Adams v. Adams

89 P.3d 743, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 55, 2004 WL 870261
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 2004
DocketS-10271
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 89 P.3d 743 (Adams v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Adams, 89 P.3d 743, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 55, 2004 WL 870261 (Ala. 2004).

Opinions

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

The power to avoid a contract due to misrepresentation can be lost if a party knowing or having reason to know of the misrepresentation affirms the contract. But this rule only applies in cases of non-fraudulent misrepresentations. Where there is fraud the power of avoidance is only lost if the party actually knows of the misrepresentation and affirms the contract. The main question in this case is whether, in the process of negotiating a lease, changing a right of first refusal to an option to purchase without notice should be considered a constructive fraud for purposes of applying this rule. We conclude that it should because of the strong deceptive tendency of such conduct.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Michael Adams owns four contiguous lots on the Old Seward Highway in Anchorage. Adjacent to this property is property owned and used by Alaska Rubber & Supply, Inc. Effective October 1, 1996, Michael Adams leased his property to Alaska Rubber and Alaska Rubber’s principal, Don Adams (collectively referred to in this opinion as Alaska Rubber). The lease had a three-year term. The focus of this case is a clause in the lease that is titled “Right of First Refusal,” but is textually an unconditional option running in favor of Alaska Rubber to purchase the leased property at any time during the lease term for $300,000.1 The lease also excepts from its coverage an L-shaped portion of about 3,750 square feet straddling two lots on which Michael Adams lives in a trailer and has a quonset hut and storage containers.2 [745]*745A secondary issue is whether the option includes the excepted property.

The negotiations leading up to the execution of the lease began in earnest in July and August of 1996. On August 2, 1996, Michael Adams wrote Don Adams, president of Alaska Rubber, asking for a decision on leasing the property before the end of the month. The letter mentions a purchase option. It also contains language that suggests- that Michael Adams’s objective was to sell the property after he found property suitable for a tax-free trade.3 Michael Adams enclosed a proposed lease containing a right-of-first-refusal clause under which the lessee was granted an option to buy conditioned on the lessor attempting to sell the property and finding a buyer. In that event the lessee would have the right to buy on the terms agreed to between the lessor and the buyer.4 Michael Adams testified that he brought the letter of August 2,1996, and the first draft of the lease to Alaska Rubber and gave them to Alaska Rubber’s general manager, Janeece Higgins, for transmission to Don Adams who resides in the state of Washington.

Subsequent to the delivery of the August 2, 1996 letter and the first draft, the parties met and discussed the prospective transaction. Michael Adams testified that they reached an agreement and that he instructed his attorney to prepare a second draft of a lease in accordance with their agreement. Larry Caudle, Michael Adams’s attorney, prepared the second draft. In it the right of first refusal was changed by specifying the sale price, $300,000. But the lessee’s option was still only exercisable when “Lessor at his sole discretion elects to sell the property during the lease term.” After Caudle prepared the second draft, Michael Adams took it to Alaska Rubber and delivered it to Higgins.

The second draft was transmitted by Higgins to Don Adams, who sent it to Alaska [746]*746Rubber’s attorney, Herbert Viergutz. Vier-gutz then prepared a third draft. The right-of-first-refusal clause in the third draft is almost identical to that in the second draft, except that two additional sentences are added at the end of the clause concerning sharing of the cost of any environmental phase two report that might be required in the event that lessee exercises its right of first refusal.5 The third draft was delivered by Alaska Rubber to Michael Adams. Michael Adams reviewed it, brought it to Alaska Rubber’s office, and stated that it was acceptable to him. Without then signing the draft, Michael Adams gave it to Higgins, who sent it to Washington for Don Adams’s review and signature.

Don Adams read the third draft and did not agree with the right-of-first-refusal clause. In his view the parties had agreed that Alaska Rubber would have an option to purchase the property that was not contingent on Michael Adams’s decision to sell. He instructed Viergutz to revise the clause so that Alaska Rubber’s option to purchase would be unconditional. Viergutz made this change but did not change the caption of the paragraph. As a result, the paragraph was still titled “Right of First Refusal.”6 Don Adams signed this, the final draft, on behalf of himself and Alaska Rubber and transmitted it to Higgins. When the draft arrived at the Alaska Rubber office, Michael Adams came to the office and signed it without reading it. No one advised Michael Adams that the third draft had been changed and that the final draft contained an unconditional option to buy.

Almost three years passed. A month before the lease was to expire it was extended. [747]*747for an additional two years. This was accomplished by a letter prepared and signed by Michael Adams that he delivered to Alaska Rubber on August 30, 1999, and that Don Adams assented to on September 15, 1999.7 The circumstances leading up to the lease extension are in dispute.

Michael Adams testified that he prepared the letter extending the lease because the lease was about to expire and he wanted to know Alaska Rubber’s intentions in advance of the expiration date. But Higgins testified that the lease was renewed after a conversation that she had with Michael Adams in which she told him that Alaska Rubber wanted to purchase the property. According to Higgins, Michael Adams said that he would get back to her, and when she did not hear from him, she telephoned him and again told him that Alaska Rubber wanted to exercise the option to purchase. She- testified that Michael Adams told her that he did not believe that he had to sell the property, that she disagreed, and that he told her that he would look into it and get back to her. The next event of significance according to Higgins was her receipt of the lease extension from Michael Adams described above. The trial court accepted Higgins’s description of the events leading up to the lease extension.

On November 29, 1999, Alaska Rubber sent a certified letter to Michael Adams exercising its option to purchase the property. Michael Adams refused to sell. Alaska Rubber brought the present action seeking specific performance or damages for breach of the lease agreement. Michael Adams filed a counterclaim, seeking a declaration that the lease is null and void because of Alaska Rubber’s “fraudulent and deceptive act of changing a material condition of the lease without [Michael Adams’s] consent or knowledge.”

Following a bench trial, the court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court found that as of October 1996, when Michael Adams signed the original lease, Michael Adams was justified in believing that the agreement he signed was identical to the third draft that he reviewed and that Alaska Rubber did not advise him that the right of first refusal in the third draft had been converted to an option to purchase.

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89 P.3d 743, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 55, 2004 WL 870261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-adams-alaska-2004.