reasonableness, we do not look to the duration of the right of first refusal or the consideration paid for it. Reasonableness as to time and price refers to the рrice the person holding the right of first refusal must pay to purchase the property, and the time allowed for the exercise of the right. See Restatement (Second) of Prop., supra.
¶ 22. With the analysis properly focused, we conclude Section 1 is reasonable as to price and time.
¶ 23. Accordingly, we conclude the right of first refusal to purchase in this case is sufficiently definite and reasonable, and terminates upon sale of the property, either to Tidy-View or a third party. We now consider whether the same is true of the ROFR's lease provision.
2. Enforceability of Section 2, the ROFR's lease provision
¶ 24. Once again, we begin with the contract's plain language. The right of first refusal to lease contains two sections. The first section, Section 2.1, defines the scope of the right. The second section, Section 2.2, defines the duration of the right.
¶ 25. Section 2.1 operates much like Section 1. It gives Tidy-View a right of first refusal to lease the property "for the same price and on the same terms" that the Foxes are willing to lease to a third party. Section 2.1 obligates the Foxes to provide written notice of an acceptable offer to lease. Tidy-View then has fifteen days within which tо accept or reject the lease offer. If Tidy-View accepts, it steps into the third party's shoes as lessee. If Tidy-View rejects the lease, the Foxes may lease the property to the third party. The failure to execute a third-party lease resurrects Tidy-View's preemptory lease right.
¶ 27. At first blush, Section 2.2, taken together with the fact that the ROFR is binding on "heirs, personal representatives, successors in interest and assigns," appears to create a right in perpetuity. Tidy-View's Section 2 rights are not extinguished when the Foxes lease the land to Tidy-View or a third party, nor are they clearly extinguished upon sale of the property, as is the case with Section 1. However, as we explain, closer scrutiny reveals Tidy-View's right of first refusal to lease does indeed terminate upon sale of the property to a third party.
¶ 28. During initial briefing, Tidy-View did not differentiate between the enforceability of its Sections 1 and 2 rights. It simply asserted the entire ROFR was valid and enforceable because it terminated upon sale of the property. Tidy-View backs away from thаt assertion in its supplemental briefing. It argues that while the plain language of Section 1 "operates to extinguish the purchase right upon a bona fide sale of the property," the lease provision "lawfully binds successive purchasers ...." See Nature Conservancy,
¶ 30. We conclude waiver can have only one reasonable meaning under the policy. "Waiver" must refer to Tidy-View's refusal to buy the property under the terms of a third-party offer to purchase, when the transfer to a third party is ultimately accomplished pursuant to Section 1. "Waiver" cannot refer to Tidy-View's refusal to meet the terms of a third-party lease; that would make Section 2.2 internally inconsistent. The only interpretation of "waiver" consistent with the entire agreement is Tidy-View's refusal to meet the terms of a third-party purchase offer. "Waiver," in a sense, ties together the purchase and lease provisions such that the sale or transfer of the property to a third party necessarily extinguishes both rights.
¶ 31. We conclude this interpretation gives effect to the intent of the parties, which is our primary goal.
¶ 32. Thus, the provision binding "the respective parties, their heirs, personal representatives, successors in interest and assigns" to the ROFR is in fact modified and limited by both Sections 1 and 2.2. The contract terminates in its entirety upon sale or transfer of the property to a third party.
CONCLUSION
¶ 33. In sum, we have determined the circuit court erred when it concluded the ROFR was indefinite and therefore terminable after a reasonable time. For different reasons, both the ROFR's purchase and leasе provisions extinguish upon sale or transfer of the property to a third party. Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court's grant of summary judgment for the Foxes and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed and cause remanded with directions.
Notes
By this time, Donald Fox had died and Jean Fox had transferred portions of the property to the Donald E Fox Family Trust and the Jean A. Fox Revocable Living Trust.
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2011-12 version unless otherwise noted.
This impression was formed in no small part by Tidy-Viеw's appellate briefing, which was dedicated exclusively to analyzing the purchase provision. Indeed, Tidy-View's brief-in-chief, despite urging a plain-language interpretation of the agreement, did not even set forth the lease provisions, and mentioned them only in passing with respect to the proceedings below.
The ROFR defines "transfer" as "to sell, give, assign, transfer or in any manner dispose of [the property] either voluntarily or by operation of law."
While we recognize a right of first refusal is in the nature of a servitude, we share a concern raised by the Foxes in their supplemental brief: where a right of first refusal runs with the
Tidy-View claims it did not separately address the enforceability of the purchase and lease provisions during initial briefing because "the Foxes never raised any arguments specific to [the lease provision] in seeking to invalidate the ROFR Agreement." Tidy-View claims that, as a result, "the circuit court did not independently analyze the legal sufficiency of the lease provision, [so] there was nothing substantive in the circuit court decision regarding the lease provision from which to appeal."
We conclude this explanation for Tidy-View's failure to separately address the purchase and lease provisions is lacking, particularly in light of its motion for reconsideration. The circuit court concluded the ROFR was terminable after a reasonable time, and that fifteen years was a reasonable duration. That decision is clearly inconsistent with Tidy-View's present argument that the lease provision is not only valid and enforceable against the Foxes, but also successive purchasers, while the purchase provision terminates upon sale of the property.
It is possible Tidy-View believed it was prеcluded from distinguishing between the purchase and lease provisions in its initial appellate brief because it failed to make that distinction below. See State v. Holland Plastics Co.,
Instead, Tidy-View waited until after we released our now-withdrawn opinion to file a motion requesting that we address the validity of the lease provision, which, again, Tidy-View's brief-in-chief did not even quote, let alone analyze. Tidy-View's procedural shenanigans added unnecessary ex
