Baltimore County (“the County”), the appellee, brought an action for declaratory and injunctive relief against Prison Health Services (“PHS”), the appellant, seeking a determination that the County had timely exercised an option to renew a contract between the parties. On summary judgment, the Circuit Court for Baltimore County interpreted the operative contract language and declared that the County indeed had exercised its option to renew in a timely manner.
PHS challenges that ruling on appeal, presenting one question for review, which we have rephrased:
Did the circuit court err in ruling that, on the undisputed material facts, the County timely exercised its option to renew its contract with PHS, as a matter of law? [1]
For the following reasons, we shall reverse the circuit court’s judgment and remand the case to that court for further proceedings.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
On July 1, 2000, the County and PHS entered into a five-year contract for PHS to provide health care services to inmates at two County jails (“the Contract”). The Contract defines its “Term” as follows:
3.1 This Agreement shall be effective on the later of July 1, 2000 or the date on which it has been fully executed by Baltimore County and shall continue through 06/30/2005 (hereinafter defined as the “Initial Term”), at which time the County may exercise its optiоn to renew set forth in Paragraph 3.2 below, unless sooner terminated pursuant to Paragraphs 5 and 7 hereof.
(Bold in original.) The renewal provision states:
3.2 This Agreement may be renewed for up to three (3) additional two-year terms on the same terms and conditions set forth herein. Unless set forth in a written amendment, the compensation and manner of payment set forth in Paragraph 2 shall remain as is including the maximum amount of compensation available hereunder. In thе event any renewal changes the terms and conditions set forth herein, the approval of the Baltimore County Council may be required.
(Bold in original.) In addition, the Contract states, at section 22, that “[t]ime is of the essence with respect to performance of the terms and conditions of this Agreement.”
On July 1, 2005, counsel for PHS faxed a letter to the administrator for the Baltimore County Bureau of Corrections, stating, in relevant рart:
The County failed to exercise its option to renew the Contract by June 30, 2005 and, therefore, the County’s option to renew the Contract has lapsed. For the reasons set forth below, the Contract is complete and PHS has no legal obligation to continue performance.
Later that same day, the County, also by counsel, faxed to PHS a document entitled “Services Term Contract Amendment,” which states in part:
AMEND TO EXERCISE THE FIRST OF THREE TWO-YEAR RENEWAL OPTIONS, FROM 07/01/05 TO 06/30/07.
The amendment also increased the unit prices for certain Contract line items.
Also that same day, the County responded to PHS’s letter, stating:
[P]lease be advised that Baltimore Cоunty disagrees completely with the assertions in your letter and, in particular, that the current Contract between PHS and the County has expired and that PHS has no legal obligation to continue performance.
On the contrary, the Contract between PHS and the County continues to be in full force and effect under the terms and conditions of the Contract dated July 1, 2000, including without limitation, the services outlined in that Agreement to be performed by PHS.
Two weeks later, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, the County filed an action for declaratory and injunctive relief against PHS. PHS filed a timely counterclaim and a motion to dismiss or for summary judgment. PHS argued that the language of the Contract clearly required the County to exercise its renewal option, if at all, no later than June 30, 2005.
The County opposed PHS’s motion and filed its own motion for summary judgment. It argued that the language оf the Contract clearly allowed the County to exercise its renewal option in some reasonable time before or immediately after June 30,2005. 2
The motions came on for a hearing before the circuit court on November 14, 2005. After counsel made their arguments, the court ruled from the bench, granting summary judgment in favor of the County. The court reasoned that the phrase “through 6/30/05 [...], at which time” means within a reasonable time “after 6/30/05,” ie., “thereafter.” It concluded that, because July 1, 2005, was a reasonable time after June 30, 2005, being the very next day, the County had timely exercised its renewal option. 3
After the circuit court entered a written order, PHS noted a timely appeal to this Court. 4
The sole issue properly before us for decision is whether the County timely exercised its option to renew the Contract when it faxed a written renewal amendment to PHS on July 1, 2005. As already quoted, the Contract states that its Initial Term would continue “through 06/30/05 [...], at which time the County may exercise its option to renew.” PHS maintains that this language is unambiguous and means that the County could exercise its renewal option up through and including June 30, 2005, but no later. PHS makes the fallback argument that, if the pertinent Contract language is ambiguous, it should be construed against the County, as the drafter of the Contract.
The County agrеes that the pertinent Contract language is unambiguous, but, not surprisingly, argues that it does not mean what PHS claims it means. The County maintains, as it did below, that the language in question allowed it to exercise its renewal option within a reasonable “interval of time near or after” June 30, 2005, which included July l. 5
We review a circuit court’s decision to grant a motion for summary judgment
de novo. Tyma v. Montgomery County,
We already have recited the facts material to the question whether the County’s July 1, 2005 written amendment was a timely exercise оf its renewal option. These facts are undisputed. The sole issue on summary judgment review, then, is whether, under the language of the Contract, July 1, 2005 was a day too late for the County to exercise its renewal option, as a matter of law.
Maryland follows the objective law of contracts.
Taylor v. NationsBank, N.A.,
A court construing an agreement under this [objective] test must first determine from the language of the agreement itself what a reasonable person in the position of the parties would have meant at the time it was effectuated. In addition, when the language of the contract is plain and unambiguous there is no room for construction, and a court must presume that the parties meant what they expressed. In these circumstances, the true test of what is meant is not what the parties to the contract intended it to mean, but what a reasonable person in the position of the parties would have thоught it meant. Consequently, theclear and unambiguous language of an agreement will not give away to what the parties thought that the agreement meant or intended it to mean.
Whether contract language is ambiguous also is a question of law, which we review
de novo. United Servs. Auto Ass’n v. Riley,
An “option” is a type of unilateral contract.
See Foard v. Snider,
There are no Maryland cases interpreting precisely the same contract language at issue here. In
Canary v. Wagner,
More than ten years after the initial lease term expired, but while the lease still was in effect, the lessee’s assignee attempted to exercise the purchase option. The Court of Appeals was called upon to decide the reasonable meaning of the option language, from the standpoint of the parties to the lease. The Court framed the issue as “whether the parties intended the redemption to take place at that time [the time of the expiration of the initial term], or did they mean at any
time
after
that time.”
Id.
at 417,
The Court concluded that a reasonable landlord and tenant would not have intended to create an option to purchase the leased premises that was indefinite in time. Rather, in negotiating such a lease, they would have included the language in question
Our research has not revealed any cases from other jurisdictions interpreting language identical to the option renewal language in the parties’ Contract. As was the issue in
Canary,
most of the cases from outside Maryland that address somewhat similar language deal with options in leases. A majority of courts interpreting language akin to that used here have held that an option to renew must be exercised, if at all, during the initial term of the lease.
See Norton v. McCaskill,
Other courts have taken a minority view that similar language means that a renewal option may be exercised within a reasonable time after the end of the initial lease term.
See Caito v. Ferri,
At least one state court has found the word “at” to be ambiguous.
Texas Co. v. Blackmon-Scarbrough, Inc.,
We conclude that the language at issue in the Contract in this case is unambiguous and that it required the County to exercise its renewal option, if at all, no later than June 30, 2005.
To be sure, as the County argues, the word “through,” when used in reference to time, can mean until the end of, Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary, at 1303 (11th ed.2003) (“through” defined to mean: “used as a function word to indicate a period of time: as ... b: from the beginning to the end of’); and if one ascribes
People in the position of the parties in this case — negotiating a business contract for necessary health services for a prison population — would need to know, with certainty, whether their agreement had ended upon the еxpiration of the Initial Term or whether it was continuing for a new, two-year term. It does not stand to reason, therefore, that the parties intended to create an option without a firm deadline, but instead with a vague, indefinite, and unpredictable exercise date. The “reasonable time thereafter” meaning the County advocates would leave the parties uncertain, after the option had been exеrcised, as to whether it was effective, unless it was exercised on or before June 30. Would an exercise three days after June 30 be reasonable, and thus timely and effective? One week? Three weeks? Two months? (The uncertainty also could leave the prison population potentially without necessary health care.) All that would be certain would be that litigation would follow. This is why an indefinite time for exercising a rеnewal option is antithetical to the nature of an option contract.
As the County points out, it is a general principle of contract law that when a contract calls for performance but does not specify a time, a reasonable time will be implied. The principle rests upon a presumption that the parties intended for performance to take place within a reasonable time.
USEMCO, Inc. v. Marbro Co., Inc.,
Here, the Contract states that time is of the essence and contains an option to renew for which time necessarily is of the essence. The only definite time in the Contract that has a bearing upon renewal is the Contract’s expiration date: June 30, 2005. The parties to this case, like the parties in the Canary сase, set about to designate a time for the County to exercise the option to renew, if it wished to do so. The language they used, “through 6/30/2005 [which was the last day of the Initial term] [...], at which time,” is closest in meaning to the “at the expiration of’ language used by the parties in Canary. Canary and the weight of authority in other jurisdictions support an interpretation of the phrase “at which time” as meaning, in the context of this Contract, no later than thе last day of Initial Term-June 30, 2005. This is so because the Contract clearly states that it was to continue “through 06/30/05” and, thus, expired on that date absent any action by the County to exercise its option to renew.
Moreover, reasonable people in the parties’ position would not have expected, when they negotiated this Contract language,
Accordingly, the circuit court erred in ruling that, on the undisputed material facts, and as a matter of law, the County timely exercised its renewal option when it faxed a written renewal amendment to PHS on July 1, 2005. 7
JUDGMENT REVERSED. CASE REMANDED TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE COUNTY FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS. COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE APPELLEE.
Notes
1. The question as posed by PHS is:
"The Contract between PHS and the County was for a fixed five-year term, which the County had the option to renew for up to three additional two-year terms. The County failed to exercise the first of its options until after the Contract expired. Was the County’s attempted post-expiration exercise of its option effective?”
. The County also argued, alternatively, that it had exercised the renewal option by its conduct prior to June 30, 2005, when it and PHS were engaged in negotiations over compensation and staffing levels for the Contract term beginning July 1, 2005. Staffing levels had become an issue because, during thе Initial Term, the County had enlarged one of its jails. Compensation increases in accordance with the Consumer Price Index were permitted, but not required, under the Contract.
. The court did not address the County’s alternative argument, that it had exercised the renewal option by its conduct, prior to June 30, 2005.
. The court’s order stated only that summary judgment was granted in favor of the County. It did not declare in writing the rights of the parties, as a dеclaratory judgment order should.
Allstate Ins. Co. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
. Alternatively, the Cоunty argues that, in fact, it exercised the renewal option before the end of the Initial Term, by its conduct during the Initial Term.
. We recognize that in this case the option exercise was but a day late, and therefore our holding may seem harsh. As the Court of Appeals has said in the context of notice, however:
The difference of one day in the giving of notice is small, in one view, but it is the distance across a necessary boundary in relations under [a] contract, and must be taken as decisive, or there can be no boundary.”
Brown Method Co. v. Ginsberg,
. In their briefs, the parties present arguments about the alternative basis the County offered in support of its motion for summary judgment: that it exercised the renewal option by its conduct prior to June 30, 2005. When more than one ground for summary judgment has been raised in the circuit court, and the court grants summary judgment on one ground, without addrеssing any other ground, we review the court’s decision based on the ground relied upon, only. The sole exception to that principle of appellate review is when the circuit court would have had no discretion but to grant summary judgment on the other, unaddressed, ground.
Neal v. Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, Inc.,
Our disposition of the single issue properly before us on appeal serves only to cure the lower court's incorrect declaration of the parties' rights. On remand, the lower court must declare the rights of the parties anew, after conducting the necessary proceedings to allow it to do so.
