228 F. 853 | 4th Cir. | 1915
By a written contract dated November 1, 1900, Southern Railway Company leased to Marion H. Chalkley a vacant lot, now in the limits of the city of Richmond, for the term of 10 years beginning October 1, 1898, with the right of renewal for two oilier successive terms of 10 years. The lessee agreed to pay 835 a year rent and to erect a two-story brick warehouse on the lot. The contract provided, “as a condition precedent” to renewal, that the lessee “should first serve upon the railway company ninety (90) days’ notice in writing of his election of such renewal prior to the expiration of sxiy existing term of renewal thereof.”
By a contract dated October 1, 1904, the railway company consented to a sublease of part of the lot to the Gus Kohn Company for 5 years from December 1, 1904; and on April 11, 1906, consented that Chalk-Icy should assign all his rights under the lease to Stanton Tanning Company, a corporation formed to take over and operate the lessee’s business, and that the Stanton Tanning Company should include the leasehold interest in a mortgage or deed of trust to secure an issue of bonds. These consents were given with the stipulation that the transactions made should be subject to the terms and conditions of the lease to Chalkley.
On August 1, 1908, 60 days before the expiration of the first lease term of 10 years/the Stanton Tanning Company, by letter, formally notified the railway company of its election to renew the lease for another period of 10 years. The failure to give the notice 90 days before the expiration of the lease term of 10 years, as required by contract, was due to the inadvertence of Chalkley, the president of the tanning company.
We do not think, however, that these facts, standing alone, are sufficient in themselves to constitute evidence of waiver; for tire consent, of the lessor to the sublease and to the assignment and execution of ,the mortgage was expressly made subject to all the terms and provisions of tire lease, and one of the provisions was that notice of 90 days should be a condition precedent to the renewal of the lease. Nor do we think that allowing the lessee to remain in possession and pay rent and taxes, pending the negotiation for adjustment of tire differences between the parties, should be taken as in itself evidence of waiver. Continuance in possession by a tenant, with the payment of rent, will usually be regarded as renewal of the lease; the acceptance of' tire rent by the lessor being considered a waiver of any right to notice of intention to renew. Probst v. Rochester Steam Laundry Co., 171 N. Y. 584, 64 N. E. 504; Long v. Stafford, 103
But the sublease, running 14 months beyond the first lease period, the formation of a corporation to take over the business, Chalklcy’s assignment of the lease to that corporation, and the mortgage of the leasehold when the first lease period had only 2 years to run, indicated to the lessor the intention of the lessee to renew the lease. These transactions placed the parties in a relation to each other different from that which would have existed, had there been a mere option to lease upon acceptance of an offer within 90 days without an intervening lease period; and they have an important bearing on the inference to be drawn from the conduct of the lessor when the notice was given by the lessee 60 days before the expiration of the lease. Expense and labor had been incurred and plans had been laid out for the future which the lessor could hardly fail to know would not have been incurred and entered upon if the lessee had not been relying on a renewal of the lease. It seems, therefore, reasonable to infer that, if the lessor intended to stand on its right to 90 days’ formal notice of the election to renew, it would have promptly rejected as insufficient the notice given 60 days before the expiration of the first lease period. Indeed, equity and good conscience required prompt rejection of the notice, so that the lessee might have immediate opportunity to relieve itself as far as possible from the embarrassing business situation which would have been brought about by the loss, through inadvertence, of a very important property right.
The position that the officer who agreed to renew did so under the supposition that another notice had been given 90 days before the termination of the first lease period is untenable. The notice of August 1, 1908, on its face plainly indicated that it was intended as the formal notice of election to renew. The natural inference is that the railway company, having been already advised by its transactions with the tanning company that it would desire to renew the lease and having suffered no detriment from the lessee’s failure to give 90 days’ notice, agreed to renew the lease with knowledge of the condition of 90 days’ notice, or that, without concerning itself with the condition it intended' to waive it, whatever it might be.
It would he mere affectation to analyze and discuss the numerous and somewhat conflicting cases on the length to which the courts will go in relieving against strict compliance with the time requirement for the renewal of a lease or other contract. Every case depends upon the particular words used in the contract and the circumstances surrounding the transaction. Assuming the right of the lessor in this case to stand on strict compliance with the condition precedent that notice of election to renew be given 90 days before expiration of the first lease term, we affirm the judgment on the strong evidence leading to the conclusion that the lessor waived the requirement and agreed to renew without respect to whether the notice was in time or not.
Affirmed.