One Newton by an indenture dated February 9, 1938, leased to the plaintiff certain premises in Revere for the term of two years commencing April 1, 1938. The lease gave the plaintiff the privilege of renewal for a further term of eighteen years provided the lessee gave the lessor written notice of his election to renew at least sixty days before the expiration of the initial term. In a subsequent paragraph, the lessor granted to the lessee an option to purchase the demised premises “at any time during the term of this lease” at a certain price. The plaintiff entered into the possession of the leased premises and has since continued in occupancy. The plaintiff on October 18, 1939, sent by registered mail to one Mr. Terminiello a written notice that he desired a renewal of the lease. Mr. Terminiello, in addition to being the legal representative of the lessor, who resided in California, also had a broad and general power of attorney from the lessor. Mr. Terminiello advised the lessor and informed the lessee that the giving of this notice constituted a renewal of the lease. Both the lessor and the lessee continued to deal with each other thereafter while the lessor owned the premises in the mistaken belief that the lessee was occupying the premises under a renewal of the lease. The defendant Mary E. Hurley purchased the premises on April 9, 1948. The deed in its final form was expressly subject to leases mentioned in Newton’s certificate of title. So far as the plaintiff’s lease was concerned, the certificate under the heading of encumbrances contained a notation of a lease to William J. O’Brien dated February 9, 1938, “2 yrs. fr. April 1, 1938 (with option of renewal & option to purchase).”
The grantee, her husband, who commenced the negotiations for the purchase, and her attorney all believed that the plaintiff was occupying the premises in some manner connected with the lease of February 9, 1938, but none of them knew upon what basis the occupancy subsequent to the ex *174 piration of the original term on April 1, 1940, rested. The plaintiff continued to pay rent to the grantee at the rate designated by the lease. His demand upon her in December, 1948, or January, 1949, to transfer the property to him at the price named in the option in the lease was refused. He. brought the present bill to require the defendants to convey the property. The demurrer and the plea of the defendants setting up res judicata were overruled with permission to set up the same matters in the answer, which they did. The defendants appealed from a decree overruling the demurrer and the plea. Both parties appealed from a final decree denying any right to the plaintiff to exercise the option to purchase, ordering the defendant grantee to give a renewal lease to the plaintiff, and dismissing the bill against the male defendant.
The plaintiff seeks to exercise the option to purchase; but in order to show that this option was still open to exercise more than eight years after the expiration of the original term of the lease, he must prove that he then had a renewal or extension of the lease, even if we assume in his favor that the option did not come to an end if it was not exercised “at any time during the term of this lease,” as those words were used in the lease. The lease contemplated the execution of a new lease for the additional term,
Cunningham
v.
Pattee,
Other than giving a notice of his desire to renew, the
*175
plaintiff took no effective steps to secure a renewal or extension of the lease. The mere giving of notice by the lessee did not constitute an extension of the lease.
D. A. Schulte, Inc.
v.
Brockton Young Men’s Christian Association,
When a previous suit between the same parties was here,
O’Brien
v.
Hurley,
The judge found that there was a mutual mistake as to the legal effect of O’Brien’s notice of his intention to renew and both Newton and O’Brien had been misled by the opinion of Mr. Terminiello that the giving of the notice constituted a renewal, and that the conduct of Mr. Terminiello with Newton on one hand and with O’Brien on the other hand was the equivalent of an extension of the lease. While there was evidence that the defendants believed that *176 O’Brien was holding under the lease of February 9, 1938, there was nothing either on the record or otherwise to show the specific grounds upon which such a right had been acquired by O’Brien. There was no renewal or extension of the lease and the holding over by O’Brien under what at most was an implied oral agreement with Newton cannot be enforced against the female defendant who without notice of such agreement purchased the property more than eight years after the expiration of the lease. Such a paroi agreement under the circumstances was ineffective to renew or extend the lease for the further term.
The decision in
Ferguson
v.
Jackson,
The interlocutory decree has become immaterial and is affirmed. The final decree must be reversed and a decree entered dismissing the bill with costs.
So ordered.
