213 A.D. 95 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1925
The complaint herein sets forth that on the 18th day of February, 1920, plaintiffs and defendant entered into an agreement of lease in writing under the terms of which defendant leased to the plain
I am of the opinion that the learned court at Special Term property held that this complaint failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
Under the terms of the option defendant was called upon, at or before the expiration of the lease, to name to plaintiffs the price at which it was willing to sell to them. It would not be enough that it had named a price to some one else; it must be the price at which it was willing to sell the property in question specifically to these plaintiffs. This interpretation is confirmed by the requirement that the option must be exercised by plaintiffs “ as soon as price is named them,” obviously by defendant.
If no price was named by defendant to plaintiffs at or before the expiration of the lease, it was the duty of the latter to call on defendant to name its price for selling to them at the expiration of the lease.
The complaint contains no appropriate allegation of either of these alternatives.
The only event in which such allegations would not be required would be in the event of an anticipatory breach of the option by defendant, such as its sale and transfer of the property to some other party before the time when the option was to mature (at the expiration of the lease), thus putting it out of its power to perform under the option. Of this there is likewise no allegation.
In the second case the clause read: “And the said parties of the first part agree that in the event of their desire to sell the above mentioned property, before the expiration of this lease, that the party of the second part shall have the first option to purchase.” It was held that such a clause obligated the landlord, if he wished to sell to another person during the term, to offer' the property to the tenant on the same terms as those offered to the landlord by a third person".
In the present case, defendant’s only agreement was to notify plaintiffs of the price it would accept from them. There was no agreement that it would give plaintiffs the first option of buying at the price it was willing to accept from any one else, as in the Bullock case; nor a general unqualified option of purchase, as in the Jurgensen case.
The language of the clause creating the option is controlling, and for the reasons above assigned the complaint does not set forth a good cause of action.
The order and judgment appealed from should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs to respondent, with leave to appellants to serve an amended complaint within twenty days on payment of said costs and of the costs of the action to date.
Clarke, P. J., Merrell, McAvoy and Burr, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs, with leave to plaintiffs to serve an amended complaint within twenty days on payment of said costs and costs of action to date.