In this landlord-tenant case, Pers Travel, Inc. (“Pers”), the tenant, appeals from a judgment granting possession of the leased premises to the landlord, Canal Square Associates (“Canal Square”). Pers contends that the trial court erred in rejecting its jury demand. In fight of the clear jury waiver clause contained in the lease, we affirm the judgment.
I
On August 11, 1994, Canal Square and Pers executed a five-year lease for a suite of offices in a commercial building on M Street, N.W., in the Georgetown section of the District of Columbia. The lease was scheduled to expire on September 30,1999, subject to an “option, to extend the term of this Lease for one (1) successive, additional period (‘Extension Period’) of five (5) years.” On October 1, 1999, Canal Square filed a complaint in the Landlord and Tenant Branch of the Superior Court, seeking possession of the property on the ground that Pers had “failed to vacate [the] property after expiration of [the] term of lease.” 1
Pers responded to the complaint with an “Answer and Jury Demand.” Canal Square moved to strike the jury demand, citing paragraph 32 of the lease, in which both parties waived their right to a trial by jury. 2 Pers filed a response, arguing that the lease was a contract of adhesion which failed to highlight the jury waiver clause. Pers asserted that there was “more than a ‘reasonable presumption’ that [it] did not *1110 knowingly waive ‘so important a right’ as the right to a trial by jury....” At the hearing on Canal Square’s motion, Canal Square’s counsel stated, “The only issue that I would add is to state that ... the provision in the lease which waives the jury trial ... [is] not hidden, it’s not small print or fine print, and it’s ... the same as the rest of the lease. It’s the same as the rest of the lease and it’s captioned, Jury Trial.” 3
Pers’ counsel then asked that his client 4 be allowed to testify as to her knowledge of the lease. The court responded:
I’ll assume that she didn’t read it and didn’t know about it 5 ... until she ran into this problem. I assume that. And I ... don’t blame her. I don’t like to read contracts like this either, but in a commercial case it’s different. It just is different, and they didn’t hide that fact, they bargained for it. I mean the reason why you don’t want a jury trial is because you get a speedy, quick resolution to these matters. If you have a jury trial in an L & T case, it is expeditious under the rules, but it’s not as quick as coming here, and it’s a matter, it’s a bargaining matter, and reasonable people bargain about that, landlords do that, and I — with all respect, you have to live by your agreements in the commercial world. So I would grant the motion to strike the jury demand filed by the plaintiff in this matter.
A non-jury trial on the merits of the complaint for possession took place a few weeks later before a different judge. At its conclusion, the judge entered judgment for Canal Square.
II
Pers’ only argument on appeal is that the trial court erred in granting Canal Square’s motion to strike its jury demand. Pers maintains that it did not knowingly, voluntarily, or intentionally waive its right to a jury, and that the judgment should therefore be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial before a jury.
The Seventh Amendment to the Constitution guarantees the right to a jury trial in “suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars.... ” U.S. Const, amend. VII. This court, while holding that it is possible to waive the right to a jury trial by failure to make a timely request,
6
apparently has not yet considered the validity of a jury waiver clause in a lease or other contract. We have, however, consistently adhered to a “general rule that one who signs a contract has a duty to read it and is obligated according to its terms.”
Hollywood Credit Clothing Co. v. Gibson,
In
Rodenbur v. Kaufmann,
115 U.S.App. D.C. 360,
“It is clear that the parties to a contract may by prior written agreement waive the right to a jury trial.”
KM.C. Co. v. Irving Trust Co.,
In determining whether a jury waiver clause was unconscionable or unfair, the court in
Chase
considered several factors: the nature of the contract, the conspicuousness of the jury waiver clause, the relative bargaining positions of the parties, and the fact that both parties had legal counsel.
Pers asserts that Canal Square Associates faded to highlight the jury waiver clause in the lease, emphasizing that it is “in the same size type ... and stuck as paragraph 32 in a 52-paragraph document.” Pers also contends “that it may be inferred from the situation and from the form of the lease agreement itself, that there was a gross disparity in bargaining power between the Landlord and the Tenant.” Applying the factors considered in Chase (and Whirlpool), we reject both of these arguments.
While the lease in this case is a standard form contract that was apparently signed with little or no focus on the jury waiver clause, that fact alone does not void the waiver. The fact that waiver language may be “buried” in a standard lease agreement (and “written in language only comprehensible to a landlord-tenant lawyer”) is not enough to vitiate the general rule that a jury waiver clause in a lease is valid and binding on the parties.
Fowler Court Tenants, Inc. v. Young,
Similarly, most courts have imposed no obligation on the drafter of a lease to highlight the jury waiver clause to ensure its validity. A New York appellate court, for example, in enforcing a jury waiver provision, noted that “the size of the print setting forth the jury waiver provision is identical to that of almost all other printed covenants and conditions of the lease.”
In re Estate of Greenberg,
Pers wrongly assumes that there was an inequality of bargaining power between the parties, merely because the lease was a standard form contract between a landlord and a tenant. For this proposition he relies mainly on
Dreiling v. Peugeot Motors of America, Inc.,
We do not find
Dreiling
persuasive, nor did the Tenth Circuit in
Telum, Inc. v. E.F. Hutton Credit Corp.,
[Those] decisions relied on facts such as inconspicuous fíne print or a gross disparity in bargaining power to invalidate jury waiver provisions. Telum and Hutton, on the other hand, were both sophisticated parties, and the provision here was in the normal print size of the contract.
Telum,
Nor is the situation here comparable to that in
Whirlpool,
in which the plaintiff sought to enforce a jury waiver clause contained in a promissory note. Throughout the negotiation of the note, Whirlpool knew that Mr. Sevaux was desperate for a cash infusion in order to sustain his business. The court held that despite Mr. Sevaux’s business acumen, Whirlpool “had significantly more bargaining power” during the negotiations, leading it to conclude that the jury waiver clause was not agreed upon knowingly and voluntarily.
Finally, Pers asserts that it had no legal assistance when the lease was agreed upon, whereas Canal Square states that, had this been raised as an issue in the trial court, it could have offered “testimony that the Tenant was represented by an attorney in the negotiation of the lease.” Either way, Pers has not established that it lacked sufficient opportunity to review the lease before signing it.
See Interdonato,
The judgment is therefore
Affirmed.
Notes
. At trial Canal Square established that Pers had failed to exercise the option to renew the lease, and hence that the lease had expired on September 30, 1999.
. Paragraph 32 of the lease reads in part: JURY TRIAL
32. The parties hereto shall and hereby do waive trial by jury in any action, proceeding or counterclaim brought by either of the parties hereto against the other on any matters whatsoever arising out of or in any way connected with this lease, the relationship of Landlord and Tenant, Tenant’s use or occupancy of leased premises and/or any claim of injury or damage.
. The court agreed that the the jury waiver clause was "not smaller than any other print.”
. The "client” is not identified at this point in the record, but Pers states in its brief, without contradiction, that counsel was referring to Catherine Danai, the co-owner of Pers, who testified later at the non-jury trial.
. Pers' counsel confirmed this assumption.
.
See Williams v. Dudley Trust Foundation,
. “Those cases in which the validity of a contractual waiver of jury trial has been in issue have overwhelmingly applied the knowing and voluntary standard.”
K.M.C. Co.,
