Aaron v. Woodcock

128 A. 665, 283 Pa. 33, 38 A.L.R. 1251, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 341
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 10, 1925
DocketAppeal, 149
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 128 A. 665 (Aaron v. Woodcock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aaron v. Woodcock, 128 A. 665, 283 Pa. 33, 38 A.L.R. 1251, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 341 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Chief Justice Moschziskee,

This is a proceeding under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act of June 18, 1923, P. L. 840, to determine whether plaintiff is entitled to a new term of ten years at the expiration of a lease for that period, or whether he is entitled to a term from year to year only. The court below decided in favor of the longer term, and defendant has appealed.

Both parties stated at the bar of this court that they had elected to treat the statute under which these proceedings were brought as constitutional, hence no question was raised on that point; and since the present case involves a real controversy, and the act invoked is one which deals with remedies and practice, rather than with substantive rights, the court is not impelled to insist that its constitutional validity shall be argued at this time; but it may be well to state that in assuming jurisdiction we must not be understood as determining constitutional points, or as indicating any view with reference thereto, for, until such matters are properly raised and argued, we entertain no opinion concerning them.

By lease, dated March 25,1913, defendant let to plaintiff a building in the City of Altoona “for the term of ten years from the first day of September, 1914,” “in consideration whereof” the latter agreed to pay the former “the sum of $585 per month......during the said term of ten years.” It is to be noted that no “yearly rental” is mentioned, as in the clause about to be quoted; and, as we shall later point out, the subsequent use of these words, after their omission here, is significant.

The term expired September 1, 1924, and the controversy arises over the construction of the following paragraph: “At the expiration of this lease, said Aaron *37 [lessee and plaintiff] to have the privilege of re-leasing the said premises at the yearly rental of $7,200, payable monthly at $600 per month.” At this point it is to be noted that the privilege granted is not to renew the old lease at an increased monthly rent, but to re-lease the premises on the basis of a yearly rental. In other words, instead of following the form of the original lease and mentioning simply the amount of the monthly payments, as increased, the idea of an annual term is suggested by naming an annual rental.

There is a distinction between the ordinary meaning of words such as “the privilege of renewing this lease ” which appear in the cases relied on by plaintiff, and words such as “the privilege of re-leasing said premises, at a yearly rental,” etc., which appear here. To renew a lease implies not only a leasing again of the premises, but more, in that it conveys the definite idea that all the terms of the new lease, including the period during which it is to run, are to be the same as those contained in the original lease; for, to “renew” is to “revive” or “restore to existence” (Webster’s New International Dictionary; and see Richards v. Richards, 12 L. J. Eq. 460, 463), while to “re-lease” means simply to “lease again” or “to grant a new lease of”: Webster’s New International Dictionary. This difference of meaning between “renew” and “re-lease” has significance here, as we shall presently indicate, though, of course, under some circumstances the words might be used to express a like meaning. For instance, in Cairns v. Llewellyn, 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 599, 607 (where other authorities, used by the court below in this case, are cited), the Superior Court states: “The word ‘renew’ or ‘renewal’ is not essential [to bring the general provisions of the original lease into the contemplated one,] if other words conveying the same idea are employed, — ‘re-rent,’ ‘rent again,’ ‘privilege of another term,’ ‘refusal of the premises,’ and like expressions, without more, are sufficient, provided the length of the new term is specified”; but this is far *38 from saying “.that, where the length of the term is not specified,” such words as “the privilege of re-leasing the premises” must, under every and all circumstances, be given the same meaning as “the privilege of renewing the lease,” so as to require the same term of years as the original lease, which in effect is the argument of plaintiff in this case.

To sustain his contention, plaintiff carries the line of authorities on which he relies too far. Speaking generally, it may be said that the cases cited by the court below, and those relied on by plaintiff, all turn on the general rule discussed in 16 R. C. L. sec. 390, at page 887, that a simple covenant to renew, without more, “implies a renewal on the same terms [except as to the renewal clause itself] and for the same time as the original lease, and is therefore sufficiently certain to be binding.” There is no question here as to the clause in controversy being “sufficiently certain to be binding,” for the parties agree as to this, and the court below has found, without exception being taken, that “All other terms of the releasing contract [except as to the period] are admitted and agreed to by the parties, i. e., the premises to be let, the amount of rent and the manner of its payment, and conditions as to repairing, water rent and heating.” The only point raised for decision is stated in appellant’s question involved thus: “Does the tenant’s election to exercise the privilege of [the option] clause give him any additional or extended term, and, if so, for what period of time?”

While the clause in question omits to state in so many words precisely what the term of the new lease is to be, on the other hand it does not provide for a “renewal” of either the old lease or of the old term, or for the privilege of such renewal, but for the privilege of “re-leasing said premises”; and, these words being susceptible of a meaning different from the former, the question is, were they meant to have a different meaning in the present instance?

*39 If, in seeking for the answer to the question just stated, our attention is confined to the option clause, we observe at once that, though no term is stipulated, a yearly rental is fixed, naming the amount, and then, — as in the demise itself, — the amount of the (increased) monthly installment is stated. In view of this mention of the new monthly installments, unless the words “at a yearly rental” were placed in the option clause with a purpose to measure the future term, it may be seen that they are entirely unnecessary and serve no purpose.

The demising clause names a term of ten years and fixes a monthly rental only; had the parties intended a term for the new lease like that in the old one, merely changing the rental, it is natural to assume that they would have used the phraseology of the original lease, and, after providing for the privilege of renewal, would have said, “at $600 per month,” instead of expressly providing, as they did, for a yearly rental. Under the circumstances, the last-mentioned provision is significant, and may well be treated as bringing this case within the rule established in Pennsylvania that, where no period of duration is mentioned in a lease, the law favors a yearly term, especially where there is an indication that the parties so intended; and in many cases the stipulation of an annual rental has been accepted as such an indication.

In Lesley v. Randolph, 4 Rawle 123, 125, the court had the following lease before it for interpretation: “We have this day rented to George F.

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Bluebook (online)
128 A. 665, 283 Pa. 33, 38 A.L.R. 1251, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aaron-v-woodcock-pa-1925.