Birmingham Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Johnson

147 So. 667, 226 Ala. 562, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 389
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 19, 1933
Docket3 Div. 35.
StatusPublished

This text of 147 So. 667 (Birmingham Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birmingham Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Johnson, 147 So. 667, 226 Ala. 562, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 389 (Ala. 1933).

Opinions

*563 BOULDIN, Justice.

The bill is for the specific performance of the renewal provisions of a lease of real estate. Complainant is the lessor, or one claiming to have succeeded to the position of lessor, with all its rights and equities:

The appeal is from a decree sustaining a demurrer to the bill as amended.

In the view we take of the case, the determining facts set forth in the bill are these:

In 1927 the lessor and lessee entered into a contract in writing under which the lessor should erect a building of agreed specifications on a lot owned by the lessor in Birmingham, and on its completion the lessee should take a lease for the term of five years.

This contract stipulated;

“(2) Upon completion of said building, the parties of the second part will make and enter into lease with the party of the first part for a term expiring September 30th, 1932, in words and figures as per copy of proposed lease attached hereto and made a part hereof as fully as if set out herein, except that the annual rental to be specified and set forth in said lease when entered into shall be fixed and determined by taking 5% of Seventy-' Five Thousand Dollars ($75,000), which is the agreed value of the land hereinabove described, plus an additional 10% of the total cost of said building, not exceeding 10% of Forty-Four Thousand Dollars ($44,000). Said lease shall be entered into and shall become effective and rent shall be payable from the time said building is completed and ready for occupancy, which shall not be later than October 1st, 1927, but may be at an earlier date, and shall extend for a period of five years from October 1st, 1927. * * *

“(4) Upon completion of said building, each of the undersigned parties hereto will be bound in all respects as lessor and lessee, respectively, whether or not the form of lease hereto attached shall have been executed by all or any of the parties hereto, and this agreement shall be binding upon the parties hereto, their heirs, administrators, successors and assigns.”

A signed copy of the form of lease was attached, leaving the figures blank, to be ascertained according to the contract.

The lease contained the following renewal provisions: “The Lessor will, not sooner than twelve months and not later than eight months prior to the expiration of this lease, cause the land covered hereby to be appraised by the Birmingham Real Estate Board, and will fix a rental for a five year term following the expiration of this lease on the basis of 5% per annum of such appraised value of said land and 10% per annum of the original cost of the improvement thereon. The Lessor will submit in writing to the lessee such appraisal and figures showing such new rental basis not later than eight months before the expiration of this lease, and lessee shall, within thirty days thereafter, signify in writing to the lessor, its willingness or unwillingness to enter into a new lease for an additional term of five years on such new rental basis. If Lessee within such period signifies its willingness, a new lease will forthwith be entered into identical in all respects with the foregoing lease, except as to dates and rent reserved, such new lease to cover an additional period of five years. If Lessee signifies its unwillingness to make such new lease, Lessor shall have thirty days thereafter in which to negotiate a new lease on said premises with another tenant or tenants at such new rental rate, but lessor shall not enter into lease on said premises at such new rental rate with any other tenant within said thirty day period without first giving the lessee the right or option of taking new lease on said premises at the highest rental which may be offered to lessor by any tenant or tenants. If the lessee herein named fails or refuses after five days’ notice, to enter into such new lease on said premises at the rental offered to the lessor by other tenant or tenants, the lessor shall have the right forthwith to enter into lease with such other tenant .or tenants. The lessor shall nevertheless have the right and option at any time before the expiration of thirty days following written notice from lessee of its unwillingness to take new lease at such new rental to require lessee to enter into new lease for such additional period of five years at the same rental and on the same terms fixed in the above and foregoing lease, it being intended that) following such appraisal and written notice of the result thereof, the lessee shall have thirty days in which to elect to make new lease for five years at such increased rental, and that, in the event of lessees failure to so elect, the lessor shall h^ve thirty days thereafter in which to attempt to lease said premises to another tenant or tenants at such new rental rate, and that lessee shall, during said second period of. thirty days, have the right or option of making new lease on said premises at whatever rental rate may be offered the lessor by other tenant or tenants, and that the lessor shall in any event within the said second period of thirty days have the right and option of requiring lessee to re-lease said premises for said additional period of five years at a rate of rental the same as that hereinabove' set forth.”

The building was erected, the lessee went into possession, and so continued during the *564 five-year period on a rental basis of $8,150 per annum, being 5 per cent, on $75,000, tbe value of the lands, and 10 per cent, of $44,-000, the cost of the building, as stipulated in the contract.

In due time before the expiration of the original lease, the lessor caused the land to be appraised by the Birmingham real estate hoard, which board valued the land at $45,-000. The lessor reported this appraisal, and called upon -the lessee to signify willingness or unwillingness to enter into a new lease on the new rental basis, viz., 5 per cent, on $45,-000, the value of the land, plus 10 per cent, on $44,000, the cost of. the building, being an annual rental of $6,650.

The lessee had theretofore advised the owner of a purpose not to renew, and in due time declined to renew on the new rental basis thus tendered. Thereupon, in due time, the lessor tendered and demanded the execution of a new lease for five years, on the original rental basis of $8,150. This being declined, specific performance is sought in line with this proposed new lease.

We consider, first, the grounds of demurrer going to the equity of the bill upon a consideration of the contract itself.

A study of the renewal covenant discloses its construction is not free from uncertainty.

One thing is clear: The parties first fixed a basis of rental value, 5 per cent, of the land value, and 10 per cent, of the cost of building, and set up a board of appraisal to ascertain the fair rental value on such basis as of the date of renewal. This basis ■ of rental value was the same in the original and in the renewal covenant; the variable factor being an anticipated change of land values. We may take it both parties considered this a fair measure of rental value, and any construction which would force a renewal upon a higher or lower basis is out of keeping with this feature of the covenant.

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Related

Blackburn v. McLaughlin
80 So. 818 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1918)
Homan v. Stewart
103 Ala. 644 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 667, 226 Ala. 562, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-ice-cold-storage-co-v-johnson-ala-1933.