delivered the opinion of the court:
In the present case, the trial court concluded that a lessee’s partial compliance with the terms of an option to cancel a commercial lease was sufficient to exercise that option. Having so concluded, the trial court granted summary judgment for plaintiff, Thomson Learning, Inc. (Tenant). Defendant, Olympia Properties, LLC (Landlord), appeals that decision. We reverse and remand.
I. BACKGROUND
The facts are somewhat involved. Tenant leased space in a Naperville office building pursuant to a lease that granted Tenant an option to cancel prior to the lease’s scheduled end in December 2009
Tenant decided to take advantage of the Cancellation Option. To this end, in April 2004, Tenant called Landlord and advised Landlord that Tenant was considering relocating. That June, in an effort to convince Tenant to stay, Landlord offered new lease terms, under which, among other things, Landlord said it would forgive payment of money Tenant already owed. In response, Tenant asked Landlord to specify the amount of the cancellation fee. Landlord informed Tenant that it was $1,136,475. 1
A few days before the September 1 deadline for exercising the Cancellation Option, Tenant called Landlord and said that Tenant intended to exercise that option. 2 At the time, Tenant did not say that it had already sent written notice of its intent. However, Tenant did request instructions for paying the cancellation fee. Landlord provided those instructions, and the cancellation fee was wired to Landlord. The next day, August 31, Landlord confirmed receipt of the cancellation fee. But, according to Landlord, it received no written notice of cancellation by the September 1 deadline for exercising the Cancellation Option.
On September 9, 2004, just over a week after that deadline had passed, Landlord notified Tenant that, although Landlord had received the cancellation fee, Landlord had not received written notice of cancellation. Because, under the terms of the Cancellation Option, Tenant had been required to provide such notice by September 1, Landlord told Tenant that the Cancellation Option had not been effectively exercised. Therefore, Landlord said the option had expired and the lease would continue. Landlord said it would return the cancellation fee that Tenant had wired.
Tenant called Landlord and said that Tenant had complied with the Cancellation Option. As to the written notice requirement, Tenant said that it had provided written notice about a week before it had called and asked for instructions regarding payment of the cancellation fee (although, during that call, Tenant had not mentioned that it had allegedly already sent written
A few days later, on September 13, Tenant sent a letter to Landlord, reiterating that Tenant had complied with the Cancellation Option. In support of its assertion, Tenant attached a copy of the written notice that Tenant alleged it had sent on August 19. That notice was dated August 16. Tenant also attached a copy of a Federal Express receipt that indicated that Landlord had received from Tenant a Federal Express envelope on August 20. The receipt did not say that a cancellation notice was in the envelope.
Landlord replied that the Federal Express envelope it received on August 20 had not contained written notice of cancellation. Instead, Landlord said, the envelope contained only the letter regarding the July power outage. Landlord said that it was “puzzled” when it received this letter, because the issues that the letter raised had been addressed weeks before Landlord received the letter. In any event, Landlord said the envelope had not contained notice of Tenant’s intention to exercise the Cancellation Option. Therefore, Landlord reiterated that the Cancellation Option had not been effectively exercised by the September 1 deadline, that the lease would continue in effect until its scheduled termination in 2009, and that Tenant was entitled to a refund of its cancellation fee. Landlord provided Tenant with that refund.
In response, Tenant insisted that it had provided written notice, which was received by Landlord on August 20. However, Tenant said, even if it had not provided written notice on August 20, it had done so on September 13 when it gave Landlord a copy of the notice that was allegedly sent earlier. Therefore, Tenant said, it had exercised the Cancellation Option. Tenant sent back to Landlord the cancellation fee that Landlord had refunded to Tenant. And Tenant said that it would treat as a default under the lease any further refusal by Landlord to accept Tenant’s claim that it had exercised the Cancellation Option. Tenant said if litigation resulted it would seek to recover expenses and attorney fees from Landlord.
Shortly thereafter, Tenant sued Landlord. Tenant filed a complaint for declaratory judgment, seeking a determination that it had effectively exercised the Cancellation Option and that, per the terms of that option, the Lease would expire on August 31, 2005. Then, Tenant moved for summary judgment. In support of its motion, Tenant attached, among other things, affidavits and deposition transcripts in which Tenant’s employees swore to Tenant’s version of events. That is, they swore that written notice had been sent by Federal Express on August 19, that this notice had been sent along with the power outage letter, and that, after Landlord said that it had not received written notice at that time, Landlord was told that Tenant had sent the notice, along with the power outage letter. Tenant acknowledged, however, that Landlord denied receiving timely written notice of cancellation. Nevertheless, Tenant argued, notwithstanding that the Cancellation Option required that Tenant provide timely written notice, Tenant had exercised the Cancellation Option, because (1) Landlord knew that Tenant intended to exercise the Cancellation Option and (2) Tenant had paid a cancellation fee.
In response, Landlord stated that Tenant had not sent Landlord timely written notice. In support of this assertion, Landlord attached, among other things, affidavits from its employees who swore to Landlord’s version of events. That is, they swore that no notice of cancellation had been contained in the Federal Express envelope received on August 20 and that, when Tenant was informed that it had failed to timely comply with the written-notice requirement, Tenant did not say that it, had sent written notice along with the power outage letter in the Federal Express envelope, although Tenant did say it had sent written notice in that envelope.
Landlord argued that, in light of this factual dispute, summary judgment was inappropriate. Specifically, Landlord argued that, under Illinois law, a Tenant seeking to exercise an option to extend or cancel a commercial lease must strictly comply with the terms of that option. Landlord argued that, if, as Landlord claimed, Tenant had not provided timely written notice, then Tenant had not strictly complied with the terms of the Cancellation Option. Thus, Landlord argued that Tenant was not entitled to summary judgment on legal grounds. Moreover, Landlord argued that Tenant was not entitled to summary judgment on equitable grounds either. In the first place, Landlord said, the doctrine of unclean hands barred equitable relief. This was because, according to Landlord, Tenant had made up the story about sending timely written notice. Therefore, Landlord said, Tenant was acting in bad faith and lying to both Landlord and the court. In the second place, Landlord argued that, unclean hands aside, Tenant had not established sufficient “special circumstances” to entitle Tenant to equitable relief. In all events, Landlord argued, Tenant was not entitled to summary judgment.
In reply, Tenant reiterated that, legally, it had complied with the Cancellation Option. Moreover, Tenant reiterated that, even if it had not, it was entitled to summary judgment on equitable grounds. With regard to Landlord’s assertion that Tenant had lied about sending timely written notice, and that, as a result, the doctrine of unclean hands barred equitable relief, Tenant stated only:
“[Landlord] seeks to draw [Tenant] into a credibility battle by accusing [Tenant’s] witnesses of lying, and suggesting that [Tenant] has been ‘waylaid by a conspiracy of mendacious property managers.’ [Tenant] will not, however, enter that fray because it is irrelevant and obviously designed to avoid the only issue before the Court.”
The trial court granted Tenant’s motion for summary judgment. In doing so, the court stated that it would assume that, if the case went to trial, Tenant’s witnesses would testify that Tenant had timely mailed written notice, and Landlord’s witnesses
II. DISCUSSION
We begin with the standard of review. Summary judgment is appropriate only if the pleadings, depositions, admissions, and affidavits on file establish that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. General Casualty Insurance Co. v. Lacey,
Here, Tenant raises two alternative bases for summary judgment. First, Tenant argues that, although the' Cancellation Option required timely written notice, and although there was a factual dispute as to whether Tenant had provided timely written notice, Tenant exercised the Cancellation Option. Second, Tenant argues that, even if it did not exercise the Cancellation Option, it is entitled to summary judgment
Tenant first argues that it exercised the Cancellation Option. As noted, the Cancellation Option required Tenant to (1) give written notice of cancellation; and (2) pay a cancellation fee. Additionally, the Cancellation Option required that Tenant do both of these things by September 1, 2004. And the Cancellation Option stated that time was of the essence. Tenant acknowledges that there is a dispute as to whether Tenant gave written notice by September 1. Tenant also acknowledges that, for purposes of summary judgment, we must assume that Tenant failed to give written notice by September 1. See Krautsack v. Anderson,
The problem with this argument is that it assumes that something less than strict compliance with the terms of an option to cancel or extend a commercial lease is sufficient to exercise that option. It is not. On the contrary, for more than 100 years, Illinois courts have held that a lessee seeking to exercise an option to cancel or extend a commercial lease must strictly comply with the terms of that option. See, e.g., Dikeman v. Sunday Creek Coal Co.,
Here, to strictly comply with the Cancellation Option, Tenant was required to give Landlord written notice by September 1. The record reflects an issue of material fact that precludes a determination that Tenant gave such notice. Thus, Tenant has not established strict compliance with the Cancellation Option, and, consequently, Tenant’s exercise of that option has not been established for purposes of granting summary judgment.
In an effort to get around this conclusion, Tenant relies on cases that do not involve a lessee’s attempt to exercise an option to cancel or extend a commercial lease. Specifically, Tenant relies on cases involving: curtailment of electricity under a contract with an electric company (Bloom Township High School v. Illinois Commerce Comm’n,
In addition to being required by precedent, the rule of strict compliance makes sense based on both fairness and the realities of commercial transactions. First, as to fairness, a lessee that receives from a lessor an option to extend or cancel a commercial lease receives something of great value. A. Arnold & J. O’Neill, Option to Renew, Extend, or Cancel Lease, 1 Real Estate Leasing Practice Manual § 3:1 (West 2006) (“From the viewpoint of the lessee, *** an option to renew is a valuable right”). For example,
Second, as to the realities of commercial transactions, the rule of strict compliance is consistent with the fact that the parties to commercial leases tend to be sophisticated businesspeople. See MXL Industries,
“Whether or not to grant a commercial tenant a right to extend [or cancel] a lease, and under what terms, is generally the product of hard bargaining and careful drafting. In a volatile real estate market, the length of the lease term, and the right to extend [or cancel] it, is often the single most important economic aspect of the commercial tenancy negotiation. To relieve parties of their obligations in this area ***, while occasionally appealing ***, is *** disruptive to legitimate commercial expectations.” Options to Renew Commercial Leases,235 N.Y. L.J. at _.
We recognized as much not too long ago in MXL Industries. In that case, the plaintiff lessee and the defendant lessor entered in a commercial lease, which granted the plaintiff the option to cancel the lease prior to its scheduled termination. MXL Industries,
owed, and the plaintiff also demanded that the defendant sign a release. MXL Industries,
“Because plaintiffs argument necessarily concedes that it did not literally or strictly comply with the option requirements, we must conclude that the option was not effectively exercised. While we recognize that a rule of strict compliance might lead to harsh results, such a rule tends to ‘enforce[ ] commercial certainty.’ [Citation.] Moreover, the parties here are sophisticated business people, the right to cancel was for the plaintiffs sole benefit, and there was no evidence in the record to suggest that the option language resulted from overreaching or an unfair inequality in bargaining power.” MXL Industries,252 Ill. App. 3d at 28 .
Here, again, we are faced with an option to cancel a commercial lease. Both parties are sophisticated business entities, the option was for Tenant’s sole benefit, and there is no evidence of unfair dealing. Thus, we conclude that Tenant was required to strictly comply with that option and that there is an issue of material fact as to such compliance.
Tenant attempts to undermine the relevance of MXL Industries by factually distinguishing that case from the present one. Tenant correctly argues that, unlike the present case, MXL Industries did not involve the issue of notice. But MXL Industries did involve the issue of compliance with the terms of an option to cancel a commercial lease. And it held that what is required is strict compliance. See MXL Industries,
One of these option-to-extend cases is particularly persuasive here. In Graham, the defendant lessee and the plaintiff lessor entered into a commercial lease, which contained an option to extend. To exercise the option, the lessee was required to give written notice to the lessor six months prior to the end of the then-current lease term. Graham,
To sum up, well-settled Illinois law requires that a lessee seeking to exercise an option to extend or cancel a commercial lease strictly comply with the terms of that option. This requirement is consistent with the approach taken in other jurisdictions, as well as the views of commentators. Here, the Cancellation Option required that written notice be given by a certain date, and Tenant conceded, for purposes of summary judgment, that it did not provide written notice by that date. In other words, Tenant conceded that it did not strictly comply with the Cancellation Option. Accordingly, Tenant failed to effectively exercise that option.
Tenant next argues that its failure to exercise the Cancellation Option should be excused on equitable grounds. As noted, the trial court did not reach Tenant’s equitable argument. However, we may affirm on any ground called for by the record, regardless of whether the trial court relied on that ground. Haupt v. Sharkey,
First, Tenant has failed to plead sufficient facts from which we could determine that Tenant is entitled to equitable relief. To be entitled to equitable relief, a lessee that fails to strictly comply with an option to cancel or extend a commercial lease must at a minimum establish: (1) the delay in strictly complying was slight; (2) the lessee would suffer undue hardship if strict compliance were not excused; and (3) the lessor would not suffer prejudice if strict compliance were excused. 1 J. Perillo, Corbin on Contracts § 2.15, at 203 (rev. ed. 1993). Here, Tenant alleges in support of its equitable argument that: (1) the delay, if any, in sending written notice was slight; (2) Tenant timely paid the cancellation fee; (3) Landlord had “actual notice” of Tenant’s decision to exercise the Cancellation Option; and (4) Landlord suffered no prejudice as a result of the delay, if any. As to Landlord’s “actual notice,” this is irrelevant; it is just another way of highlighting Tenant’s failure to strictly comply with the Cancellation Option. The same is true of Tenant’s timely payment of the cancellation fee, that is, Tenant’s timely compliance with only one of the two requirements of the Cancellation Option. Finally, and most importantly, once we cut through the irrelevant facts that Tenant
Second, even if Tenant were to allege sufficient facts to entitle it to equitable relief, Tenant would not necessarily be entitled to equitable relief in this case. This is because Tenant has not yet even attempted to defeat Landlord’s affirmative defense of unclean hands. The doctrine of unclean hands bars equitable relief when the party seeking that relief is guilty of misconduct in connection with the subject matter of the litigation. Wolfram Partnership, Ltd. v. LaSalle National Bank,
Here, Landlord alleges that Tenant lied about sending timely written notice. In support of this assertion, Landlord points out that, when Tenant called Landlord to request instructions for paying the cancellation fee, Tenant did not mention having earlier sent written notice. Additionally, Landlord points out that, when Landlord informed Tenant that Landlord had not received written notice, Tenant did not tell Landlord that Tenant had sent written notice along with a power outage letter. Instead, Tenant said this only after Landlord informed Tenant that the Federal Express envelope received on August 20 contained the power outage letter. Finally, Landlord points out that it did not receive timely written notice. (We must assume that these allegations are true for purposes of deciding Tenant’s summary judgment motion. See Krautsack,
Based on the particular circumstances of this case, the above factual allegations are
It is possible that neither Landlord nor Tenant is correct here. It is possible that written notice was never sent, but that Tenant honestly believes that it was. It is possible that Tenant made a mistake and that Tenant never intended to deceive Landlord. But as we have repeatedly pointed out, matters of intent are generally inappropriate for resolution at the summary judgment stage. See, e.g., Farmers Automobile Insurance Ass’n v. Williams,
In summation the entry of summary judgment was error. There were and are issues of material fact regarding whether Tenant is entitled to judgment in either law or equity.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
GROMETER, P.J., and RAPALA, J., concur.
Notes
Under the terms of the Cancellation Option, the cancellation fee was equal to “the sum of (i) $472,620.54 and (ii) the unamortized portion as of August 31, 2005 of any construction allowance and brokerage fees paid or provided by Landlord” for a certain type of space, if any, “leased by Tenant after September 1, 1995.”
In the “Statement of Facts” section of its appellate brief, Tenant repeatedly refers to the “fact” that it “exercised” the Cancellation Option. But Tenant’s exercise of the Cancellation Option is not a fact. On the contrary, it is the very issue to be decided in this case. Under our supreme court rules, a party may not submit a statement of facts in which disputed issues are disguised as facts. See 210 Ill. 2d R. 341(e)(6) (requiring that the facts in party’s statement of facts be “stated accurately and fairly without argument”). Thus, we have ignored Tenant’s statements that it exercised the Cancellation Option. See Hamilton v. Conley,
Tenant attempts to distinguish Graham on the ground that there, unlike here, the lessor disputed receiving timely oral notice. However, because Graham involved a motion for summary judgment filed by the lessor, the court necessarily assumed for purposes of its decision that the lessee had provided timely oral notice. See Graham,
Courts and commentators are split over whether equity can relieve the lessee from negligently failing to strictly comply with a lease option or whether equity may step in only in case of fraud, estoppel, nonnegligent mistake, or nonnegligent accident. Compare Andrews,
