The plaintiff, the assignee of a lease given by the defendant of a parcel of land with the buildings thereon in Revere for the‘period of ten years ending December 31, 1946, brings this bill in equity for the specific performance of a paragraph in the lease which provides that “the lessee at his option shall be entitled to the privilege of purchasing the aforesaid land and buildings.” The lease granted to the lessee the right to sublet and to make improvements upon the premises which were used for the purpose of furnishing amusement to the public, and the bill alleges that the lessee and the plaintiff have spent large sums in the development of the property. The plaintiff notified the defendant on October 17, 1946, that he desired to exercise the option to purchase the demised premises, but the defendant has refused to convey the property to him. The plaintiff appealed from an interlocutory decree sustaining a demurrer and from a final decree dismissing the bill.
The contract upon which the bill is based is alleged to have arisen out of the acceptance of the option by the plaintiff, and the question presented is whether the contract contains all the essential elements involved in a contract for the proposed conveyance of the demised premises. A contract must be complete and definite to support a decree for specific performance, Boston & Maine Railroad v.
The offer of the defendant made no reference to the price of the land. The parties never agreed upon any definite price or made any attempt to do so, and never agreed upon any specific method for fixing the price. The plaintiff contends that the option should be interpreted to mean that the defendant offered to sell at a fair and reasonable price. The interpretation of this written option is a question of law for the court. Atwood v. Boston,
The option was a material term of the lease and may well have been one of the factors that induced the execution of the lease by the lessee, especially where, as here, the lessee was permitted to make alterations, to erect a building and to improve the premises. The parties were dealing with-, each other not only as lessor and lessee but also as pror spective vendor and vendee. The option was for the exclusive benefit of the lessee. It could not be continued as a binding obligation of the lessor except by the performance of the terms of the lease by the lessee. It was supported
• It is assumed that the parties were acting in good faith in executing the lease, and that they intended to proceed in a straightforward manner in carrying out,the terms of the lease, including the option to buy if the lessee should exercise it, Clark v. State Street Trust Co.
The price of a parcel of land is undoubtedly an essential element of a contract for its sale. Ansorgl v. Kane,
The offer of the lessor to sell was absolute and unconditional. It was-unlike the covenant in Fogg v. Price,
The exercise of the written option by the assignee of the lessee during the term of the lease made it a mutual contract which he can enforce and, the contract being complete and definite, the statute of frauds would not bar specific performance merely because the parties had not agreed upon a specific and exact price but had agreed upon a sale at the fair and reasonable value of the demised premises. See Hayes v. Jackson,
The option did not prescribe the manner in which notice was to be given to the lessor of its exercise, .and the notice alleged to have been given by the plaintiff, although requesting a conveyance in fourteen days, was not an unreasonable or insufficient method of exercising the option. Lack v. Western Loan & Building Co. 134 Fed. (2d) 1017. Mauzy v. Elliott,
.The decrees sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the bill are reversed with costs to the plaintiff.
So ordered.
