DONNA SHAVER, Individually and as Trustee, etc., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. ROBERT A. CLANTON et al., Defendants and Appellants.
No. G013816
Fourth Dist., Div. Three
June 30, 1994
26 Cal. App. 4th 568
Carlos F. Negrete for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Coontz & Matthews and M. Stephen Coontz for Defendants and Appellants.
OPINION
SONENSHINE, J.--This case of first impression requires us to analyze every first-year law student‘s worst nightmare: the rule against perpetuities. (1) “No interest is good unless it must vest, if at all, not later than 21 years after some life in being at the creation of the interest.” (Gray, The Rulе Against Perpetuities (4th ed. 1942) § 201, p. 191.) As one sage stated in 1916 regarding the rule‘s applicability, “Before we pull the heavens down,
At issue is whether a lease amendment which provides for perpetual options to renew is void because it violates the rule. Until 1991, California law applied the rule to commercial transactions and, accordingly, to options to renew. That changed with the adoption of the Uniform Statutory Rule Against Perpetuities. Now, commercial, nondonative transactions are exempt from the rule. However, if, as here, the transaction involves the lease of a town or city lot, it is limited to 99 years under
I
Robert and Helen Clanton entered into a 10-year lease with Martin Wagner for shopping center space, effective May 1, 1971. The lease provided for a minimum annual rent of $11,400 and an “additional . . . amount, if any, by which Three % of [the] gross sales for each calendar year period exceeds the guaranteed minimum rental . . . .” It also provided a renewal option for another 10 years.
Emerson Stanley purchased the property shortly after the lease was exeсuted. During the first 10-year term, no percentage rent was ever due. When the lease came up for renewal, the Clantons requested the 3 percent provision be deleted. Stanley agreed and his counsel sent a letter memorializing the extension on those terms.
In 1985, the Clantons attempted to sell the business and assign their rights to the Rosenbergs. Stanley executed an amendment removing the percentage rent provision and adding an option to renew the lease for two additional five-year periods. However, the sale was subsequently canceled and the assignment and amendment rescinded, returning all parties to their 1981 status quo.
The Clantons and Stanley amended the lease in 1988 and again in January 1989. The last amendment granted the Clantons options to extend the lease
Donna Shaver is Stanley‘s daughter and sole heir. Shortly after her father died, she challenged the validity of the lease amendments and filed the underlying complaint seeking declaratory relief, rescission, аn accounting, back rent, and damages for fraud. The trial court concluded her fraud allegations were without foundation and the 3 percent provision had been validly deleted from the lease. The 1988 amendment was valid, but the 1989 amendment was not because “the parties attempted to provide for option renewals into infinity. This they cannot do. . . . Therefore, this provision of the lease cannot be upheld, [and] since it is an integral part of this amendment the whole amendment goes out.”4 The court ruled there was no prevailing party and did not award costs. This appeal followed.
II
The common law policy favoring alienation of property led to the establishment of the rule against perpetuities. The sole test was whether an interest might vest beyond the maximum period permitted by the rule. As stated by our Supreme Court in Wong v. Di Grazia (1963) 60 Cal.2d 525 [35 Cal.Rptr. 241, 386 P.2d 817], “The rule . . . originated as a rule of property law during the mercantilistic period of English history. . . . The social order of 1682 demanded as to its property transactions certainty in title and fixation of ownership; the idea of titles which had not vested or ownership which remained inchoate was necessarily anathemа. Indeed, the basic purpose of the rule was to limit family dispositions, and in that context the period of lives in being plus 21 years served as a proper measurement. Only later by an overextension of nineteenth century concepts did the courts apply the rule to commercial transactions.” (Id. at p. 533; see also 4 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1987) § 377, p. 568.)
From the earliest stages of the doctrine‘s development, the English courts and many American courts found covenants to renew leases exempt from the
Simply stated, the purpose of the rule against perpetuities was found to be inapt to commercial arrangements. “The courts must have realized that covenants to renew leases were devices employed by business [people] to secure the safety of their investments in real property business enterprises.” (Berg, Long-Term Options and the Rule Against Pеrpetuities, supra, 37 Cal.L.Rev. at p. 24.) “The lessor‘s desire to retain ownership of the land as a good business investment might influence him [or her] in granting a lease with such a convenant. On some occasions he [or she] might be motivated by a sentimental unwillingness to part with the land, but in any event it is difficult to twist the transaction so as to impute to him [or her] the desire to create an inalienable interest.” (Ibid.)
In 1991, Cаlifornia became the 12th state to adopt the Uniform Statutory Rule Against Perpetuities (Uniform Act). (
III
Until the adoption of the Uniform Act, California common law applied the rule against perpetuities to commercial transactions. Accordingly, the rule was applied to such interests as options to renew, rights of first rеfusal, and commercial leases.6 The Uniform Act changed California law by explicitly excluding such commercial transactions from coverage under the rule.7 The rule is now irrelevant to such transactions: “It makes no sense to apply a rule based on family-oriented donative transfers to interests created by contract whose nature is determined by negotiations between the parties.” (Rep., supra, at p. 2516.) “The rationale for this exclusion is that the rule against perpetuities is a wholly inappropriate instrument of social policy to use as a control over such arrangements. The period of the rule—a life in being plus 21 years—is not suitable for nondonative transfers . . . .” (1991 Addition to Law Revision Com. com., 54A West‘s Ann. Prob. Code, § 21225 (1994 pocket supp.) p. 60 [herеafter Commission 1991 Addition].)
The Law Revision Commission Comment explains, “[S]ubdivision (a) [of
The parties’ 1989 amendment is exempt from the rule because it involves the nondonative transfer of three subdivision (a)-type exclusions: an option to renew, a right of first refusal, and a lease to commence in the future at a time сertain. Shaver concedes the Probate Code governs, but argues the Uniform Act should not apply to commercial transactions between individuals where “controlling the duration of certain interests and allowing for free alienability of property is clearly desirable.” She relies on Metropolitan Transportation Authority v. Bruken Realty Corp. (1986) 67 N.Y.2d 156 [501 N.Y.S.2d 306, 492 N.E.2d 379], and argues only large
Shaver argues even if the Uniform Act applies to commercial transactions, it should not apply here. She claims the transaction was donative because it had “some of the elements of a donative, family-type transaction” and was “at least quasi-donative.” The question is whether the transaction was “essentially gratuitous in nature, accompanied by donative intent on the part of at least one party to the transaction . . . .” (Com. 1991 Addition, supra, at p. 60.)
The amendment ties the monthly rental for each new five-year period to “the smallest value of the Cost of Living Indexes published by the Federal Government as measured over the prior five (5) year period.” It is a common business practice to make cost-of-living adjustments in long-term leases. (See Wolfen v. Clinical Data, Inc. (1993) 16 Cal.App.4th 171, 175 [19 Cal.Rptr.2d 684].) Shaver stresses the Clantons testified Stanley was “a close personal friend,” “wanted to help them out,” and their son was “the son . . . Stanley never had.” Although the lease amendments did give the Clantons favorable terms, there is no evidence of any detriment to Stanley which would characterize the amendments as donative, nor that either party had donative intent. The terms Stanley offered in 1985 to a third party, the Rosenbergs, were similar to those he offered the Clantons, tenants for more than 16 years, in the 1988 amendment. Moreover, the terms were not specific to the Clantons. The 1989 amendment allowed the Clantons to assign the lease with Stanley‘s written consent which he could nоt unreasonably withhold. Since the transaction was commercial and nondonative, the rule against perpetuities does not apply.
IV
The trial court found although the original lease and the 1988 amendment were valid, the 1989 amendment and the provision for option renewals were not, because “the parties attempted to provide for option renewals into infinity. This they сannot do. . . .” This would have been error even without the adoption of the Uniform Act because under
By adopting the Uniform Act while preserving
For these reasons, the 1989 amendment is valid and gives the Clantons а series of five-year options to renew their lease on the terms stated in the lease amendment. The total term of the lease, however, is limited to 99 years from its effective date, May 1, 1971.11
V
Shaver also argues the court erred by finding the 3 percent provision was deleted by the amendments. We disagree.
Where there is any substantial evidence, either contradicted or uncоntradicted, in support of the factual conclusion reached by the trial court, its decision must be affirmed. (Estate of Silverstein (1984) 159 Cal.App.3d 221, 226 [205 Cal.Rptr. 294].) Stanley‘s attorney testified the 3 percent provision was deleted because “Mr. Clanton refused to extend the lease with that provision in there, so it was taken out.” The agreement memorialized in Stanley‘s attorney‘s letter indicates the percentage provision wаs deleted. The original lease sets forth the rent under “minimum rental” and “additional rental,” the total of which is the annual rent. The 1981 amendment defines rent as “annual rental amount of $16,800.00” and does not break up the amounts into “minimum” and “additional.”
In its statement of decision, the trial court found, “The 1970 Lease provided for fixed rent plus 3% gross sales, whichever was greater. When the lease came up fоr renewal in 1990 Clanton rebelled against the 3 percent clause. Stanley, through his attorney, acquiesed [sic] to the deletion of this provision in an exchange of letters.” We must resolve every evidentiary conflict in favor of the judgment if it is supported by substantial evidence. (Nestle v. City of Santa Monica (1972) 6 Cal.3d 920, 925 [101 Cal.Rptr. 568, 496 P.2d 480]; Orange County Employees Assn. v. County of Orange (1988) 205 Cal.App.3d 1289, 1293 [253 Cal.Rptr. 584].) The evidence requires we affirm that portion of the judgment finding the 3 percent provision was deleted.
VI
Both parties contend they were the prevailing party entitled to attorney fees and costs. Under
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed as to the validity of the 1989 Amendment and affirmed as to the deletion of the percentage provision. The total term of the
Wallin, Acting P. J., concurred.
CROSBY, J., Concurring.—The majority opinion reaches a correct result, but the holding is hornbook law and hardly worthy of publication. (See, e.g., 4 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1987) Real Property, § 550, pp. 719-720;
A petition for a rehearing was denied July 22, 1994, and the petition of appellant Donna Shaver for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 14, 1994.
